๐ Structures of the Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus 3C-like protease reveal insights into substrate specificity
ยฉ 2015 International Union of Crystallography. Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) is a highly pathogenic virus that causes severe respiratory illness accompanied by multi-organ dysfunction, resulting in a case fatality rate of approximately 40%. As found in other coronaviruses, the majority of the positive-stranded RNA MERS-CoV genome is translated into two polyproteins, one created by a ribosomal frameshift, that are cleaved at three sites by a papain-like protease and at 11 sites by a 3C-like protease (3CLpro). Since 3CLpro is essential for viral replication, it is a leading candidate for therapeutic intervention. To accelerate the development of 3CLpro inhibitors, three crystal structures of a catalytically inactive variant (C148A) of the MERS-CoV 3CLpro enzyme were determined. The aim was to co-crystallize the inactive enzyme with a peptide substrate. Fortuitously, however, in two of the structures the C-terminus of one protomer is bound in the active site of a neighboring molecule, providing a snapshot of an enzyme-product complex. In the third structure, two of the three protomers in the asymmetric unit form a homodimer similar to that of SARS-CoV 3CLpro; however, the third protomer adopts a radically different conformation that is likely to correspond to a crystallographic monomer, indicative of substantial structural plasticity in the enzyme. The results presented here provide a foundation for the structure-based design of small-molecule inhibitors of the MERS-CoV 3CLpro enzyme.
keywords
๐ syndrome coronavirus (1074)
๐ highly pathogenic (100)
๐ papain-like protease (67)
๐ fatality rate (123)
๐ respiratory syndrome (2004)
๐ crystal structure (114)
๐ viral replication (258)
year
โฐ 2015
issn
๐ 13990047 09074449
volume
71
number
page
1102-1111
citedbycount
15
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