Crystal Structure of Inhibitor-Bound GII.4 Sydney 2012 Norovirus 3C-Like Protease

Author:

Eruera Alice-Roza12,McSweeney Alice M.1,McKenzie-Goldsmith Geena M.1,Opel-Reading Helen K.2,Thomas Simone X.1,Campbell Ashley C.2ORCID,Stubbing Louise3,Siow Andrew3ORCID,Hubert Jonathan G.3,Brimble Margaret A.3ORCID,Ward Vernon K.1ORCID,Krause Kurt L.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, School of Biomedical Sciences, University of Otago, P.O. Box 56, Dunedin 9054, New Zealand

2. Department of Biochemistry, School of Biomedical Sciences, University of Otago, P.O. Box 56, Dunedin 9054, New Zealand

3. School of Chemical Sciences, The University of Auckland, 23 Symonds Street and 3b Symonds Street, Auckland 1142, New Zealand

Abstract

Norovirus is the leading cause of viral gastroenteritis worldwide, and there are no approved vaccines or therapeutic treatments for chronic or severe norovirus infections. The structural characterisation of the norovirus protease and drug development has predominantly focused upon GI.1 noroviruses, despite most global outbreaks being caused by GII.4 noroviruses. Here, we determined the crystal structures of the GII.4 Sydney 2012 ligand-free norovirus protease at 2.79 Å and at 1.83 Å with a covalently bound high-affinity (IC50 = 0.37 µM) protease inhibitor (NV-004). We show that the active sites of the ligand-free protease structure are present in both open and closed conformations, as determined by their Arg112 side chain orientation. A comparative analysis of the ligand-free and ligand-bound protease structures reveals significant structural differences in the active site cleft and substrate-binding pockets when an inhibitor is covalently bound. We also report a second molecule of NV-004 non-covalently bound within the S4 substrate binding pocket via hydrophobic contacts and a water-mediated hydrogen bond. These new insights can guide structure-aided drug design against the GII.4 genogroup of noroviruses.

Funder

New Zealand Ministry of Business Innovation & Employment, Endeavour Fund

Maurice Wilkins Centre for Molecular Biodiscovery

University of Otago Doctoral scholarship

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Virology,Infectious Diseases

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