Why is the Omicron main protease of SARS-CoV-2 less stable than its wild-type counterpart? A crystallographic, biophysical, and theoretical study of the free enzyme and its complex with inhibitor 13b-K.

bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology(2024)

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摘要
During the continuing evolution of SARS-CoV-2, the Omicron variant of concern emerged in the second half of 2021 and has been dominant since November that year. Along with its sublineages, it has maintained a prominent role ever since. The Nsp5 main protease (Mpro) of the Omicron virus is characterized by a single dominant mutation, P132H. Here we determined the X-ray crystal structures of the P132H mutant (or O-Mpro) as free enzyme and in complex with the Mpro inhibitor, the alpha-ketoamide 13b-K, and we conducted enzymology, biophysical as well as theoretical studies to characterize the O-Mpro. We found that O-Mpro has a similar overall structure and binding with 13b-K; however, it displays lower enzymatic activity and lower thermal stability compared to the WT-Mpro (with "WT" referring to the original Wuhan-1 strain). Intriguingly, the imidazole ring of His132 and the carboxylate plane of Glu240 are in a stacked configuration in the X-ray structures determined here. The empirical folding free energy calculations suggest that the O-Mpro dimer is destabilized relative to the WT-Mpro due to the less favorable van der Waals interactions and backbone conformation in the individual protomers. The all-atom continuous constant pH molecular dynamics (MD) simulations reveal that His132 and Glu240 display coupled titration. At pH 7, His132 is predominantly neutral and in a stacked configuration with respect to Glu240 which is charged. In order to examine whether the Omicron mutation eases the emergence of further Mpro mutations, we also determined crystal structures of the relatively frequent P132H+T169S double mutant but found little evidence for a correlation between the two sites.
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