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Elucidating the Substrate Envelope of Enterovirus 68-3C Protease: Structural Basis of Specificity and Potential Resistance. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Enterovirus-D68 (EV68) is a growing global health threat, causing severe infections that can lead to long-term neurological issues and fatalities, with no FDA-approved antiviral treatments currently available.
  • Researchers are investigating small molecule inhibitors that target the EV68-3C protease's active site, aiming to reduce the risk of drug resistance by understanding substrate specificity.
  • The study utilized molecular modeling and co-crystal structures to determine the substrate specificity of EV68-3C protease, revealing how it interacts with viral peptides and calculating a substrate envelope to better understand how existing inhibitors might work and predict possible resistance mutations.

Article Abstract

Enterovirus-D68 (EV68) has emerged as a global health concern over the last decade with severe symptomatic infections resulting in long-lasting neurological deficits and death. Unfortunately, there are currently no FDA-approved antiviral drugs for EV68 or any other non-polio enterovirus. One particularly attractive class of potential drugs are small molecules inhibitors, which can target the conserved active site of EV68-3C protease. For other viral proteases, we have demonstrated that the emergence of drug resistance can be minimized by designing inhibitors that leverage the evolutionary constraints of substrate specificity. However, the structural characterization of EV68-3C protease bound to its substrates has been lacking. Here, we have determined the substrate specificity of EV68-3C protease through molecular modeling, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, and co-crystal structures. Molecular models enabled us to successfully characterize the conserved hydrogen-bond networks between EV68-3C protease and the peptides corresponding to the viral cleavage sites. In addition, co-crystal structures we determined have revealed substrate-induced conformational changes of the protease which involved new interactions, primarily surrounding the S1 pocket. We calculated the substrate envelope, the three-dimensional consensus volume occupied by the substrates within the active site. With the elucidation of the EV68-3C protease substrate envelope, we evaluated how 3C protease inhibitors, AG7088 and SG-85, fit within the active site to predict potential resistance mutations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11437433PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v16091419DOI Listing

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