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846: Ebola hotspot discovery

Closed since about 12 years ago

Intermediate Overall Design

Summary


Created
February 13, 2014
Expires
Max points
100
Description

We would like to design a peptide to treat the Ebola virus. This puzzle is a hotspot discovery puzzle, meaning that we would like you to find a good place in which to fit a small peptide "stub" in a particular hydrophobic binding pocket on the Ebola virus glycoprotein. We will then use the best stub placements as starting points for designing a larger molecule. Blocking this pocket on the Ebola glycoprotein will prevent the glycoprotein from binding to proteins on host cells, and should thereby block viral entry into host cells. We're starting you with a tryptophan, but you can mutate the stub residues to whatever you like. Remember that you can share interesting designs with the scientists, regardless your score!

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Comments


bertro Lv 1

Is this the real Ebola virus? I mean is it really what it looks like. Even with segment 157-158 stretched like that?

v_mulligan Lv 1

Yes, the large molecule in this puzzle is a real x-ray crystallographic structure of a protein found on the surface of the Ebola virus (the Ebola glycoprotein, or GP). Viruses are typically about ten to a hundred times larger than individual protein molecules. An Ebola virus looks like a little tube about a thousandth of a millimetre long and a ten-thousandth of a millimetre thick. Its surface is studded with hundreds of these GP molecules. (Here's a computer-generated picture of an Ebola virus. The little magenta things studding the outer surface are GP molecules.) And yes, some segments in the protein look a bit odd, though the actual molecule is a trimer of heterodimers, so there might be interactions with other subunits that stabilize the odd-looking bits. I stripped the protein down to the bit for which we want to design a binder in the interests of simplicity.

GP binds to proteins on the surface of human cells and triggers fusion of the viral membrane with the human cell membrane, which allows the virus to inject its genetic material into a host cell and thereby use the host cell to replicate itself. If we can block the function of GP with a peptide that plugs up its binding site, then we can hopefully prevent the Ebola virus from invading a host cell.

v_mulligan Lv 1

Ah, I just noticed segment 157-158. That's just a display artifact; those two residues aren't actually connected. Since that segment is far from the binding site, and since the backbone of the protein can't move in this puzzle, it shouldn't affect anything, but if I were to set this up again, I'd make sure that there was a proper cut between those two residues so that it looks right. Since it won't affect gameplay, I don't think it's necessary to repost the puzzle. Sorry about that – it is kind of funny looking.

mind_hack Lv 1

So, it's a virus. I just looked it up on Wikipedia, and (conveniently,) it has a picture of a protein of the virus.

If you look at it close enough, it looks a little like a drawing. Or a shoelace.

v_mulligan Lv 1

That electron micrograph image is of a much, much larger scale than what we're showing you here. It's not "a picture of a protein of the virus"; it's a picture of a whole virus. One of these viral glycoprotein molecules would be a tiny speck on the surface of the virus, lost in the black outline.