4.6 Article

Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus Gene 5 Modulates Pathogenesis in Mice

期刊

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
卷 95, 期 3, 页码 -

出版社

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01172-20

关键词

infectious cDNA; innate immune response; MERS-CoV; animal models; coronavirus; pathogenesis

类别

资金

  1. Government of Spain [B102013-42869-R, B102016-75549-R, SEV 2017-0712]
  2. CSIC [202020E079]
  3. European Zoonotic Anticipation and Preparedness Initiative (ZAPI) [IMI_JU_115760]
  4. U.S. National Institutes of Health [NIH: 0258-3413/HHSN266200700010C, 2P01A1060699, RO1 A1129269]
  5. China Scholarship Council (CSC)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) is a highly lethal virus causing severe pneumonia in humans. By developing a mouse-adapted MERS-CoV strain and studying gene 5, researchers found that the adapted virus showed increased virulence and gene 5 may play a role in modulating interferon response during infection. These findings contribute to a better understanding of MERS-CoV pathogenesis and could potentially lead to the development of new antiviral strategies.
Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) causes a highly lethal pneumonia that emerged in 2012. There is limited information on MERS-CoV pathogenesis, as data from patients are scarce and the generation of animal models reproducing MERS clinical manifestations has been challenging. Human dipeptidyl peptidase 4 knock-in (hDPP4-KI) mice and a mouse-adapted MERS-CoV strain (MERSMA-6-1-2) were recently described. hDPP4-KI mice infected with MERSMA-6-1-2 show pathological signs of respiratory disease, high viral titers in the lung, and death. In this work, a mouse-adapted MERS-CoV infectious cDNA was engineered by introducing nonsynonymous mutations contained in the MERSMA-6-1-2 genome into a MERS-CoV infectious cDNA, leading to a recombinant mouse-adapted virus (rMERS-MA) that was virulent in hDDP4-KI mice. MERS-CoV adaptation to cell culture or mouse lungs led to mutations and deletions in genus-specific gene 5 that prevented full-length protein expression. In contrast, analysis of 476 MERS-CoV field isolates showed that gene 5 is highly stable in vivo in both humans and camels. To study the role of protein 5, two additional viruses were engineered expressing a full-length gene 5 (rMERS-MA-5FL) or containing a complete gene 5 deletion (rMERS-MA-Delta 5). rMERS-MA-5FL virus was unstable, as deletions appeared during passage in different tissue culture cells, highlighting MERS-CoV instability. The virulence of rMERS-MA-Delta 5 was analyzed in a sublethal hDPP4-KI mouse model. Unexpectedly, all mice died after infection with rMERS-MA-Delta 5, in contrast to those infected with the parental virus, which contains a 17-nucleotide (nt) deletion and a stop codon in protein 5 at position 108. Expression of interferon and proinflammatory cytokines was delayed and dysregulated in the lungs of rMERS-MA-05-infected mice. Overall, these data indicated that the rMERS-MA-Delta 5 virus was more virulent than the parental one and suggest that the residual gene 5 sequence present in the mouse-adapted parental virus had a function in ameliorating severe MERS-CoV pathogenesis. IMPORTANCE Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) is a zoonotic virus causing human infections with high mortality rate (similar to 35%). Animal models together with reverse-genetics systems are essential to understand MERS-CoV pathogenesis. We developed a reverse-genetics system for a mouse-adapted MERS-CoV that reproduces the virus behavior observed in humans. This system is highly useful to investigate the role of specific viral genes in pathogenesis. In addition, we described a virus lacking gene 5 expression that is more virulent than the parental one. The data provide novel functions in IFN modulation for gene 5 in the context of viral infection and will help to develop novel antiviral strategies.

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