Allosteric Control and Glycan Shielding Adaptations in the SARS-CoV-2 Spike from Early to Peak Virulence
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The SARS-CoV-2 Spike glycoprotein is central to viral infectivity and immune evasion, making it a key target for vaccine and therapeutic design. This trimeric peplomer undergoes dynamic conformational changes, particularly in its Receptor Binding Domain (RBD), which transitions between closed (down) and ACE2-accessible (up) states relative to the rest of the protein, to facilitate host cell entry. Structural understanding of such critical inter-domain motions, as well as epitope exposure quantification, is essential for obtaining an effective molecular handle over this protein and, in turn, exploiting it towards improved immunogen development. Focusing on the early circulating D614G form and the later emerging Delta (B.1.617.2) variant with higher virulence, we performed large-scale molecular dynamics simulations of the soluble form of the Spike in both Down and Up conformations of the RBD. Guided by differences in overall fluctuations, we described reaction coordinates based on domain rotations and tilting to extract features that distinguish D614G versus Delta structural behavior of the N-terminal Domain (NTD) and RBD. Using reaction coordinate analysis and Principal Component Analysis (PCA), we identify allosteric coupling between the N-terminal Domain (NTD) and RBD, where NTD tilting influences RBD gating. While some of these motions are conserved across variants, Delta exhibits an optimized RBD-gating mechanism that enhances ACE2 accessibility. Additionally, glycan remodeling in Delta enhances shielding at the NTD supersite, contributing to reduced sensitivity to neutralizing antibodies. Finally, we uncover the impact of the D950N mutation in the HR1 region, which modulates downstream Spike dynamics and immune evasion. Together, our findings reveal variant-specific and conserved structural determinants of SARS-CoV-2 Spike function, providing a mechanistic basis for allosteric modulation, glycan-mediated immune evasion, and viral adaptation. These insights offer valuable guidance for rational vaccine and therapeutic design against SARS-CoV-2 and emerging variants.