EMD-47823
Structure of the prefusion HKU5-19s Spike trimer (conformation 1)
EMD-47823
Single-particle2.0 Å

Map released: 26/02/2025
Last modified: 26/02/2025
Sample Organism:
Homo sapiens,
Pipistrellus bat coronavirus HKU5
Sample: Prefusion HKU5-19s S trimer
Fitted models: 9ea0 (Avg. Q-score: 0.702)
Deposition Authors: Park YJ, Gen R, Seattle Structural Genomics Center for Infectious Disease (SSGCID), Veesler D
Sample: Prefusion HKU5-19s S trimer
Fitted models: 9ea0 (Avg. Q-score: 0.702)
Deposition Authors: Park YJ, Gen R, Seattle Structural Genomics Center for Infectious Disease (SSGCID), Veesler D
Molecular basis of convergent evolution of ACE2 receptor utilization among HKU5 coronaviruses.
Park YJ,
Liu C,
Lee J,
Brown JT,
Ma CB,
Liu P,
Gen R,
Xiong Q,
Zepeda SK,
Stewart C,
Addetia A,
Craig CJ,
Tortorici MA,
Alshukairi AN,
Starr TN,
Yan H,
Veesler D
(2025) Cell
(2025) Cell
Abstract:
DPP4 was considered a canonical receptor for merbecoviruses until the recent discovery of African bat-borne MERS-related coronaviruses using ACE2. The extent and diversity of ACE2 utilization among merbecoviruses and their receptor species tropism remain unknown. Here, we reveal that HKU5 enters host cells utilizing Pipistrellus abramus (P.abr) and several non-bat mammalian ACE2s through a binding mode distinct from that of any other known ACE2-using coronaviruses. We defined the molecular determinants of receptor species tropism and identified a single amino acid mutation enabling HKU5 to utilize human ACE2, providing proof of principle for machine-learning-assisted outbreak preparedness. We show that MERS-CoV and HKU5 have markedly distinct antigenicity and identified several HKU5 inhibitors, including two clinical compounds. Our findings profoundly alter our understanding of coronavirus evolution, as several merbecovirus clades independently evolved ACE2 utilization, and pave the way for developing countermeasures against viruses poised for human emergence.
DPP4 was considered a canonical receptor for merbecoviruses until the recent discovery of African bat-borne MERS-related coronaviruses using ACE2. The extent and diversity of ACE2 utilization among merbecoviruses and their receptor species tropism remain unknown. Here, we reveal that HKU5 enters host cells utilizing Pipistrellus abramus (P.abr) and several non-bat mammalian ACE2s through a binding mode distinct from that of any other known ACE2-using coronaviruses. We defined the molecular determinants of receptor species tropism and identified a single amino acid mutation enabling HKU5 to utilize human ACE2, providing proof of principle for machine-learning-assisted outbreak preparedness. We show that MERS-CoV and HKU5 have markedly distinct antigenicity and identified several HKU5 inhibitors, including two clinical compounds. Our findings profoundly alter our understanding of coronavirus evolution, as several merbecovirus clades independently evolved ACE2 utilization, and pave the way for developing countermeasures against viruses poised for human emergence.