envelope

Identification of a New Region of SARS-CoV S Protein Critical for Viral Entry

Journal of Molecular Biology
Volume 394, Issue 4, 11 December 2009, Pages 600-605

Ying Guo, Jennifer Tisoncik, Susanna McReynolds, Michael Farzan, Bellur S. Prabhakar, Thomas Gallagher, Lijun Rong, Michael Caffrey.

Abstract

Infection by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) is initiated by specific interactions between the SARS-CoV spike (S) protein and its receptor ACE2. In this report, we screened a peptide library representing the SARS-CoV S protein sequence using a human immunodeficiency virus-based pseudotyping system to identify specific regions that affect viral entry. One of the 169 peptides screened, peptide 9626 (S residues 217–234), inhibited SARS-CoV S-mediated entry of the pseudotyped virions in 293T cells expressing a functional SARS-CoV receptor (human angiotensin-converting enzyme 2) in a dose-dependent manner (IC50 ∼ 11 μM). Alanine scanning mutagenesis was performed to assess the roles of individual residues within this region of S, which was previously uncharacterized. The effects included significant reductions in expression (K223A), viral incorporation (L218A, I230A, and N232A), and reduced viral entry (L224A, L226A, I228A, T231A, and F233A). Taken together, these results reveal a new region of the S protein that is crucial for SARS-CoV entry.

Keywords

viral entry, SARS-CoV, envelope, mutagenesis, spike