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Article Abstract

The ongoing evolution of SARS-CoV-2 variants has underscored the need to understand not only the structural basis of antibody recognition but also the dynamic and allosteric mechanisms that could be the underlying contributors to their complex broad and escape-resistant neutralization activities. In this study, we employed a multi-scale approach integrating structural analysis, hierarchical molecular simulations, mutational scanning and network-based allosteric modeling to dissect how class 4 antibodies (represented by S2X35, 25F9, and SA55) and class 5 antibodies (represented by S2H97, WRAIR-2063 and WRAIR-2134) can modulate conformational behavior, binding energetics, allosteric interactions and immune escape patterns of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein. Using hierarchical simulations of the antibody complexes with the spike protein and ensemble-based mutational scanning of binding interactions we showed that these antibodies through targeting conserved cryptic sites can exert allosteric effects that influence global conformational dynamics in the RBD functional regions. The ensemble-based mutational scanning of binding interactions revealed excellent agreement with experimentally derived deep mutational scanning (DMS) data accurately recapitulating the known binding hotspots and escape mutations across all studied antibodies. The predicted destabilization values in functional sites are consistent with experimentally observed reductions in antibody binding affinity and immune escape profiles demonstrating that computational models can robustly reproduce and forecast mutation-induced immune escape trends. Using dynamic network modeling we characterized the antibody-induced changes in residue interaction networks and long-range interactions. The results revealed that class 4 antibodies can exhibit distinct patterns of allosteric influence despite targeting overlapping regions, while class 5 antibodies elicit consistently dense and broadly distributed allosteric networks and long-range stabilization of the RBD conformations. Dynamic network analysis identifies a conserved allosteric network core that mediates long-range interactions and includes antibody specific allosteric extensions that connect the binding interface hotspots with allosteric hubs. This study suggests that mechanisms of binding and immune escape for classes of antibodies targeting cryptic binding sites may be determined by the confluence of multiple factors including high-affinity binding, long-range allosteric effects that modulate RBD adaptability and propagation of dynamic constraints that can reshape the conformational equilibrium and ultimately determine efficacy and neutralization patterns.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d5cp02468dDOI Listing

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