Durrant Jacob D, Kochanek Sarah E, Casalino Lorenzo, Ieong Pek U, Dommer Abigail C, Amaro Rommie E
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15260, United States.
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093-0340, United States.
ACS Cent Sci. 2020 Feb 26;6(2):189-196. doi: 10.1021/acscentsci.9b01071. Epub 2020 Feb 19.
Influenza virus circulates in human, avian, and swine hosts, causing seasonal epidemic and occasional pandemic outbreaks. Influenza neuraminidase, a viral surface glycoprotein, has two sialic acid binding sites. The catalytic (primary) site, which also binds inhibitors such as oseltamivir carboxylate, is responsible for cleaving the sialic acid linkages that bind viral progeny to the host cell. In contrast, the functional annotation of the secondary site remains unclear. Here, we better characterize these two sites through the development of an all-atom, explicitly solvated, and experimentally based integrative model of the pandemic influenza A H1N1 2009 viral envelope, containing ∼160 million atoms and spanning ∼115 nm in diameter. Molecular dynamics simulations of this crowded subcellular environment, coupled with Markov state model theory, provide a novel framework for studying realistic molecular systems at the mesoscale and allow us to quantify the kinetics of the neuraminidase 150-loop transition between the open and closed states. An analysis of chloride ion occupancy along the neuraminidase surface implies a potential new role for the neuraminidase secondary site, wherein the terminal sialic acid residues of the linkages may bind before transfer to the primary site where enzymatic cleavage occurs. Altogether, our work breaks new ground for molecular simulation in terms of size, complexity, and methodological analyses of the components. It also provides fundamental insights into the understanding of substrate recognition processes for this vital influenza drug target, suggesting a new strategy for the development of anti-influenza therapeutics.
流感病毒在人类、禽类和猪宿主中传播,引发季节性流行以及偶尔的大流行疫情。流感神经氨酸酶是一种病毒表面糖蛋白,有两个唾液酸结合位点。催化(主要)位点也结合诸如奥司他韦羧酸盐等抑制剂,负责裂解将病毒后代与宿主细胞相连的唾液酸键。相比之下,次要位点的功能注释仍不清楚。在此,我们通过构建2009年甲型H1N1大流行性流感病毒包膜的全原子、显式溶剂化且基于实验的整合模型,更好地表征这两个位点,该模型包含约1.6亿个原子,直径约115纳米。对这个拥挤的亚细胞环境进行分子动力学模拟,并结合马尔可夫状态模型理论,为在中尺度研究实际分子系统提供了一个新框架,使我们能够量化神经氨酸酶150环在开放和关闭状态之间转变的动力学。对神经氨酸酶表面氯离子占据情况的分析表明神经氨酸酶次要位点可能有一个新作用,即连接键的末端唾液酸残基可能在转移到发生酶促裂解的主要位点之前就与之结合。总之,我们的工作在分子模拟的规模、复杂性和组分的方法学分析方面开辟了新领域。它还为理解这个重要的流感药物靶点的底物识别过程提供了基本见解,为抗流感治疗药物的开发提出了新策略。