Abstract

Since early 2020, the world suffers from a new beta-coronavirus, called SARS-CoV-2, that has devastating effects globally due to its associated disease, Covid-19. Until today, Covid-19, which not only causes life-threatening lung infections but also impairs various other organs and tissues, has killed hundreds of thousands of people and caused irreparable damage to many others. Since the very onset of the pandemic, huge efforts were made worldwide to fully understand this virus and numerous studies were, and still are, published. Many of these deal with structural analyses of the viral spike glycoprotein and with vaccine development, antibodies and antiviral molecules or immunomodulators that are assumed to become essential tools in the struggle against the virus. This paper summarizes knowledge on the properties of the four structural proteins (spike protein S, membrane protein M, envelope protein E and nucleocapsid protein N) of the SARS-CoV-2 virus and its relatives, SARS-CoV and MERS-CoV, that emerged few years earlier. Moreover, attention is paid to ways to analyze such proteins using freely available bioinformatic tools and, more importantly, to bring these proteins alive by looking at them on a computer/laptop screen with the easy-to-use but highly performant and interactive molecular graphics program DeepView. It is hoped that this paper will stimulate non-bioinformaticians and non-specialists in structural biology to scrutinize these and other macromolecules and as such will contribute to establishing procedures to fight these and maybe other forthcoming viruses.

Highlights

  • The year 2020 will always be remembered as “the year of the pandemic.” A new type of virus causing severe respiratory illness emerged in December 2019 in Wuhan, China

  • This paper summarizes and discusses the current knowledge of the structural proteins that make up the coronaviruses in general, and the beta-coronaviruses SARS-CoV-2, SARS-CoV and MERSCoV in particular

  • We demonstrate how these proteins are well-designed by Nature for their function, how they cooperate with each other to make very successful virions, and how these viruses mislead and hijack the host for their own benefit

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Summary

Introduction

The year 2020 will always be remembered as “the year of the pandemic.” A new type of virus causing severe respiratory illness emerged in December 2019 in Wuhan, China.

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