| Literature DB >> 34930105 |
Jamilet Miranda1, Ricardo Bringas2, Jorge Fernandez-de-Cossio2, Yasser Perera-Negrin3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Similarities in the hijacking mechanisms used by SARS-CoV-2 and several types of cancer, suggest the repurposing of cancer drugs to treat Covid-19. CK2 kinase antagonists have been proposed for cancer treatment. A recent study in cells infected with SARS-CoV-2 found a significant CK2 kinase activity, and the use of a CK2 inhibitor showed antiviral responses. CIGB-300, originally designed as an anticancer peptide, is an antagonist of CK2 kinase activity that binds to the CK2 phospho-acceptor sites. Recent preliminary results show the antiviral activity of CIGB-300 using a surrogate model of coronavirus. Here we present a computational biology study that provides evidence, at the molecular level, of how CIGB-300 may interfere with the SARS-CoV-2 life cycle within infected human cells.Entities:
Keywords: CIGB-300; CK2 inhibitor; Computational biology; Drug repurposing; HSBP1; NPM1/B23; Phosphoproteomics; SARS-CoV-2; SQSTM1; SRSF1
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34930105 PMCID: PMC8686809 DOI: 10.1186/s10020-021-00424-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Med ISSN: 1076-1551 Impact factor: 6.354
SARS-CoV-2 infection: data sources of phosphoproteomic studies
| Reference | Timepoints | Cell lines | Downloaded from |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bouhaddou et al. ( | 2 h, 4 h, 8 h, 12 h and 24 h | Vero E6 | |
| Hekman et al. ( | 1 h, 3 h, 6 h and 24 h | iAT2 | |
| Stukalov et al. ( | 6 h and 24 h | A549 | |
| Klann et al. ( | 24 h | CaCo-2 |
Fig. 7Viral protein interactions with host proteins having phosphorylation sites inhibited by CIGB-300. The rhombus in red represents viral proteins, rectangles in blue represent host proteins, and hexagons represent phospho-acceptor sites. The sites in yellow are those whose phosphorylation was increased by SARS-CoV-2 infection
Fig. 8Network of proteins with phosphosites activated in at least two SARS-CoV-2 studies and inhibited by CIGB-300. The phospho-acceptor sites inhibited by CIGB-300 are shown for each protein. Proteins involved in more significant pathways are grouped and colored: mRNA metabolism (pink circle), Cell Cycle (yellow circle) and ‘Selective Autophagy’ (blue circle). The five nodes with the highest degree (HNRNPA1, HSPB1, SRRM2, NPM1 and SRRM1) are labeled with (•)
Fig. 1Sequence alignment of the nucleocapsid proteins of SARS-CoV-2 (NCAP_SARS2) and SARS-CoV (NCAP_CVHSA) viruses. Numbers at the right end indicate the amino acid position in the SARS-CoV-2 protein. Above the aligned sequences, the RNA-binding (residues 41–186, according to UniProt annotation) and Dimerization (residues 258–361) domains are delimited. The v-above the amino acid residues indicates the phosphorylation sites identified in the works of Davidson et al. (2020), Bouhaddou et al. (2020), Klann et al. (2020) and Hekman et al. (2020). The highlighted segments are those between a CK2 phospho-acceptor site and position + 3, those amino acids in yellow are the ones in silico predicted by Surjit et al. (2005) and in green are those experimentally validated by Davidson et al. (2020)
Fig. 2Interference of IFN signaling by Orf6 and the role of CIGB-300. a Interferon, on binding to the receptor, induces STAT1 phosphorylation and the formation of a complex with STAT2 and IRF9. KPNA1 binds with the complex, and KPNB1 binds to KPNA1 and thereby chaperons the complex through the nuclear pore. b Orf6 retains KPNA1 and KPNA2 in the ER/Golgi membrane and the transport of the STAT complex to the nucleus is interrupted. c CIGB-300 blocks the interaction of Orf6 with KPNA2 and the transport of the STAT complex to the nucleus is restored
Fig. 3Sequence alignment of Orf6 proteins of SARS-CoV (NS6_CVHSA) and SARS-CoV-2 (NS6_SARS2) viruses. The residues highlighted in red, green and yellow are those replaced by alanine in the mutants generated by Frieman et al. (2007) and Lei et al. (2020)
Fig. 4Upregulated phosphorylation sites by SARS-CoV-2 infection and its intersection with the CIGB-300 downregulated phospho-acceptor sites. a Venn diagram showing unique phosphorylation sites identified as upregulated in A549, VeroE6, iAT2 and Caco-2 cell lines. b Venn diagram showing unique phosphorylation sites identified as upregulated in A549, VeroE6, iAT2 and Caco-2 cells and downregulated by the action of CIGB-300 in the H125 cell line
Fig. 5GSEA analysis of the Reactome pathways of proteins with altered phosphorylation at the early stages of infection. a NES plotted against the significance of Reactome pathways generated by GSEA at 1 h, 2 h and 3 h after infection. The FDR q-value of a pathway is plotted with a red box, while the corresponding p-value is plotted with a black box. b Heat map of the NESs of the Reactome pathways resulting from the GSEA analysis. The four columns corresponds to the 1 h and 3 h time points of the iAT2 cell (Hekman et al. 2020) and the 2 h and 4 h time points of Vero E6 cells (Bouhaddou et al. 2020) after the infection by SARS-CoV-2. The numbers in small rectangles on the heat map indicate the number of proteins in the CES that contain phosphosites upregulated by SARS-CoV-2 infection and inhibited by CIGB-300 (Perera et al. 2020). c Venn diagram for sets of phosphorylation sites of proteins in the CES for “mRNA Splicing/Processing of capped intron containing pre-mRNA” Reactome pathways at 1 h, 2 h and 3 h time points or that were inhibited by the action of CIGB-300 according to Perera et al. (2020). The sites upregulated in one of the three time points and inhibited by CIGB-300 are listed. d PPI—Networks of proteins in “mRNA Splicing” CES for 1 h, 2 h and 3 h post infection time points. Shown in green are the nodes with the highest degrees; at the center, in yellow, are the nodes representing proteins found in all sub-networks. e Profile of the Running ES Score for “mRNA Splicing” gene sets at 1 h, 2 h and 3 h post infection. The middle panel of the plots shows the positions of the members of the gene set on the ranked list. The bottom panel shows the value of the ranking metric (phosphorylation changes) in a descending order
Fig. 6CK2 expression and SRKP1_S51 site phosphorylation profiles
Fig. 9Network of enriched phenotypes in proteins with phosphosites activated in at least two SARS-CoV-2 studies and inhibited by CIGB-300. Genecodis functional annotation tool was used for the enrichment analysis and to generate the network of the top 20 enriched phenotypes. Nodes in blue represent enriched phenotypes and nodes in orange represent the proteins associated to these phenotypes
Summary of main findings
| Analysis type | Subject | Identity | Working hypothesis | Experimental clues | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Individual CK2 sites | Viral proteins | N | CK2 phosphosite inhibition/blockage by CIGB-300 impairs viral replication | Interaction, co-localization, N mRNA and protein expression inhibition by CIGB-300 in a subrogate model | Ramon et al. ( |
| Individual CK2 sites | Viral proteins | Orf6 | CK2 phosphosite inhibition/blockage by CIGB-300 restores IFN signaling | Additive/Synergistic profile of CIGB-300 plus IFN alpha | Unpublished |
| Co-Expression and network propagation | Host and Viral Proteins | B23, Orf6, NUP98 | CK2 phosphosite inhibition/blockage by CIGB-300 restores IFN signaling | Additive/Synergistic profile of CIGB-300 plus IFN alpha | Unpublished |
| Phosphoproteome overlap | Host Proteins | MATR3, SQSTM1, DIDO1 | CIGB-300 Multitarget effect impairing viral transcription/splicing, inflammation, immunoresponse and apoptosis | Pulmonary lesions resolution in CT Phase I | Cruz et al. ( |
| Enrichment analysis at early viral infection and Kinase activity profiles | Host proteins | SRPK1 (SRSF1 and SRSF-2,6,10) | CIGB-300 impairs SRSF1 role in viral protein synthesis | None, to be evaluated in preclinical settings | NA |
| PPIs vs H125 Phosphoproteome | Host and Viral Proteins | Several proteins (see text and Fig. | CIGB-300 impairs Viral RNA processing and transcription | None, to be evaluated in preclinical settings | NA |
| SARS-CoV-2 vs H125 Phosphoproteome overlap, Network and Enrichment analysis | Host proteins | Several proteins (see text and Fig. [HNRNPA1, HSPB1, SRRM2, SRRM1, B23] | CIGB-300 Multitarget effect impairing on mRNA metabolism, cell cycle and Autophagy pathways | Pulmonary lesions resolution in CT Phase I | Cruz et al. ( |
| Enrichment of Human Phenotypes | Host proteins | HNPRNPA1, MATR3, SQSTM1, B23, FIP1L1, NUMA1 | CIGB-300 may relief Covid-19 clinical symptoms | To be evaluated in CT Phase II | NA |