| Literature DB >> 35746472 |
Georgina I López-Cortés1,2, Miryam Palacios-Pérez1,2, Hannya F Veledíaz1, Margarita Hernández-Aguilar1, Gerardo R López-Hernández1, Gabriel S Zamudio1, Marco V José1,2.
Abstract
The global scale of the COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated the evolution of SARS-CoV-2 and the clues of adaptation. After two years and two months since the declaration of the pandemic, several variants have emerged and become fixed in the human population thanks to extrinsic selective pressures but also to the inherent mutational capacity of the virus. Here, we applied a neutral substitution evolution test to the spike (S) protein of Omicron's protein and compared it to the others' variant of concern (VOC) neutral evolution. We carried out comparisons among the interactions between the S proteins from the VOCs (Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta and Omicron) and the receptor ACE2. The shared amino acids among all the ACE2 binding S proteins remain constant, indicating that these amino acids are essential for the accurate binding to the receptor. The complexes of the RBD for every variant with the receptor were used to identify the amino acids involved in the protein-protein interaction (PPI). The RBD of Omicron establishes 82 contacts, compared to the 74 of the Wuhan original viral protein. Hence, the mean number of contacts per residue is higher, making the contact thermodynamically more stable. The RBDs of the VOCs are similar in sequence and structure; however, Omicron's RBD presents the largest deviation from the structure by 1.11 Å RMSD, caused by a set of mutations near the glycosylation N343. The chemical properties and structure near the glycosylation N343 of the Omicron S protein are different from the original protein, which provoke reduced recognition by the neutralizing antibodies. Our results hint that selective pressures are induced by mass vaccination throughout the world and by the persistence of recurrent infections in immunosuppressed individuals, who did not eliminate the infection and ended up facilitating the selection of viruses whose characteristics are different from the previous VOCs, less pathogenic but with higher transmissibility.Entities:
Keywords: S protein; SARS-CoV-2; hydrophobic and electrostatic potentials; neutral substitution test; receptor binding domain; structural analysis; variants of concern
Year: 2022 PMID: 35746472 PMCID: PMC9230601 DOI: 10.3390/vaccines10060864
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccines (Basel) ISSN: 2076-393X
Figure 1Neutrality substitution test from the S protein of Omicron variant (red line) compared to the previously reported neutrality test of the SARS2-S VOC sequences reported before June 2021 (blue line) (data obtained from our previous work [16]). The negative control (black line) shows the expected probability of amino acids occurring by random mutations. The probability of occurrence of each amino acid of the proteins was calculated with a confident interval of 95%. Amino acids showing a probability of occurrence different from the expected control are under selective pressures, either positive or negative.
Mutations of each VOC at the RBD until the furin cleavage site. Mutations are shadowed by the chemical characteristic of the residue: yellow—non-polar, green—polar uncharged, blue—polar positively charged and red—polar negatively charged. The symbol next to each residue refers to the type of selective pressure exerted over that amino acid; thus, + is positive selective pressure, - is negative selective pressure, and / is for neutral selection.
| Reference | Alpha | Beta | Gamma | Delta | Omicron | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 339 | G | D | + | ||||||||
| 371 | S | L | - | ||||||||
| 373 | S | P | - | ||||||||
| 375 | S | F | + | ||||||||
| 417 | K | N | + | T | + | N | + | ||||
| 440 | N | K | + | ||||||||
| 446 | G | S | - | ||||||||
| 452 | L | R | - | ||||||||
| 477 | S | N | + | ||||||||
| 478 | T | K | + | K | + | ||||||
| 484 | E | K | + | K | + | A | / | ||||
| 490 | F | ||||||||||
| 493 | Q | R | - | ||||||||
| 496 | G | S | - | ||||||||
| 498 | Q | R | - | ||||||||
| 501 | N | Y | + | Y | + | Y | + | Y | + | ||
| 505 | T | Y | + | Y | + | Y | + | H | - | ||
| 547 | T | K | + | ||||||||
| 570 | A | D | + | ||||||||
| 614 | D | G | - | G | - | G | - | G | - | G | - |
| 655 | H | Y | + | Y | + | ||||||
| 677 | Q | ||||||||||
| 679 | N | K | + | ||||||||
| 681 | P | H | - | R | - | H | - | ||||
Contact residues of the Wuhan original sequence of SARS-CoV-2 and the VOCs with the receptor ACE2. The list of the contact residues for every RBD is listed. The number at the right of each residue is the number of contacts of that specific residue. The underlined position refers to conserved positions from ACE2 binding to S proteins. The shadowed positions are contact residues that have not mutated in VOCs and the red residues are the mutated contact residue.
| Reference | Alpha | Beta | Gamma | Delta | Omicron | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 417 | K | 4 | K | 1 | K | 3 | ||||||
| 446 | G | 1 | ||||||||||
|
|
| 6 | Y | 5 | Y | 2 | ||||||
|
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| 1 | Y | 3 | Y | 1 | Y | 3 | Y | 3 | ||
| 455 | L | 2 | L | 3 | L | 4 | L | 2 | ||||
| 456 | F | 5 | F | 4 | F | 8 | F | 5 | F | 2 | F | 3 |
| 473 | Y | Y | 1 | Y | 1 | |||||||
| 475 | A | 2 | A | 2 | A | 1 | A | 1 | A | 1 | A | 2 |
| 476 | G | G | 1 | G | 1 | |||||||
| 486 | F | 9 | F | 5 | F | 8 | F | 6 | F | 5 | F | 7 |
|
|
| 3 | N | 7 | N | 5 | N | 2 | N | 6 | N | 4 |
|
|
| 4 | Y | 4 | Y | 5 | Y | 5 | Y | 4 | Y | 6 |
| 493 | Q | 2 | Q | 13 | Q | 6 | Q | 2 | Q | 3 | R | 7 |
| 494 | S | S | 2 | S | 2 | S | 2 | |||||
| 496 | G | 1 | G | 2 | S | 2 | ||||||
| 498 | Q | 7 | Q | 3 | Q | 3 | Q | 4 | Q | 2 | R | 4 |
|
|
| 9 | T | 8 | T | 8 | T | 10 | T | 7 | T | 6 |
| 501 | N | 1 | Y | 12 | N | 5 | Y | 14 | N | 9 | Y | 14 |
|
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| 5 | G | 5 | G | 1 | G | 2 | G | 4 | G | 6 |
| 503 | V | V | 1 | |||||||||
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| 12 | Y | 10 | T | 13 | Y | 16 | Y | 20 | H | 13 |
Properties of the interaction between RBDs of the VOCs and the receptor.
| SARS-CoV-2 | Alpha | Beta | Gamma | Delta | Omicron | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hydrogen bonds | 10 | 8 | 2 | 6 | 12 | 13 |
| Hydrophobic contacts | 18 | 11 | 21 | 16 | 10 | 12 |
| Contacts | 74 | 77 | 72 | 72 | 80 | 82 |
| Mean distance (Å) | 3.563 | 3.572 | 3.414 | 3.569 | 3.492 | 3.557 |
| Number of residues | 17 | 14 | 16 | 13 | 17 | 16 |
Figure 2Interface of the RBD of each VOC. (a) Electric potential and (b) hydrophobic potential of the interface of the RBDs of each VOC.
Deviations in the structures of the RBD of each VOC compared to the Wuhan original structure.
| RMSD (Ǻ) | TM Score | |
|---|---|---|
| Alpha | 0.55 | 0.99 |
| Beta | 0.74 | 0.98 |
| Gamma | 0.54 | 0.99 |
| Delta | 0.55 | 0.99 |
| Omicron | 1.11 | 0.97 |
Figure 3VOC RBD overlapping. Typical view of the orientation of the RBD of each VOC when it is coupled with the receptor. Rosy, brown—reference original structure, dark red—Alpha, dark green—Beta, golden rod—Gamma, navy blue—Delta, and chartreuse—Omicron.
Figure 4Comparison of the contacts at the glycosylation site N343 from the reference structure and of Omicron’s RBD. The carbohydrate in the reference structure is colored in light blue. The residues highlighted in green lime in the RBD of Omicron are the mutated residues.
Figure 5Electrostatic potential of the receptor ACE2 in the interacting surface with SARS2-S.