Abstract
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is the cause of COVID19, a highly infectious disease that is severely affecting our society and welfare systems.
In order to develop therapeutic interventions against this condition, one promising
strategy is to target spike, the trimeric transmembrane glycoprotein that the virus uses
to recognise and bind its host cells. Here we use a metainference cryo-electron microscopy
approach to determine the opening pathway that brings spike from its inactive (closed)
conformation to its active (open) one. The knowledge of the structures of the intermediate
states of spike along these opening pathways enables us to identify a cryptic pocket that
is not exposed in the open and closed states. We then identify compounds that bind the
cryptic pocket by screening a library of repurposed drugs. These results underline the
opportunities offered by the determination of the structures of the intermediate states
populated during the dynamics of proteins to allow the therapeutic targeting of otherwise
invisible cryptic binding sites.