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Unveiling SARS-CoV-2 N501Y mutation mystery: History
Please note this is an old version of this entry, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Contributor: Done Stojanov

The study provides a detailed computational analysis of the N501Y mutation in the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein and its structural implications. Key findings include:

  1. N501Y leads to significant structural shifts, especially in the RBD domain.
  2. The mutation enhances binding affinity to ACE2, making the virus potentially more transmissible.
  3. It causes secondary structure destabilization, especially in stable regions like α-helices.
  4. Hydrogen bond dynamics were significantly altered, with stronger interactions between the spike protein and ACE2, especially in the RBD domain.
  5. The N501Y mutation increases binding affinity, as evidenced by a shift in binding energy.

These insights could be important for understanding the biological behavior of SARS-CoV-2 variants and designing therapeutics and vaccines that account for these structural alterations.

  • SARS-CoV-2
  • N501Y
  • mutations
  • COVID-19
  • surface glycoprotein
  • S protein
  • hydrogen bonds
  • secondary structure
  • N501S
  • N501T

     Results 

  1. Backbone Deviation and Structural Shifts:
  • The N501Y mutation induces a significant backbone shift compared to the wild-type (N501) and other mutations, such as N501S and N501T. The root-mean-square deviation (RMSD) values for N501Y (0.047 nm) and N501T (0.04 nm) were higher than those for the wild-type, indicating a greater structural change in the N501Y variant.
  • These shifts were not uniform over time, with peak deviations observed at different simulation times: N501Y reached its peak deviation of 0.49 nm at 6.78 ns, while other variants peaked at different times and with smaller deviations.
  • Despite the variability in deviations, all variants eventually reached an equilibrium state after 42.3 ns, with backbone oscillations staying below 0.15 nm during the last phase of the simulation (42.3-50 ns), confirming system stability.
  1. Solubility and Surface Accessibility:
  • The solvent-accessible surface area (SASA) analysis showed that N501Y and N501S had similar solubility profiles, with N501S exhibiting a slightly higher SASA (364.66 ± 3.28 nm²) compared to the others, suggesting it might contribute more favorably to protein solubility.
  • Interestingly, while N501T did not significantly alter the surface accessibility, N501Y showed slight changes in solubility, particularly around the 37.5 ns mark, where N501S had a higher SASA score than N501Y.
  1. RMSF Analysis and Residue Fluctuations:
  • The root mean square fluctuation (RMSF) analysis, which measures residue flexibility, showed that the N501Y variant exhibited higher fluctuation in the RBD domain [499-505], particularly around Pro-Thr-Tyr-Gly-Val-Gly-Tyr. This behavior was unique to the N501Y mutant, indicating that Tyrosine at position 501 induced local instability in the RBD domain.
  • Other variants, N501S and N501T, showed similar trends with lower RMSF values in specific regions, such as ValLeuTyrAsnSerAlaSer in the S-protein RBD [367-373], indicating less flexibility compared to N501Y.
  1. Secondary Structure Analysis:
  • The secondary structure prediction revealed distinct conformational changes between N501 and N501Y. For example:
    • In N501, the α-helix formed in the RBD domain [366-370] was stable, but in N501Y, there were frequent transitions from α-helix to π-helix, particularly after 38.5 ns.
    • Additionally, a 3/10-helix structure in N501 at the RBD domain [503-505] was destabilized in N501Y, which shifted to a turn at the same interval.
  • These structural transitions suggest that N501Y may destabilize some stable conformations in the RBD domain, potentially affecting the spike protein's ability to bind to ACE2 effectively.
  1. Hydrogen Bond Dynamics:
  • The analysis of hydrogen bonds between the spike protein RBD and ACE2 highlighted notable differences in polar contacts for the N501Y mutant:
    • The N501Y mutation enhanced the strength and persistence of hydrogen bonds compared to the wild-type structure, particularly in the RBD domain [499-505].
    • A specific hydrogen bond between Gly502 (spike protein) and Lys353 (ACE2) was more stable in N501Y than in N501, with the N501Y variant showing a 98.4% occupancy during the convergence phase, compared to 79.5% for N501.
    • The Tyr505 (spike protein) to Glu37 (ACE2) hydrogen bond was also more persistent in N501Y, with a stronger interaction (occupancy increased by 10.6% compared to N501).
    • Thr500 in the spike protein also formed different hydrogen bonds in N501Y: while it usually interacted with Asp355 (ACE2) in the wild type, it increasingly formed a bond with Tyr41 (ACE2) in N501Y, compensating for the reduced interaction with Asp355.
  1. Binding Energy and Affinity:
  • Binding energy shifts due to the N501Y mutation were calculated for the most affected hydrogen bonds. The mutation caused an increase in binding affinity, with a shift of 0.91 kcal/mol during the simulation and 1.06 kcal/mol during the convergence phase. This indicates a stronger and more stable interaction between the spike protein RBD and ACE2 in the N501Y variant.

[1][2]

This entry is adapted from: https://doi.org/10.1080/13102818.2023.2206492

References

  1. Done Stojanov; Phylogenicity of B.1.1.7 surface glycoprotein, novel distance function and first report of V90T missense mutation in SARS-CoV-2 surface glycoprotein. Meta Gene 2021, 30, 100967-100967, .
  2. Done Stojanov; Data on multiple SARS-CoV-2 surface glycoprotein alignments. Data Brief 2021, 38, 107414, .
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