A comprehensive survey of coronaviral main protease active site diversity in 3D: Identifying and analyzing drug discovery targets in search of broad specificity inhibitors for the next coronavirus pandemic
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
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Abstract
Although the rapid development of therapeutic responses to combat SARS-CoV-2 represents a great human
achievement, it also demonstrates untapped potential for advanced pandemic preparedness. Cross-species
efficacy against multiple human coronaviruses by the main protease (MPro) inhibitor nirmatrelvir raises
the question of its breadth of inhibition and our preparedness against future coronaviral threats. Herein, we
describe sequence and structural analyses of 346 unique MPro enzymes from all coronaviruses represented
in the NCBI Virus database. Cognate substrates of these representative proteases were inferred from their
polyprotein sequences. We clustered MPro sequences based on sequence identity and AlphaFold2-
predicted structures, showing approximate correspondence with known viral subspecies. Predicted
structures of five representative MPros bound to their inferred cognate substrates showed high conservation
in protease:substrate interaction modes, with some notable differences. Yeast-based proteolysis assays of
the five representatives were able to confirm activity of three on inferred cognate substrates, and
demonstrated that of the three, only one was effectively inhibited by nirmatrelvir. Our findings suggest that
comprehensive preparedness against future potential coronaviral threats will require continued inhibitor
development. Our methods may be applied to candidate coronaviral MPro inhibitors to evaluate in advance
the breadth of their inhibition and identify target coronaviruses potentially meriting advanced development
of alternative countermeasures.
