4.6 Article

Biophysical Insight into the SARS-CoV2 Spike-ACE2 Interaction and Its Modulation by Hepcidin through a Multifaceted Computational Approach

Journal

ACS OMEGA
Volume 7, Issue 20, Pages 17024-17042

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.2c00154

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Institute for Advanced Studies in Basic Sciences at Zanjan, Iran
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31872723]

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The spike protein of SARS-CoV2 and its interaction with the human receptor ACE2 play a central role in the infection process. Vaccines are important for preventing severe effects and transmission, but there is still a need for drugs that specifically target the spike protein. This study uses computational modeling to explore the interaction of spike protein with ACE2, focusing on its allosteric regulation, which could provide important insights for understanding the virus and developing potential treatments.
At the center of the SARS-CoV2 infection, the spike protein and its interaction with the human receptor ACE2 play a central role in the molecular machinery of SARS-CoV2 infection of human cells. Vaccine therapies are a valuable barrier to the worst effects of the virus and to its diffusion, but the need of purposed drugs is emerging as a core target of the fight against COVID19. In this respect, the repurposing of drugs has already led to discovery of drugs thought to reduce the effects of the cytokine storm, but still a drug targeting the spike protein, in the infection stage, is missing. In this work, we present a multifaceted computational approach strongly grounded on a biophysical modeling of biological systems, so to disclose the interaction of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein with ACE2 with a special focus to an allosteric regulation of the spike-ACE2 interaction. Our approach includes the following methodologies: Protein Contact Networks and Network Clustering, Targeted Molecular Dynamics, Elastic Network Modeling, Perturbation Response Scanning, and a computational analysis of energy flow and SEPAS as a protein-softness and monomer-based affinity predictor. We applied this approach to free (closed and open) states of spike protein and spike-ACE2 complexes. Eventually, we analyzed the interactions of free and bound forms of spike with hepcidin (HPC), the major hormone in iron regulation, recently addressed as a central player in the COVID19 pathogenesis, with a special emphasis to the most severe outcomes. Our results demonstrate that, compared with closed and open states, the spike protein in the ACE2-bound state shows higher allosteric potential. The correspondence between hinge sites and the Allosteric Modulation Region (AMR) in the S-ACE complex suggests a molecular basis for hepcidin involvement in COVID19 pathogenesis. We verify the importance of AMR in different states of spike and then study its interactions with HPC and the consequence of the HPC-AMR interaction on spike dynamics and its affinity for ACE2. We propose two complementary mechanisms for HPC effects on spike of SARS-CoV-2; (a) HPC acts as a competitive inhibitor when spike is in a preinfection state (open and with no ACE2), (b) the HPC-AMR interaction pushes the spike structure into the safer closed state. These findings need clear molecular in vivo verification beside clinical observations.

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