๐ Two adjacent mutations on the dimer interface of SARS coronavirus 3C-like protease cause different conformational changes in crystal structure
The 3C-like protease of SARS coronavirus (SARS-CoV 3CLpro) is vital for SARS-CoV replication and is a promising drug target. It has been extensively proved that only the dimeric enzyme is active. Here we discovered that two adjacent mutations (Ser139_Ala and Phe140_Ala) on the dimer interface resulted in completely different crystal structures of the enzyme, demonstrating the distinct roles of these two residues in maintaining the active conformation of SARS-CoV 3CLpro. S139A is a monomer that is structurally similar to the two reported monomers G11A and R298A. However, this mutant still retains a small fraction of dimer in solution, which might account for its remaining activity. F140A is a dimer with the most collapsed active pocket discovered so far, well-reflecting the stabilizing role of this residue. Moreover, a plausible dimerization mechanism was also deduced from structural analysis. Our work is expected to provide insight on the dimerization-function relationship of SARS-CoV 3CLpro. ยฉ 2009 Elsevier Inc.
keywords
๐ crystal structure (114)
author
๐ค Hu, Tiancen
๐ค Zhang, Yu
๐ค Li, Lianwei
๐ค Wang, Kuifeng
๐ค Chen, Shuai
๐ค Chen, Jing
๐ค Ding, Jianping
๐ค Jiang, Hualiang
๐ค Shen, Xu
year
โฐ 2009
journal
๐ Virology
issn
๐ 00426822 10960341
volume
388
number
2
page
324-334
citedbycount
18
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