Literature detail

Identification of two critical amino acid residues of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus spike protein for its variation in zoonotic tropism transition via a double substitution strategy.

Xiu-Xia Qu1 Pei Hao Xi-Jun Song Si-Ming Jiang Yan-Xia Liu Pei-Gang Wang Xi Rao Huai-Dong Song Sheng-Yue Wang Yu Zuo Ai-Hua Zheng Min Luo Hua-Lin Wang Fei Deng Han-Zhong Wang Zhi-Hong Hu Ming-Xiao Ding Guo-Ping Zhao Hong-Kui Deng
Affiliations 1 institutions
  1. Department of Cell Biology and Genetics, College of Life Sciences, Peking University, Beijing, China.
PMID 15980414 2005 J Biol Chem eng ppublish
PubMed DOI Browse context

Article

Publication summary

Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) is a recently identified human coronavirus. The extremely high homology of the viral genomic sequences between the viruses isolated from human (huSARS-CoV) and those of palm civet origin (pcSARS-CoV) suggested possible palm civet-to-human transmission. Genetic analysis revealed that the spike (S) protein of pcSARS-CoV and huSARS-CoV was subjected to the strongest positive selection pressure during transmission, and there were six amino acid residues within the receptor-binding domain of the S protein being potentially important for SARS progression and tropism. Using the single-round infection assay, we found that a two-amino acid substitution (N479K/T487S) of a huSARS-CoV for those of pcSARS-CoV almost abolished its infection of human cells expressing the SARS-CoV receptor ACE2 but no effect upon the infection of mouse ACE2 cells. Although single substitution of these two residues had no effects on the infectivity of huSARS-CoV, these recombinant S proteins bound to human ACE2 with different levels of reduced affinity, and the two-amino acid-substituted S protein showed extremely low affinity. On the contrary, substitution of these two amino acid residues of pcSARS-CoV for those of huSRAS-CoV made pcSARS-CoV capable of infecting human ACE2-expressing cells. These results suggest that amino acid residues at position 479 and 487 of the S protein are important determinants for SARS-CoV tropism and animal-to-human transmission.

Zoonoses Amino Acid Sequence Amino Acid Substitution Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme 2 Binding Sites Carboxypeptidases Humans Membrane Glycoproteins Molecular Sequence Data Peptidyl-Dipeptidase A Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus Spike Glycoprotein, Coronavirus Structure-Activity Relationship Tropism Viral Envelope Proteins ACE2 protein, human Ace2 protein, mouse

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

3 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.98
Key finding

Mutations N479K and T487S in the SARS-CoV spike receptor-binding domain alter binding to the human ACE2 receptor and determine host tropism between palm civet and human SARS-CoV strains.

Virus
Host
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

A two-amino acid substitution (N479K/T487S) of a huSARS-CoV for those of pcSARS-CoV almost abolished its infection of human cells expressing the SARS-CoV receptor ACE2... substitution of these two amino acid residues of pcSARS-CoV for those of huSARS-CoV made pcSARS-CoV capable of infecting human ACE2-expressing cells.

Genes or proteins
spike
Receptors
ACE2
Mutations
N479K; T487S
Mechanism types
receptor_binding; tropism; host_adaptation
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Two amino acid changes in the SARS-CoV spike protein alter binding and infection specificity toward human versus mouse ACE2 receptors.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Using a single-round infection assay, a two-amino acid substitution (N479K/T487S) of a huSARS-CoV for those of pcSARS-CoV almost abolished its infection of human cells expressing the SARS-CoV receptor ACE2 but had no effect upon the infection of mouse ACE2 cells. These recombinant S proteins bound to human ACE2 with reduced affinity, and the double mutant showed extremely low affinity. Conversely, substitution of these residues in pcSARS-CoV made it capable of infecting human ACE2-expressing cells.

Method
single-round infection assay; binding assay
Receptors
ACE2
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Experimental amino acid substitution in SARS-CoV spike protein demonstrated molecular determinants enabling palm civet-to-human transmission of the virus.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

The extremely high homology of the viral genomic sequences between the viruses isolated from human (huSARS-CoV) and those of palm civet origin (pcSARS-CoV) suggested possible palm civet-to-human transmission... These results suggest that amino acid residues at position 479 and 487 of the S protein are important determinants for SARS-CoV tropism and animal-to-human transmission.

Method
genetic analysis; infection assay
Study design
molecular experiment
Transmission direction
animal-to-human