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Structural basis of anti-SARS-CoV-2 activity of HCQ: specific binding to N protein to disrupt its interaction with nucleic acids and LLPS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 November 2021

Mei Dang
Affiliation:
Department of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Science, National University of Singapore, 10 Kent Ridge Crescent, Singapore 119260, Singapore
Jianxing Song*
Affiliation:
Department of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Science, National University of Singapore, 10 Kent Ridge Crescent, Singapore 119260, Singapore
*
*Author for correspondence: Jianxing Song, E-mail: dbssjx@nus.edu.sg
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Abstract

HCQ specifically binds CTD to inhibit its interaction with nucleic acid. (a) (I) Superimposition of HSQC spectra of CTD in the free state (blue) and in the presence of HCQ at 1:7.5 (CTD:HCQ) (red). (II) Zoom of HSQC spectra of CTD in the absence (blue) and in presence of HCQ at 1:0.925 (cyan); 1:1.86 (black); 1:3.75 (green); 1:7.5 (red). The assignments of the significantly perturbed residues are labelled. (b) Residue-specific chemical shift difference (CSD) of CTD in the presence of HCQ at 1:3.75 (blue) and 1:7.5 (red) (CTD:HCQ). The significantly perturbed residues are labelled, which are defined as those with the CSD values at 1:7.5 > 0.093 (average value + one standard deviation) (cyan line). (c) Superimposition of HSQC spectra of CTD only in the presence of HCQ at 1:7.5 (red) and with additional addition of S2m at 1:1 (CTD:S2m) (blue).

SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid (N) protein plays the essential roles in key steps of the viral life cycle, thus representing a top drug target. Functionality of N protein including liquid–liquid phase separation (LLPS) depends on its interaction with nucleic acids. Only the variants with N proteins functional in binding nucleic acids might survive and spread in evolution and indeed, the residues critical for binding nucleic acids are highly conserved. Hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) was shown to prevent the transmission in a large-scale clinical study in Singapore but so far, no specific SARS-CoV-2 protein was experimentally identified to be targeted by HCQ. Here by NMR, we unambiguously decode that HCQ specifically binds NTD and CTD of N protein with Kd of 112.1 and 57.1 μM, respectively to inhibit their interaction with nucleic acid, as well as to disrupt LLPS. Most importantly, HCQ-binding residues are identical in SARS-CoV-2 variants and therefore HCQ is likely effective to different variants. The results not only provide a structural basis for the anti-SARS-CoV-2 activity of HCQ, but also renders HCQ to be the first known drug capable of targeting LLPS. Furthermore, the unique structure of the HCQ-CTD complex suggests a promising strategy for design of better anti-SARS-CoV-2 drugs from HCQ.

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Type
Research Article
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Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Fig. 1. HCQ specifically binds NTD to inhibit its interaction with nucleic acid. (a) (I) Superimposition of HSQC spectra of NTD in the free state (blue) and in the presence of HCQ at 1:15 (NTD:HCQ) (red). The assignments of the significantly perturbed residues are labelled. (II) Zoom of HSQC spectra of NTD in the absence (blue) and in presence of HCQ at 1:1.88 (cyan); 1:3.75 (black); 1:7.5 (green); 1:15 (red). (b) Residue-specific chemical shift difference (CSD) of NTD in the presence of HCQ at 1:7.5 (blue) and 1:15 (red) (NTD:HCQ). The significantly perturbed residues are labelled, which are defined as those with the CSD values at 1:15 > 0.084 (average value + one standard deviation) (cyan line). (c) Superimposition of HSQC spectra of NTD only in the presence of HCQ at 1:15 (red) and with additional addition of S2m at 1;2.5 (NTD:S2m) (blue).

Figure 1

Fig. 2. NMR characterisation of the binding of HCQ to NTD. (a) Eleven significantly perturbed residues of NTD upon binding to HCQ. (b) Fitting of 11 NTD residue-specific dissociation constant (Kd): experimental (dots) and fitted (lines) values for the CSDs induced by addition of HCQ at different ratios. (I) Trp52 (brown), Leu56 (red), His59 (cyan) and Ser79 (green). (II) Gly147 (brown), Ile157 (red), Val158 (cyan) and Leu159 (green). (III) Thr166 (brown), Ala173 (red) and Glu174 (cyan). (c) Structure of the HCQ-NTD complex with HCQ in sticks and NTD in ribbon (I) and in electrostatic potential surface (II).

Figure 2

Fig. 3. HCQ specifically binds CTD to inhibit its interaction with nucleic acid. (a) (I) Superimposition of HSQC spectra of CTD in the free state (blue) and in the presence of HCQ at 1:7.5 (CTD:HCQ) (red). (II) Zoom of HSQC spectra of CTD in the absence (blue) and in presence of HCQ at 1:0.925 (cyan); 1:1.86 (black); 1:3.75 (green); 1:7.5 (red). The assignments of the significantly perturbed residues are labelled. (b) Residue-specific chemical shift difference (CSD) of CTD in the presence of HCQ at 1:3.75 (blue) and 1:7.5 (red) (CTD:HCQ). The significantly perturbed residues are labelled, which are defined as those with the CSD values at 1:7.5 > 0.093 (average value + one standard deviation) (cyan line). (c) Superimposition of HSQC spectra of CTD only in the presence of HCQ at 1:7.5 (red) and with additional addition of S2m at 1:1 (CTD:S2m) (blue).

Figure 3

Fig. 4. NMR characterisation of the binding of HCQ to CTD. (a) Seven significantly perturbed residues of CTD upon binding to HCQ. (b) Fitting of seven CTD residue-specific dissociation constant (Kd): experimental (dots) and fitted (lines) values for the CSDs induced by addition of HCQ at different ratios. (I) Gln281 (brown), Thr282 (red), Thr325 (cyan) and Thr329 (green). (II) Trp330 (brown), Ala336 (red) and Ile337 (cyan). (c) Structure of the HCQ-CTD complex with HCQ in sticks and CTD in ribbon (I) and in electrostatic potential surface (II).

Figure 4

Fig. 5. HCQ disrupts LLPS of SARS-CoV-2 N protein. (a) Turbidity curves of N protein in the presence of S2m at different ratios (I). (II) Turbidity curves of N protein in the absence (red) or in the presence of S2m at 1:0.75 (green) with additional addition of HCQ at different ratios. (b) DIC images of N protein in the presence of S2m at different ratios. (c) DIC images of N protein in the presence of S2m at 1:0.75 with additional addition of HCQ at different ratios.

Supplementary material: PDF

Dang and Song supplementary material

Table S1 and Figures S1-S7

Download Dang and Song supplementary material(PDF)
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Review: Structural basis of anti-SARS-CoV-2 activity of HCQ: specific binding to N protein to disrupt its interaction with nucleic acids and LLPS. — R0/PR1

Conflict of interest statement

Reviewer declares none. no conflict.

Comments

Comments to Author: This is a very well conducted study with interesting results. The structures are well presented and the NMR work carefully done.

My minor revision suggestion is about some minor language problems- the ms should be scrutinized again before publication.

examples of some problems:

p.6, 2nd para., line 4:... NTD characteristic of broadening of HSQC... (difficult to understand)

p. 10, 1st para., line 8:...valueless... (do you mean valuable?)

p. 11, 3rd para., line 2:.. effective... (do you really mean effective?)

In figures 2 and 4 you call one color "brown", but in my print it more looks like yellow (?)

Review: Structural basis of anti-SARS-CoV-2 activity of HCQ: specific binding to N protein to disrupt its interaction with nucleic acids and LLPS. — R0/PR2

Conflict of interest statement

Reviewer dedclares none.

Comments

Comments to Author: This paper describes experiments, mostly using NMR titrations, that are used to conclude that hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) binds to both the N-terminal and C-terminal domains of the N protein of SARS-Cov2, and is capable of displacing bound nucleic acids, and of disrupting LLPS. It is concluded that HCQ forms a viable drug target.

The authors use a DNA ligand in this study, which they describe as stem-loop but also as single stranded. Presumably this means that at least part is double stranded? Please explain. The biological ligand is RNA. Please provide justification for why DNA is an appropriate molecule to choose, and why RNA was not used.

The NMR data are fairly convincing that there is specific binding to both domains. The binding is however very weak. The authors’ use of molar ratio in their presentations is perfectly reasonable, but hides the fact that it takes a very high concentration of HCQ to cause a useful effect: if they are using 100 uM or 200 uM domain, and only seeing reductions in binding with ratios of around 10-fold, then they need HCQ concentrations of at least 1 mM to see any useful reduction in binding. This point needs making clearly in the manuscript.

In some of the chemical structures (Fig S1, Fig S7) some of the letters and numbers are reversed. Please correct these.

Figs S2, S3, S4, S5 present NMR spectra showing loss of signal intensity due to S2m binding, which then recovers on addition of HCQ. A good indication of binding is that the effects on the spectrum should be specific, ie some peaks shift or reduce in intensity while others do not. My impression from these spectra is that all the peaks simply reduce in intensity fairly uniformly. It is clearly true that some peaks remain red for longer, but these are peaks that typically are sharp and intense anyway. The authors should present an analysis of signal loss across the peaks in the spectrum, to show if there is any clear evidence for specific loss of intensity rather than a general loss of intensity everywhere. In the text, the authors comment (page 7) that the loss of intensity is due to an intermediate exchange binding. If my interpretation is correct, then actually it is just protein precipitation or aggregation (eg in LLPS), which need not reflect any direct binding at all, and certainly says nothing about the timescale. So the authors need to analyse and present their data more carefully.

Decision: Structural basis of anti-SARS-CoV-2 activity of HCQ: specific binding to N protein to disrupt its interaction with nucleic acids and LLPS. — R0/PR3

Comments

Comments to Author: Reviewer #1: This paper describes experiments, mostly using NMR titrations, that are used to conclude that hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) binds to both the N-terminal and C-terminal domains of the N protein of SARS-Cov2, and is capable of displacing bound nucleic acids, and of disrupting LLPS. It is concluded that HCQ forms a viable drug target.

The authors use a DNA ligand in this study, which they describe as stem-loop but also as single stranded. Presumably this means that at least part is double stranded? Please explain. The biological ligand is RNA. Please provide justification for why DNA is an appropriate molecule to choose, and why RNA was not used.

The NMR data are fairly convincing that there is specific binding to both domains. The binding is however very weak. The authors’ use of molar ratio in their presentations is perfectly reasonable, but hides the fact that it takes a very high concentration of HCQ to cause a useful effect: if they are using 100 uM or 200 uM domain, and only seeing reductions in binding with ratios of around 10-fold, then they need HCQ concentrations of at least 1 mM to see any useful reduction in binding. This point needs making clearly in the manuscript.

In some of the chemical structures (Fig S1, Fig S7) some of the letters and numbers are reversed. Please correct these.

Figs S2, S3, S4, S5 present NMR spectra showing loss of signal intensity due to S2m binding, which then recovers on addition of HCQ. A good indication of binding is that the effects on the spectrum should be specific, ie some peaks shift or reduce in intensity while others do not. My impression from these spectra is that all the peaks simply reduce in intensity fairly uniformly. It is clearly true that some peaks remain red for longer, but these are peaks that typically are sharp and intense anyway. The authors should present an analysis of signal loss across the peaks in the spectrum, to show if there is any clear evidence for specific loss of intensity rather than a general loss of intensity everywhere. In the text, the authors comment (page 7) that the loss of intensity is due to an intermediate exchange binding. If my interpretation is correct, then actually it is just protein precipitation or aggregation (eg in LLPS), which need not reflect any direct binding at all, and certainly says nothing about the timescale. So the authors need to analyse and present their data more carefully.

Reviewer #2: This is a very well conducted study with interesting results. The structures are well presented and the NMR work carefully done.

My minor revision suggestion is about some minor language problems- the ms should be scrutinized again before publication.

examples of some problems:

p.6, 2nd para., line 4:... NTD characteristic of broadening of HSQC... (difficult to understand)

p. 10, 1st para., line 8:...valueless... (do you mean valuable?)

p. 11, 3rd para., line 2:.. effective... (do you really mean effective?)

In figures 2 and 4 you call one color "brown", but in my print it more looks like yellow (?)

Review: Structural basis of anti-SARS-CoV-2 activity of HCQ: specific binding to N protein to disrupt its interaction with nucleic acids and LLPS. — R1/PR4

Conflict of interest statement

Reviewer declares none. no conflict.

Review: Structural basis of anti-SARS-CoV-2 activity of HCQ: specific binding to N protein to disrupt its interaction with nucleic acids and LLPS. — R1/PR5

Conflict of interest statement

Reviewer dedclares none.

Comments

Comments to Author: This paper reports a novel and interesting observation, and so certainly fits into the remit of this journal. Because QRD takes papers that are slightly speculative, I have applied a slightly less rigorous standard of proof here than I would normally do. The authors have clearly demonstrated interactions between the NTD, S2m, and HCQ. How specific these are is much more difficult to determine. LLPS is by its nature a bulk phase separation rather than a specific binding event, and I therefore feel it would be unfair to look for too much evidence of specific intermolecular interactions. Overall I feel roughly 50% confident that there is a genuine and biologically relevant interaction going on here. Given the topic and the journal, I feel this is acceptable.

A key point is that the interaction is very weak: it requires concentrations of HCQ approaching 1 mM in order to see convincing effects. At the end of the paper, the authors note that joining together two HCQ molecules could produce stronger binding. This is true, and a helpful point, but nevertheless the authors should make it clear that the interactions that they are seeing are extremely weak, implying that the observations they make here are unlikely to provide an explanation for any possible therapeutic effect of HCQ. At the very least, they need to say this explicitly in the abstract and the discussion.

They quote their dissociation constants to one decimal place. These are far too precise given the errors in the determination: I suggest that for example 50 - 20 would be a more suitable precision.

Fig S2 shows the results of adding S2m to NTD. Signals broaden, but I suspect this is due to incorporation of the NTD into an amorphous phase-separated aggregate. This implies that the peak broadening is not due to intermediate exchange (page 6) but to formation of a slowly tumbling aggregate. The text here should be changed. I suspect that all signals are decreasing in intensity together - is this true? If they are, then this is almost certainly formation of an aggregate.

On page 10, the authors describe small molecule drugs as "valueless". I suspect they mean exactly the opposite (ie valuable, or the confusing but acceptable word invaluable).

Page 12 line 2:"Kd value is the time" - the word time should be product.

In Figure 2, can the authors explain the significance of the colours used in (A).

Supplementary figures S1 and S7 have structures drawn upside down. Please change them.

Decision: Structural basis of anti-SARS-CoV-2 activity of HCQ: specific binding to N protein to disrupt its interaction with nucleic acids and LLPS. — R1/PR6

Comments

Comments to Author: Reviewer #1: This paper reports a novel and interesting observation, and so certainly fits into the remit of this journal. Because QRD takes papers that are slightly speculative, I have applied a slightly less rigorous standard of proof here than I would normally do. The authors have clearly demonstrated interactions between the NTD, S2m, and HCQ. How specific these are is much more difficult to determine. LLPS is by its nature a bulk phase separation rather than a specific binding event, and I therefore feel it would be unfair to look for too much evidence of specific intermolecular interactions. Overall I feel roughly 50% confident that there is a genuine and biologically relevant interaction going on here. Given the topic and the journal, I feel this is acceptable.

A key point is that the interaction is very weak: it requires concentrations of HCQ approaching 1 mM in order to see convincing effects. At the end of the paper, the authors note that joining together two HCQ molecules could produce stronger binding. This is true, and a helpful point, but nevertheless the authors should make it clear that the interactions that they are seeing are extremely weak, implying that the observations they make here are unlikely to provide an explanation for any possible therapeutic effect of HCQ. At the very least, they need to say this explicitly in the abstract and the discussion.

They quote their dissociation constants to one decimal place. These are far too precise given the errors in the determination: I suggest that for example 50 - 20 would be a more suitable precision.

Fig S2 shows the results of adding S2m to NTD. Signals broaden, but I suspect this is due to incorporation of the NTD into an amorphous phase-separated aggregate. This implies that the peak broadening is not due to intermediate exchange (page 6) but to formation of a slowly tumbling aggregate. The text here should be changed. I suspect that all signals are decreasing in intensity together - is this true? If they are, then this is almost certainly formation of an aggregate.

On page 10, the authors describe small molecule drugs as "valueless". I suspect they mean exactly the opposite (ie valuable, or the confusing but acceptable word invaluable).

Page 12 line 2:"Kd value is the time" - the word time should be product.

In Figure 2, can the authors explain the significance of the colours used in (A).

Supplementary figures S1 and S7 have structures drawn upside down. Please change them.