

research communications
Nucleotide-bound crystal structures of the SARS-CoV-2 helicase NSP13
aDepartment of Molecular Structural Biology, Institute of Microbiology and Genetics,
Göttingen Center of Molecular Biosciences (GZMB), University of Göttingen, Justus-von-Liebig-Weg
11, 37077 Göttingen, Germany, and bCluster of Excellence `Multiscale Bioimaging: From Molecular Machines to Networks
of Excitable Cells' (MBExC), University of Göttingen, Justus-von-Liebig-Weg 11, 37077
Göttingen, Germany
*Correspondence e-mail: [email protected]
Nucleotide-bound crystal structures of SARS-CoV-2 NSP13 in ADP- and ATP-bound states were resolved to 1.8 and 1.9 Å, respectively. The ADP-bound model captures a state immediately following ATP hydrolysis, with both ADP and orthophosphate still present in the active site. Further comparative analysis revealed that crystal packing influences NSP13 by stabilizing the nucleotide-binding site, underscoring the importance of accounting for these effects in structure-based drug design targeting NSP13.
Keywords: SARS-CoV-2; NSP13 helicase; nucleotide-binding sites; inorganic phosphate; ADP-bound structure; ATP-bound structure; COVID-19.
PDB references: SARS-CoV-2 helicase NSP13, complex with ADP, 9i51; complex with ATP, 9i53
1. Introduction
Nonstructural protein 13 (NSP13), a helicase, is a critical component of the replication
machinery in SARS-CoV-2. During the viral life cycle, NSP13 associates with other
nonstructural proteins to form the replication–transcription complex (RTC; Chen et al., 2020). NSP13 exhibits diverse enzymatic activities, including NTPase activity, NTP-dependent
translocation on RNA and DNA, and RNA 5′-triphosphatase activity (Newman et al., 2021
), which enable it to perform essential roles in the replication and transcription
of the SARS-CoV-2 genome. In particular, NSP13 contributes to resolving RNA secondary
structures, displacing nucleic acid-bound proteins, facilitating transcriptional backtracking,
regulating replication fidelity, enabling capping and mediating template switching (Grimes & Denison, 2024
). The critical role of NSP13 in viral replication is further emphasized by its high
conservation across coronaviruses, including SARS-CoV-1 and MERS-CoV. Remarkably,
NSP13 from SARS-CoV-2 differs by only a single amino-acid substitution (V570I) from
its SARS-CoV-1 counterpart and shares 70% sequence identity with MERS-CoV NSP13. Furthermore,
structural comparisons using the DALI server (Holm et al., 2023
; http://ekhidna2.biocenter.helsinki.fi/dali/) revealed significant structural homology among these NSP13 variants, as shown by
high DALI Z-scores (≥42.1 for PDB entries 6szl, 6jyt and 5wwp).
Known crystal and cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) structures of SARS-CoV-2 NSP13
reveal a 67 kDa monomer with a triangular pyramidal architecture, consisting of five
distinct domains: an N-terminal zinc-binding domain (ZBD), a stalk domain, the 1B
domain and two RecA-like helicase core domains (RecA1 and RecA2), as illustrated in
Fig. 1. The ZBD interacts with NSP8, as observed in cryo-EM structures, anchoring NSP13
to the RTC and facilitating its integration into replication and transcription processes
(Chen et al., 2020
). The remaining domains, including the 1B, stalk and RecA domains, form the RNA-binding
tunnel, while the RecA1 and RecA2 domains also form the nucleotide-binding site of
NSP13. Interestingly, the nucleotide-binding site shows significant structural similarity
to the human Upf1 helicase (hUpf1; PDB entry 2gk7; DALI Z-score 22.7), classifying NSP13 as a Upf1-like helicase within superfamily 1B (SF1B).
The SF1B helicases are characterized by their 5′–3′ polarity, their ability to act
on both DNA and RNA substrates, and conserved motifs within their RecA domains (Raney
et al., 2013
).
![]() |
Figure 1 Domain architecture and structural features of SARS-CoV-2 NSP13. (a) Schematic representation of the domain organization of NSP13, consisting of five domains: the zinc-binding domain (ZBD, green), stalk domain (S, wheat), 1B domain (grey), RecA1 domain (orange) and RecA2 domain (blue). The 1B domain and RecA1 domain are connected by an unstructured linker (dark grey). The conserved helicase motifs (I–VI) within the RecA1 and RecA2 domains are displayed with their respective residue ranges and sequences within NSP13. (b) Surface representation of the three-dimensional structure of NSP13, with domains coloured as in (a). Key structural features include the nucleotide-binding site, formed between the RecA1 and RecA2 domains, and the RNA tunnel, formed by all domains except the ZBD. The structure is presented in two orientations rotated horizontally by 100°. |
The helicase activity of NSP13 is facilitated by a series of conserved motifs, as
described by Fairman-Williams et al. (2010). These motifs include motif I (residues 282–289, GPPGTGKS), motif Ia (residues 307–313,
TACSHAA), motif II (residues 373–378, FDEISM), motif III (residues 400–407, GDPAQLPA)
and motif IV (residues 439–443, GTCRR; sometimes referred to as motif IIIa in the
SF1 context), as well as motif V (residues 533–538, VDSSQG) and motif VI (residues
563–569, VAITRAK). Motifs I, II and IV play key roles in ATP binding and hydrolysis,
whereas motifs Ia, III, V and VI are involved in RNA binding and in coupling the energy
from ATP hydrolysis to helicase activity (Raney et al., 2013
).
Interestingly, the nucleotide-binding site of NSP13 is highly conserved across coronaviruses
(Newman et al., 2021). An analysis of the amino acids lining this site across 27 α- and β-coronaviruses revealed that 79% of the residues are identical, underscoring the functional
importance of this site and establishing it as an attractive target for antiviral
drug development. Detailed structural analyses have provided valuable insights into
the nucleotide-binding site, highlighting its interactions and viability as a drug
target. Remarkably, the AMP-PNP-bound revealed distinct nucleotide-binding modes, while a fragment screen identified several
fragments that bind to this site, offering promising starting points for inhibitor
development (Newman et al., 2021
). Additionally, cryo-EM structures have illuminated the role of NSP13 within the
RTC, showing NSP13 bound to RNA and to the ADP–Mg2+–AlF3 complex, which mimics the transition from ATP to ADP (Chen et al., 2022
).
In this study, nucleotide-bound crystal structures of SARS-CoV-2 NSP13 are presented, featuring bound ADP and ATP. The ADP-bound structure captures the product state of NSP13, offering valuable structural insights following the hydrolysis of ATP. Furthermore, the findings highlight how crystal packing may influence the observed NSP13 conformation, revealing challenges in accurately resolving ligand and inhibitor complexes with SARS-CoV-2 NSP13.
2. Methods
2.1. Protein production and purification
The production and purification of NSP13 from SARS-CoV-2 (NCBI Accession YP_009725308)
were performed as described in Kloskowski et al. (2025). Briefly, a modified pET-52b(+) vector was used to express NSP13 with an N-terminal
Strep-tag II in Escherichia coli Rosetta 2 (DE3). The protein was purified using a StrepTrap XT column (Cytiva), followed
by tag removal via TEV protease digestion and further purification by on a Superdex 200 16/60 column (Cytiva). The purified protein was dissolved in a
buffer consisting of 50 mM HEPES pH 7.5, 500 mM NaCl, 0.5 mM TCEP and then concentrated to 20 mg ml−1.
2.2. Protein crystallization, ligand co-crystallization and ligand soaking
The protein crystals used for soaking and co-crystallization experiments were obtained
as described in Kloskowski et al. (2025) and in Table 1
. Briefly, the reservoir solution comprised 16% ethylene glycol, 8% PEG 8000, 0.05 M HEPES, 0.05 M MOPS, 0.03 M sodium nitrate, 0.03 M sodium phosphate, 0.03 M ammonium sulfate and 9% MPD.
|
For co-crystallization, NSP13 was incubated with ADP or ATP at a fivefold to 20-fold
molar excess for 30–60 min at room temperature (RT) before crystallization. In soaking
experiments, pre-grown crystals were exposed to 5–50 mM ADP or ATP for 30 min to 2 h. Prior to flash-cooling, crystals were cryoprotected
in reservoir solution supplemented with increased concentrations of ethylene glycol
and PEG 8000 (Table 1). No magnesium ions were included in any soaking or co-crystallization solution,
as their presence would stimulate ATP hydrolysis. ADP was soaked under the same metal-free
conditions to ensure that the ATP and ADP data sets were collected in an identical
chemical environment.
2.3. Data collection, and ligand identification
Diffraction data from putative nucleotide-bound SARS-CoV-2 NSP13 crystals were collected
on EMBL beamline P13, PETRA III, DESY, Hamburg, Germany and processed with autoPROC (Vonrhein et al., 2011), which integrates XDS, POINTLESS, AIMLESS and CCP4 (Evans & Murshudov, 2013
; Kabsch, 2010
; Winn et al., 2011
; Evans, 2006
). Data-collection and processing statistics are provided in Table 2
. was performed with DIMPLE (Wojdyr et al., 2013
), a macromolecular crystallography pipeline utilizing programs from the CCP4 suite (Murshudov et al., 2011
; Agirre et al., 2023
). PDB entry 6zsl (Newman et al., 2021
) was used as the initial search model for molecular replacement.
|
DIMPLE's integrated blob function reported unmodelled electron density at the nucleotide-binding
site of the soaked NSP13 crystals located in each of the two monomers of the (chains A and B). It was attributed to ADP or ATP, depending on the soaking experiment. In chain
B of both structures, the difference electron-density map indicated the presence of
a partially occupied β-phosphate that was bound prior to soaking experiments. The refined occupancies amounted
to 0.30 and 0.29 for the ADP- and ATP-bound structures, respectively. Near each bound
nucleotide molecule, an inorganic phosphate originating from the crystallization conditions
(Table 1) was observed. Additionally, an extra ADP or ATP molecule was identified between
the two NSP13 chains occupying the Further unmodelled electron density corresponding to the reservoir buffer component
MOPS was observed at the 5′-RNA binding site of chain A and chain B in each consistent with previous findings (Kloskowski et al., 2025
).
Each atomic model underwent manual rebuilding in Coot (Emsley et al., 2010) with alternating reciprocal-space and real-space cycles using a Phenix-based pipeline (Garbers et al., 2024
). Refined structures of ADP- and ATP-bound NSP13 have been submitted to the Protein
Data Bank as PDB entries 9i51 and 9i53, respectively (Table 3
). Figures were prepared using the open-source version of PyMOL (version 2.6; Schrödinger).
|
2.4. Interaction analysis
Intermolecular interactions between the residues of SARS-CoV-2 NSP13, the Arpeggio webserver (https://biosig.lab.uq.edu.au/arpeggioweb/; Jubb et al., 2017). This analysis provided detailed insights into the interactions at the nucleotide-binding
site, highlighting both similarities and differences between the ADP-bound and ATP-bound
structures of SARS-CoV-2 NSP13.
3. Results
Nucleotide-bound crystal structures of SARS-CoV-2 NSP13 were determined in ADP-bound
and ATP-bound states at resolutions of 1.8 and 1.9 Å, respectively (Table 2). NSP13, a 67 kDa protein with a triangular pyramidal architecture, comprises five
distinct domains, including two RecA-like domains that form its nucleotide-binding
site (Fig. 1
). Considering its critical role in viral RNA replication and its high conservation,
NSP13 represents a compelling target for antiviral development against SARS-CoV-2
and other coronaviruses with pandemic potential.
The determined crystal structures revealed that ADP and ATP bind to a site formed
by the RecA1 and RecA2 domains of NSP13, as expected, with each nucleotide accompanied
by an inorganic phosphate derived from the crystallization conditions (Table 1). These structures were analysed to identify key interactions between the bound ligands
and the two NSP13 molecules (chains A and B) in the as shown in Fig. 2
.
![]() |
Figure 2 Phosphate and nucleotide binding in the phosphate-bound, ADP-bound and ATP-bound structures of NSP13. NSP13 is depicted in cartoon representation, showing the RecA1 domain (orange) and the RecA2 domain (blue). Phosphates are shown in ball-and-stick format coloured by atom, and the nucleotide is shown in cyan ball-and-stick format. Interacting residues are labelled and shown as sticks, with hydrogen bonds (red), salt bridges (yellow), π–π interactions (white), cation–π interactions (green) and donor–π interactions (blue) depicted. The polder OMIT mFo − DFc electron-density map for inorganic phosphate, ADP and ATP is displayed as a blue mesh contoured at the ≥3.5σ level. Nucleotide-binding sites are shown for the phosphate-bound structure (PDB entry 9i4v), with chain A in (a) and chain B in (b), the ADP-bound structure (PDB entry 9i51), with chain A in (c) and chain B in (d), and the ATP-bound structure (PDB entry 9i53), with chain A in (e) and chain B in (f). |
In chain A of the ADP-bound structure, ADP establishes multiple interactions within the nucleotide-binding
site of NSP13 (Fig. 2c). The purine ring of ADP is sandwiched between the His290 side chain, forming π–π stacking interactions, and Arg442, which engages in cation–π and donor–π interactions, along with a hydrogen bond to Ser264. The ribose moiety interacts with
Lys320 via a hydrogen bond, while the α-phosphate forms a hydrogen bond to Gly287. The β-phosphate establishes hydrogen bonds to Gly285, Gly287, Lys288 and Ser289. The inorganic
phosphate bound within the nucleotide-binding site forms hydrogen bonds to Gln404
and Gly538. Potential salt bridges are observed between the β-phosphate and Lys288 and Arg443, as well as between the inorganic phosphate and Lys288,
Arg443 and Arg567.
Notable differences in ADP binding were observed between chains A and B. In chain B (Fig. 2d), the purine ring of ADP does not form a hydrogen bond to Ser264, as seen in chain
A. Instead, the ribose forms an additional hydrogen bond to Lys320, and the α-phosphate establishes a potential salt bridge with Arg443. These changes indicate
a shift of ADP within the nucleotide-binding site towards the protein atoms of NSP13.
In particular, the C1′ atom of the ribose of ADP in chain B is displaced by 1.2 Å, while the P atom of the β-phosphate shifts in the same direction by 0.9 Å. The P atom of the inorganic phosphate
is shifted by 0.6 Å. Furthermore, the distance between the P atoms of the ADP β-phosphate and the inorganic phosphate decreases by 0.5 Å (distance in chain A, 5.0 Å; distance in chain B, 4.5 Å). Pairwise structural alignment of the two chains yielded an all-atom r.m.s.d.
of 0.99 Å. The nucleotide-binding sites in both chains are nearly identical, with
the only significant difference being the conformation of the Arg442 side chain, which
undergoes a shift of 3.9 Å (based on the Cζ atoms). This conformational change is likely to trigger the observed nucleotide shift
within the binding site of NSP13, as illustrated in Fig. 3
.
![]() |
Figure 3 Nucleotide shift between chain A and chain B of the ADP-bound and ATP-bound structures of SARS-CoV-2 NSP13. NSP13 is shown in cartoon representation, with chain A coloured (RecA1 domain in orange, RecA2 domain in blue) and chain B outlined in black. The side chains of Arg442 are depicted in stick format, while are shown in ball-and-stick format, coloured cyan for chain A and outlined in black for chain B. Nucleotide shifts between chain A and chain B are illustrated for the ADP-bound (a) and ATP-bound (b) structures of NSP13 (PDB entries 9i51 and 9i53, respectively). |
In chain A of the ATP-bound structure, ATP adopts a binding pattern similar to that of ADP in
chain A of the ADP-bound structure (Fig. 2e). The purine ring of ATP is sandwiched between His290, forming π–π interactions, and Arg442, establishing cation–π and donor–π interactions, along with a hydrogen bond to Ser264. The α-phosphate of ATP establishes hydrogen bonds to Ser289 and His290, while the ribose
forms a hydrogen bond to Lys320. The β-phosphate engages in a hydrogen bond with Gly287, and the γ-phosphate forms hydrogen bonds to Gly285, Gly287, Lys288 and Ser289. The inorganic
phosphate observed in the nucleotide-binding site forms hydrogen bonds to Gln404 and
Gly538. Potential salt bridges are observed between the α-phosphate and Lys320, the β- and γ-phosphates and Arg443 and Lys288, and the inorganic phosphate and Lys288, Arg443
and Arg567.
Differences in ligand-binding interactions between chains A and B of the ATP-bound structure closely mirrored those observed in the ADP-bound structure.
In chain B (Fig. 2d), the purine ring of ATP does not form a hydrogen bond to Ser264, as seen in chain
A. Instead, the ribose forms hydrogen bonds to Lys320, while the α-phosphate establishes a potential salt bridge with Arg443. The β-phosphate in chain B occupies a position similar to the γ-phosphate in chain A, while the γ-phosphate is repositioned and forms hydrogen bonds to Lys288 and Ser289. These differences
indicate a shift of ATP in chain B towards the protein atoms within the nucleotide-binding site of NSP13. This shift
is characterized by a 2.0 Å displacement of the C1′ atom of the ribose and a 2.5 Å
displacement of the γ-phosphate. The P atom of the inorganic phosphate is shifted by 0.5 Å. Furthermore,
the distance between the P atoms of the ATP γ-phosphate and the inorganic phosphate decreases by 0.3 Å (distance in chain A, 4.8 Å; distance in chain B, 4.5 Å). Pairwise structural alignment of the two chains yielded an all-atom r.m.s.d.
of 1.05 Å. The nucleotide-binding sites are highly similar, with the only significant
difference being the conformation of the Arg442 side chain, which undergoes a shift
of 4.0 Å (based on the Cζ atoms). These structural differences in ATP binding are illustrated in Fig. 3
, aligning with the findings from the ADP-bound structure and underscoring the role
of Arg442 in facilitating nucleotide repositioning within NSP13.
Each nucleotide-bound . Furthermore, no differences were observed between corresponding chains of the ADP-
and ATP-bound structures, despite the binding of different as shown by an all-atom r.m.s.d. of 0.18 Å for chain A and 0.21 Å for chain B. These findings prompted an analysis of symmetry mates to assess their potential
influence on NSP13 crystal structures. Indeed, symmetry mates were consistently observed
in close proximity to the nucleotide-binding site in each chain across all analysed
structures, as illustrated in Fig. 4
. In both the ADP- and ATP-bound structures the Arg442 side chain in chain A lies within 9 Å of a symmetry mate, while in chain B it directly interacts with the main chain of Thr501 of the symmetry mate. These results
suggest that symmetry mates near the nucleotide-binding site influence the conformation
of Arg442 and may stabilize the nucleotide-binding site of NSP13.
![]() |
Figure 4 Influence of symmetry mates on the side-chain conformation of Arg442 in the ADP-bound structure of SARS-CoV-2 NSP13. NSP13 is shown in cartoon representation, showing the RecA1 domain (orange) and the RecA2 domain (blue). Bound ADP (cyan) and inorganic phosphate (atom-coloured) are depicted in ball-and-stick format. The symmetry mates are shown in smudge-coloured cartoon format. In chain A, the Arg442 side chain is 9 Å from Phe472 of the symmetry mate, indicated by a yellow dashed line (a). In chain B, the Arg442 side chain forms hydrogen bonds to Thr501 of the symmetry mate, indicated by red dashed lines (b). These interactions were also observed in the unliganded, phosphate-bound and ATP-bound structures of SARS-CoV-2 NSP13. |
4. Discussion
The nucleotide-bound crystal structures of SARS-CoV-2 NSP13 reported here reveal the
expected binding of ADP and ATP to the nucleotide-binding site (Fig. 2). In both cases, the nucleotide binds alongside an inorganic phosphate originating
from the crystallization conditions (Table 1
). The nucleotide-binding sites in these structures differed conformationally only
in the positioning of the Arg442 side chain, which appears to trigger or accompany
the observed nucleotide shift (Fig. 3
). An examination of symmetry mates revealed intermolecular contacts involving Arg442
and the nucleotide-binding site of neighbouring molecules in the (Fig. 4
), potentially stabilizing this site of NSP13.
4.1. Inorganic phosphates binding to the nucleotide-binding site of SARS-CoV-2 NSP13
Inorganic phosphates, originating from the crystallization conditions (Table 1), were consistently observed to bind to NSP13 molecules alongside ADP and ATP (Fig.
2
). Magnesium was deliberately omitted from all soaking solutions, suppressing ATP
hydrolysis in crystallo and ensuring that the ATP- and ADP-bound data sets were collected under identical
metal-free conditions. In the case of the ATP-bound structure (Figs. 2
e and 2
f), the simultaneous presence of ATP and inorganic phosphate suggests a nonphysiological
state, as ATP typically binds only after ADP and orthophosphate (Pi) have been released during the catalytic cycle (Newman et al., 2021
). In contrast, the ADP-bound structure (Figs. 2
c and 2
d), which contains both ADP and an inorganic phosphate, mimics a state following ATP
hydrolysis in NSP13.
In addition to the structures reported here, inorganic phosphates were observed in
the unliganded NSP13 crystals used for soaking (PDB entry 9i4v) and in NSP13 crystals obtained under similar conditions (PDB entry 6zsl). These phosphates occupy positions corresponding to the α- and γ-phosphates in the open product state (Newman et al., 2021). They form several potential salt bridges, stabilizing their binding in the nucleotide-binding
site of NSP13. In particular, the inorganic phosphate at the α-phosphate position may interact with Lys288 and Arg443, while the phosphate at the
γ-phosphate position forms potential salt bridges with Lys288, Arg443 and Arg567, potentially
resulting in greater stabilization (Figs. 2
a and 2
b). These interactions are likely to explain why the inorganic phosphate at the α-phosphate position is consistently displaced by ADP or ATP in the reported structures,
while the phosphate at the γ-phosphate position remains bound.
Pairwise structural comparisons between the phosphate-bound and nucleotide-bound structures
yielded all-atom r.m.s.d.s of 0.31 Å for chain A and 0.18 Å for chain B. Furthermore, the phosphate-bound structures exhibit the same nucleotide-binding
site configuration, with the conformation of Arg442 in both chains of the matching that observed in the ADP-bound and ATP-bound structures (Figs. 5c and 5
d). Remarkably, the inorganic phosphate occupying the γ-phosphate position in the phosphate-bound structures aligns with the corresponding
inorganic phosphate in the nucleotide-bound structures of NSP13.
![]() |
Figure 5 Pairwise structural alignments of each chain of the ADP-bound structure (PDB entry 9i51; wheat) were performed against the corresponding chains of the apo-form (PDB entry 7nio; green), phosphate-bound (PDB entry 9i4v; blue) and AMP-PNP-bound (PDB entry 7nn0; yellow) structures of SARS-CoV-2 NSP13. NSP13 is shown in cartoon format. Nucleotides and phosphates are depicted in ball-and-stick format, coloured to match the respective proteins, while interacting residues are shown in stick format. The following alignments are illustrated: (a) chain A of the ADP-bound structure with chain E of the apo form, (b) chain B of the ADP-bound structure with chain A of the apo form, (c) chain A of the ADP-bound structure with chain A of the phosphate-bound structure, (d) chain B of the ADP-bound structure with chain B of the phosphate-bound structure, (e) chain A of the ADP-bound structure with chain B of the AMP-PNP-bound structure and (f) chain B of the ADP-bound structure with chain D of the AMP-PNP-bound structure. |
4.2. The NSP13–ADP complex captures a state immediately following ATP hydrolysis
In order to determine whether the ADP-bound structure reported here corresponds to
a state of NSP13 following ATP hydrolysis, this structure was compared with the apo-form
structure (PDB entry 7nio) and phosphate-bound structures (PDB entries 6zsl and 9i4v), each representing the open state of NSP13 (Newman et al., 2021). Pairwise structural comparisons between the ADP-bound structure and the corresponding
chains in the apo-form and phosphate-bound structures revealed no significant differences,
as shown in Figs. 5
(a)–5
(d).
Furthermore, the ADP-bound structure was compared with NSP13 co-crystallized with
the nonhydrolysable ATP analogue AMP-PNP (PDB entry 7nn0). In the AMP-PNP-bound structure, were bound across all four molecules in the revealing two distinct binding modes (Newman et al., 2021). Mode A, represented by chain A, corresponds to the pre-hydrolysis state and adopts a closed conformation. In contrast,
mode B, observed in chains B, C and D, adopts an open conformation, reflecting the product state following ATP hydrolysis.
Pairwise structural alignments revealed that chain A of the ADP-bound structure closely resembles chain B of the AMP-PNP-bound structure (all-atom r.m.s.d. of 0.32 Å). Similarly, chain B of the ADP-bound structure aligns more closely with chain D of the AMP-PNP-bound structure (all-atom r.m.s.d. of 0.30 Å). Both chains represent
mode B, the open product state of NSP13. Moreover, the nucleotide-binding sites were highly
similar, with ADP and AMP-PNP aligning particularly well. The α- and β-phosphates of ADP, as well as the inorganic phosphate at the γ-position, align well with their equivalent positions in AMP-PNP (Figs. 5
e and 5
f).
Hence, the observed structural similarities between the ADP-bound structure and the product state of the AMP-PNP-bound structure, alongside its resemblance to the apo-form and phosphate-bound structures, provide strong evidence that this conformation represents a nucleotide-bound state immediately following ATP hydrolysis of NSP13.
4.3. The role of symmetry mates in stabilizing the nucleotide-binding site of SARS-CoV-2 NSP13
Intriguingly, the ADP- and ATP-bound NSP13 complexes reported here adopt the same
overall conformation as the phosphate-bound structure, as all crystals for soaking
experiments were grown under identical conditions. The ). Interestingly, examination of a structurally related apo-form (phosphate-free)
structure (PDB entry 7nio), crystallized in the same P1 but under different conditions, revealed identical symmetry-mate contacts and similar
nucleotide-binding site conformations, especially in the positioning of Arg442 (Figs.
5
a and 5
b).
In all reported NSP13 structures crystallized in P1, symmetry mates interact with the nucleotide-binding sites, particularly influencing the conformation of Arg442. These contacts differ between the two monomers in the resulting in distinct Arg442 conformations in each NSP13 chain. In the ADP-bound and ATP-bound structures, this variation coincides with shifts in nucleotide positioning, highlighting the potential sensitivity of nucleotide binding to subtle conformational changes in Arg442. Remarkably, beyond Arg442, the nucleotide-binding sites across both chains in all space-group P1 structures exhibit identical side-chain conformations, suggesting that crystal packing plays a central role in shaping the nucleotide-binding site of NSP13.
In conclusion, these findings underscore the influence of crystal packing on the study
of complex structures obtained through soaking experiments, a well known challenge
in crystallographic studies. As demonstrated by the structures reported here, crystal
packing can affect the shape of the nucleotide-binding site and complicate the accurate
determination of protein–ligand complexes by altering or obstructing the plasticity
of binding sites. Furthermore, soaking experiments primarily allow local side-chain
rearrangements and cannot resolve the domain-scale conformational changes that may
accompany ATP binding and hydrolysis. Such larger-scale movements, which are typical
of helicases like NSP13, require co-crystallization or cryo-EM analysis. Indeed, comparison
with available cryo-EM structures of NSP13 (Chen et al., 2022) reveals significant differences in domain positioning, as reflected in elevated
r.m.s.d. values. A complete picture of NSP13 dynamics will therefore require integrative
structural approaches that capture both local and global conformational changes. Accounting
for these effects is essential to ensure the reliability of structure-based drug design
and inhibitor development.
Acknowledgements
We are grateful to PETRA III (Hamburg) for providing beamtime and to Daniel Weinrich for his dedicated technical support. We also extend our special appreciation to Dr Joseph A. Newman from the Centre for Medicines Discovery, University of Oxford, UK for his valuable and constructive discussions. The author contributions were as follows. Funding acquisition and resources: RF. Experimental design: PK, PN, RF. Protein preparation: AB, PK. Protein crystallization and soaking experiments: PK. Data acquisition: PK, PN. Data processing and
PK, PN. Data analysis: PK, PN. Manuscript writing: PK, PN with contributions from all co-authors. All authors approved the final manuscript. Open access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL.Conflict of interest
The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
Funding information
Funding for this research was provided by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Germany's Excellence Strategy EXC 2067/1-390729940 to RF and grant No. INST186/1117 to RF).
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