4.8 Article

Pathogen-sugar interactions revealed by universal saturation transfer analysis

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 377, Issue 6604, Pages 385-+

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.abm3125

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust [095872/Z/10/Z, 20289/Z/16/Z, 100209/Z/12/Z, 106115/Z/14/Z]
  2. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/R029849/1]
  3. University of Oxford Institutional Strategic Support Fund
  4. John Fell Fund
  5. Edward Penley Abraham Cephalosporin Fund
  6. EPSRC [V011359/1 (P)]
  7. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme [101002859]
  8. European Union [823830, 777536]
  9. IMI-CARE project [101005077]
  10. Telethon Network of Genetic Biobanks [GTB18001]
  11. Network for Italian Genomes (NIG)
  12. Intesa San Paolo [B/2020/0119]
  13. Tuscany Region
  14. Italian Ministry of University and Research
  15. Istituto Buddista Italiano Soka Gakkai [2020-2016_RIC_3]
  16. EU [101016775]
  17. European Research Council (ERC) [101002859] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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This study utilizes universal saturation transfer analysis to reveal the interaction between the novel coronavirus and glycan compounds, and identifies protein mutations related to pathogenicity and zoonosis.
Many pathogens exploit host cell-surface glycans. However, precise analyses of glycan ligands binding with heavily modified pathogen proteins can be confounded by overlapping sugar signals and/or compounded with known experimental constraints. Universal saturation transfer analysis (uSTA) builds on existing nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to provide an automated workflow for quantitating protein-ligand interactions. uSTA reveals that early-pandemic, B-origin-lineage severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) spike trimer binds sialoside sugars in an end-on manner. uSTA-guided modeling and a high-resolution cryo-electron microscopy structure implicate the spike N-terminal domain (NTD) and confirm end-on binding. This finding rationalizes the effect of NTD mutations that abolish sugar binding in SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern. Together with genetic variance analyses in early pandemic patient cohorts, this binding implicates a sialylated polylactosamine motif found on tetraantennary N-linked glycoproteins deep in the human lung as potentially relevant to virulence and/or zoonosis.

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