4.5 Article

Emergent SARS-CoV-2 variants: comparative replication dynamics and high sensitivity to thapsigargin

Journal

VIRULENCE
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages 2946-2956

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/21505594.2021.2006960

Keywords

SARS-CoV-2; Alpha; Beta; Delta; thapsigargin; antiviral; emergent variants; co-infection; replication synergy; syncytia

Funding

  1. Medical Research Council [MC_PC_18058]
  2. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council [BB/S506758/1]

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The Delta variant of the COVID-19 virus has shown to have the highest replication rate and infectivity among the Alpha and Beta variants, and can boost the replication of co-infected viruses. Thapsigargin (TG) has proven to be highly effective in inhibiting all three variants, and can exhibit synergy in co-infections, effectively blocking viral replication.
The struggle to control the COVID-19 pandemic is made challenging by the emergence of virulent SARS-CoV-2 variants. To gain insight into their replication dynamics, emergent Alpha (A), Beta (B) and Delta (D) SARS-CoV-2 variants were assessed for their infection performance in single variant- and co-infections. The effectiveness of thapsigargin (TG), a recently discovered broad-spectrum antiviral, against these variants was also examined. Of the 3 viruses, the D variant exhibited the highest replication rate and was most able to spread to in-contact cells; its replication rate at 24 h post-infection (hpi) based on progeny viral RNA production was over 4 times that of variant A and 9 times more than the B variant. In co-infections, the D variant boosted the replication of its co-infected partners at the expense of its own initial performance. Furthermore, co-infection with AD or AB combination conferred replication synergy where total progeny (RNA) output was greater than the sum of corresponding single-variant infections. All variants were highly sensitive to TG inhibition. A single pre-infection priming dose of TG effectively blocked all single-variant infections and every combination (AB, AD, BD variants) of co-infection at greater than 95% (relative to controls) at 72 hpi. Likewise, TG was effective in inhibiting each variant in active preexisting infection. In conclusion, against the current backdrop of the dominant D variant that could be further complicated by co-infection synergy with new variants, the growing list of viruses susceptible to TG, a promising host-centric antiviral, now includes a spectrum of contemporary SARS-CoV-2 viruses.

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