<i>De novo</i> design of ACE2 protein decoys to neutralize SARS-CoV-2

Thomas W. Linsky(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Renan Vergara(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Núria Codina(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Jorgen Nelson(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Matthew J. Walker(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Wen Su(University of Hong Kong), Tien-Ying Hsiang(University of Washington), Katharina Esser‐Nobis(University of Washington), Kevin Yu(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Yixuan J. Hou(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Tanu Priya(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Masaya Mitsumoto(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Avery Pong(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Uland Y. Lau(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Marsha L. Mason(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Jerry Chen(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Alex Chen(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Tania Berrocal(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Hong Peng(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Nicole S. Clairmont(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Javier Castellanos(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Yu‐Ru Lin(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Anna Josephson-Day(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Ralph S. Baric(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Carl Walkey(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Ryan Swanson(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Michael Gale(University of Washington), Luis M. Blancas‐Mejía(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States)), Hui‐Ling Yen(University of Hong Kong), Daniel‐Adriano Silva(Neoleukin Therapeutics (United States))
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
August 3, 2020
Cited by 38Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract There is an urgent need for the ability to rapidly develop effective countermeasures for emerging biological threats, such as the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) that causes the ongoing coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. We have developed a generalized computational design strategy to rapidly engineer de novo proteins that precisely recapitulate the protein surface targeted by biological agents, like viruses, to gain entry into cells. The designed proteins act as decoys that block cellular entry and aim to be resilient to viral mutational escape. Using our novel platform, in less than ten weeks, we engineered, validated, and optimized de novo protein decoys of human angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (hACE2), the membrane-associated protein that SARS-CoV-2 exploits to infect cells. Our optimized designs are hyperstable de novo proteins (∼18-37 kDa), have high affinity for the SARS-CoV-2 receptor binding domain (RBD) and can potently inhibit the virus infection and replication in vitro. Future refinements to our strategy can enable the rapid development of other therapeutic de novo protein decoys, not limited to neutralizing viruses, but to combat any agent that explicitly interacts with cell surface proteins to cause disease.


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