4.6 Article

Unusual zwitterionic catalytic site of SARS-CoV-2 main protease revealed by neutron crystallography

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 295, Issue 50, Pages 17365-17373

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.AC120.016154

Keywords

joint neutron; X-ray crystallography; room temperature; SARS-CoV-2; 3CL main protease; 3CL Mpro; protonation state; hydrogen bond; enzyme mechanism; drug design; neutron diffraction; viral protease; SARS-CoV-2 3CL main protease

Funding

  1. Department of Energy Office of Science through the National Virtual Biotechnology Laboratory
  2. Coronavirus CARES Act
  3. Office of Biological and Environmental Research

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The main protease (3CL M-pro) from SARS-CoV-2, the etiological agent of COVID-19, is an essential enzyme for viral replication. 3CL M-pro possesses an unusual catalytic dyad composed of Cys(145) and His(41) residues. A critical question in the field has been what the protonation states of the ionizable residues in the substrate-binding active-site cavity are; resolving this point would help understand the catalytic details of the enzyme and inform rational drug development against this pernicious virus. Here, we present the room-temperature neutron structure of 3CL M-pro, which allowed direct determination of hydrogen atom positions and, hence, protonation states in the protease. We observe that the catalytic site natively adopts a zwitterionic reactive form in which Cys(145) is in the negatively charged thiolate state and His(41) is doubly protonated and positively charged, instead of the neutral unreactive state usually envisaged. The neutron structure also identified the protonation states, and thus electrical charges, of all other amino acid residues and revealed intricate hydrogen-bonding networks in the active-site cavity and at the dimer interface. The fine atomic details present in this structure were made possible by the unique scattering properties of the neutron, which is an ideal probe for locating hydrogen positions and experimentally determining protonation states at near-physiological temperature. Our observations provide critical information for structure-assisted and computational drug design, allowing precise tailoring of inhibitors to the enzyme's electrostatic environment.

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