Evolution of the SARS-CoV-2 proteome in three dimensions (3D) during the first six months of the COVID-19 pandemic
Author:
Lubin Joseph H.ORCID, Zardecki Christine, Dolan Elliott M., Lu Changpeng, Shen Zhuofan, Dutta Shuchismita, Westbrook John D., Hudson Brian P., Goodsell David S., Williams Jonathan K., Voigt Maria, Sarma Vidur, Xie Lingjun, Venkatachalam Thejasvi, Arnold Steven, Alvarado Luz Helena Alfaro, Catalfano Kevin, Khan Aaliyah, McCarthy Erika, Staggers Sophia, Tinsley Brea, Trudeau Alan, Singh Jitendra, Whitmore Lindsey, Zheng Helen, Benedek Matthew, Currier Jenna, Dresel Mark, Duvvuru Ashish, Dyszel Britney, Fingar Emily, Hennen Elizabeth M., Kirsch Michael, Khan Ali A., Labrie-Cleary Charlotte, Laporte Stephanie, Lenkeit Evan, Martin Kailey, Orellana Marilyn, de la Campa Melanie Ortiz-Alvarez, Paredes Isaac, Wheeler Baleigh, Rupert Allison, Sam Andrew, See Katherine, Zapata Santiago Soto, Craig Paul A., Hall Bonnie L., Jiang Jennifer, Koeppe Julia R., Mills Stephen A., Pikaart Michael J., Roberts Rebecca, Bromberg Yana, Hoyer J. Steen, Duffy Siobain, Tischfield Jay, Ruiz Francesc X., Arnold Eddy, Baum Jean, Sandberg Jesse, Brannigan Grace, Khare Sagar D., Burley Stephen K.
Abstract
AbstractThree-dimensional structures of SARS-CoV-2 and other coronaviral proteins archived in the Protein Data Bank were used to analyze viral proteome evolution during the first six months of the COVID-19 pandemic. Analyses of spatial locations, chemical properties, and structural and energetic impacts of the observed amino acid changes in >48,000 viral proteome sequences showed how each one of the 29 viral study proteins have undergone amino acid changes. Structural models computed for every unique sequence variant revealed that most substitutions map to protein surfaces and boundary layers with a minority affecting hydrophobic cores. Conservative changes were observed more frequently in cores versus boundary layers/surfaces. Active sites and protein-protein interfaces showed modest numbers of substitutions. Energetics calculations showed that the impact of substitutions on the thermodynamic stability of the proteome follows a universal bi-Gaussian distribution. Detailed results are presented for six drug discovery targets and four structural proteins comprising the virion, highlighting substitutions with the potential to impact protein structure, enzyme activity, and functional interfaces. Characterizing the evolution of the virus in three dimensions provides testable insights into viral protein function and should aid in structure-based drug discovery efforts as well as the prospective identification of amino acid substitutions with potential for drug resistance.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
10 articles.
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