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Design of customized coronavirus receptors

Author

Listed:
  • Peng Liu

    (Wuhan University)

  • Mei-Ling Huang

    (Wuhan University)

  • Hua Guo

    (Chinese Academy of Sciences)

  • Matthew McCallum

    (University of Washington)

  • Jun-Yu Si

    (Wuhan University)

  • Yuan-Mei Chen

    (Wuhan University)

  • Chun-Li Wang

    (Wuhan University)

  • Xiao Yu

    (Wuhan University)

  • Lu-Lu Shi

    (Wuhan University)

  • Qing Xiong

    (Wuhan University)

  • Cheng-Bao Ma

    (Wuhan University)

  • John E. Bowen

    (University of Washington)

  • Fei Tong

    (Wuhan University)

  • Chen Liu

    (Wuhan University)

  • Ye-hui Sun

    (Wuhan University)

  • Xiao Yang

    (Wuhan University)

  • Jing Chen

    (Chinese Academy of Sciences)

  • Ming Guo

    (Wuhan University)

  • Jing Li

    (Wuhan University)

  • Davide Corti

    (subsidiary of Vir Biotechnology)

  • David Veesler

    (University of Washington
    University of Washington)

  • Zheng-Li Shi

    (Chinese Academy of Sciences
    Guangzhou International Bio Island)

  • Huan Yan

    (Wuhan University)

Abstract

Although coronaviruses use diverse receptors, the characterization of coronaviruses with unknown receptors has been impeded by a lack of infection models1,2. Here we introduce a strategy to engineer functional customized viral receptors (CVRs). The modular design relies on building artificial receptor scaffolds comprising various modules and generating specific virus-binding domains. We identify key factors for CVRs to functionally mimic native receptors by facilitating spike proteolytic cleavage, membrane fusion, pseudovirus entry and propagation for various coronaviruses. We delineate functional SARS-CoV-2 spike receptor-binding sites for CVR design and reveal the mechanism of cell entry promoted by the N-terminal domain-targeting S2L20-CVR. We generated CVR-expressing cells for 12 representative coronaviruses from 6 subgenera, most of which lack known receptors, and show that a pan-sarbecovirus CVR supports propagation of a propagation-competent HKU3 pseudovirus and of authentic RsHuB2019A3. Using an HKU5-specific CVR, we successfully rescued wild-type and ZsGreen-HiBiT-incorporated HKU5-1 (LMH03f) and isolated a HKU5 strain from bat samples. Our study demonstrates the potential of the CVR strategy for establishing native receptor-independent infection models, providing a tool for studying viruses that lack known susceptible target cells.

Suggested Citation

  • Peng Liu & Mei-Ling Huang & Hua Guo & Matthew McCallum & Jun-Yu Si & Yuan-Mei Chen & Chun-Li Wang & Xiao Yu & Lu-Lu Shi & Qing Xiong & Cheng-Bao Ma & John E. Bowen & Fei Tong & Chen Liu & Ye-hui Sun &, 2024. "Design of customized coronavirus receptors," Nature, Nature, vol. 635(8040), pages 978-986, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:635:y:2024:i:8040:d:10.1038_s41586-024-08121-5
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-08121-5
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