Zhao Huaying, Nguyen Ai, Wu Di, Li Yan, Hassan Sergio A, Chen Jiji, Shroff Hari, Piszczek Grzegorz, Schuck Peter
Laboratory of Dynamics of Macromolecular Assembly, National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
Biophysics Core Facility, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
PNAS Nexus. 2022 May 16;1(2):pgac049. doi: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgac049. eCollection 2022 May.
Worldwide SARS-CoV-2 sequencing efforts track emerging mutations in its spike protein, as well as characteristic mutations in other viral proteins. Besides their epidemiological importance, the observed SARS-CoV-2 sequences present an ensemble of viable protein variants, and thereby a source of information on viral protein structure and function. Charting the mutational landscape of the nucleocapsid (N) protein that facilitates viral assembly, we observe variability exceeding that of the spike protein, with more than 86% of residues that can be substituted, on average by three to four different amino acids. However, mutations exhibit an uneven distribution that tracks known structural features but also reveals highly protected stretches of unknown function. One of these conserved regions is in the central disordered linker proximal to the N-G215C mutation that has become dominant in the Delta variant, outcompeting G215 variants without further spike or N-protein substitutions. Structural models suggest that the G215C mutation stabilizes conserved transient helices in the disordered linker serving as protein-protein interaction interfaces. Comparing Delta variant N-protein to its ancestral version in biophysical experiments, we find a significantly more compact and less disordered structure. N-G215C exhibits substantially stronger self-association, shifting the unliganded protein from a dimeric to a tetrameric oligomeric state, which leads to enhanced coassembly with nucleic acids. This suggests that the sequence variability of N-protein is mirrored by high plasticity of N-protein biophysical properties, which we hypothesize can be exploited by SARS-CoV-2 to achieve greater efficiency of viral assembly, and thereby enhanced infectivity.
全球范围内对严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(SARS-CoV-2)的测序工作追踪其刺突蛋白中出现的突变以及其他病毒蛋白中的特征性突变。除了其流行病学重要性外,观察到的SARS-CoV-2序列呈现出一系列可行的蛋白质变体,从而成为病毒蛋白质结构和功能信息的来源。绘制促进病毒组装的核衣壳(N)蛋白的突变图谱时,我们观察到其变异性超过了刺突蛋白,平均超过86%的残基可被三到四种不同氨基酸取代。然而,突变呈现出不均匀分布,既追踪已知的结构特征,也揭示了功能未知的高度保守区域。其中一个保守区域位于靠近N-G215C突变的中央无序连接区,该突变在Delta变体中占主导地位,在没有进一步刺突或N蛋白替代的情况下胜过G215变体。结构模型表明,G215C突变稳定了无序连接区中作为蛋白质-蛋白质相互作用界面的保守瞬时螺旋。在生物物理实验中将Delta变体的N蛋白与其原始版本进行比较,我们发现其结构明显更紧凑且无序程度更低。N-G215C表现出显著更强的自缔合,使未结合配体的蛋白从二聚体转变为四聚体寡聚状态,这导致与核酸的共组装增强。这表明N蛋白的序列变异性反映在其生物物理性质的高可塑性上,我们推测SARS-CoV-2可利用这种可塑性来实现更高效率的病毒组装,从而增强感染性。