The SARS-CoV-2 Spike Protein is vulnerable to moderate electric fields
Claudia R. Arbeitman, Pablo Rojas, Pedro Ojeda-May, Martin E., Garcia

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that moderate external electric fields can significantly destabilize the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, potentially offering a physical method to weaken the virus and prevent infection.
Contribution
The paper reveals that easily achievable electric fields can induce structural damage to the spike protein, a novel approach for virus inactivation and structural manipulation.
Findings
Electric fields cause long-lasting structural damage to the spike protein
Conformational change in the receptor binding domain reduces ACE2 binding
Vulnerability of spike protein occurs at much lower field strengths than other proteins
Abstract
Most of the ongoing projects aimed at the development of specific therapies and vaccines against COVID-19 use the SARS-CoV-2 spike (S) protein as the main target [1-3]. The binding of the spike protein with the ACE2 receptor (ACE2) of the host cell constitutes the first and key step for virus entry. During this process, the receptor binding domain (RBD) of the S protein plays an essential role, since it contains the receptor binding motif (RBM), responsible for the docking to the receptor. So far, mostly biochemical methods are being tested in order to prevent binding of the virus to ACE2 [4]. Here we show, with the help of atomistic simulations, that external electric fields of easily achievable and moderate strengths can dramatically destabilise the S protein, inducing long-lasting structural damage. One striking field-induced conformational change occurs at the level of the…
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