Molecular mechanism of inhibiting the SARS-CoV-2 cell entry facilitator TMPRSS2 with camostat and nafamostat
Journal article, 2021

The entry of the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 into human lung cells can be inhibited by the approved drugs camostat and nafamostat. Here we elucidate the molecular mechanism of these drugs by combining experiments and simulations. In vitro assays confirm that both drugs inhibit the human protein TMPRSS2, a SARS-Cov-2 spike protein activator. As no experimental structure is available, we provide a model of the TMPRSS2 equilibrium structure and its fluctuations by relaxing an initial homology structure with extensive 330 microseconds of all-atom molecular dynamics (MD) and Markov modeling. Through Markov modeling, we describe the binding process of both drugs and a metabolic product of camostat (GBPA) to TMPRSS2, reaching a Michaelis complex (MC) state, which precedes the formation of a long-lived covalent inhibitory state. We find that nafamostat has a higher MC population than camostat and GBPA, suggesting that nafamostat is more readily available to form the stable covalent enzyme-substrate intermediate, effectively explaining its high potency. This model is backed by our in vitro experiments and consistent with previous virus cell entry assays. Our TMPRSS2-drug structures are made public to guide the design of more potent and specific inhibitors.

Author

Tim Hempel

Freie Universität Berlin

Lluis Raich

Freie Universität Berlin

Simon Olsson

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Data Science

Freie Universität Berlin

Nurit P. Azouz

University of Cincinnati

Andrea M. Klingler

University of Cincinnati

Markus Hoffmann

German Primate Center

University of Göttingen

Stefan Pohlmann

University of Göttingen

German Primate Center

Marc E. Rothenberg

University of Cincinnati

Frank Noe

Freie Universität Berlin

Rice University

Chemical Science

2041-6520 (ISSN) 2041-6539 (eISSN)

Vol. 12 3 983-992

Subject Categories

Pharmaceutical Sciences

Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Structural Biology

DOI

10.1039/d0sc05064d

More information

Latest update

3/17/2021