Directed Evolution-Driven Increase of Structural Plasticity Is a Prerequisite for
Binding the Complement Lectin Pathway Blocking MASP-Inhibitor Peptides
MASP-1 and MASP-2 are key activator proteases of the complement lectin pathway. The
first specific mannose-binding lectin-associated serine protease (MASP) inhibitors
had been developed from the 14-amino-acid sunflower trypsin inhibitor (SFTI) peptide
by phage display, yielding SFTI-based MASP inhibitors, SFMIs. Here, we present the
crystal structure of the MASP-1/SFMI1 complex that we analyzed in comparison to other
existing MASP-1/2 structures. Rigidified backbone structure has long been accepted
as a structural prerequisite for peptide inhibitors of proteases. We found that a
hydrophobic cluster organized around the P2 Thr residue is essential for the structural
stability of wild-type SFTI. We also found that the same P2 Thr prevents binding of
the rigid SFTI-like peptides to the substrate-binding cleft of both MASPs as the cleft
is partially blocked by large gatekeeper enzyme loops. Directed evolution removed
this obstacle by replacing the P2 Thr with a Ser, providing the SFMIs with high-degree
structural plasticity, which proved to be essential for MASP inhibition. To gain more
insight into the structural criteria for SFMI-based MASP-2 inhibition, we systematically
modified MASP-2-specific SFMI2 by capping its two termini and by replacing its disulfide
bridge with varying length thioether linkers. By doing so, we also aimed to generate
a versatile scaffold that is resistant to reducing environment and has increased stability
in exopeptidase-containing biological environments. We found that the reduction-resistant
disulfide-substituted L-2,3-diaminopropionic acid (Dap) variant possessed near-native
potency. As MASP-2 is involved in the life-threatening thrombosis in COVID-19 patients,
our synthetic, selective MASP-2 inhibitors could be relevant coronavirus drug candidates.