SARS-CoV-2 variant Alpha has a spike-dependent replication advantage over the ancestral B.1 strain in human cells with low ACE2 expression
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Published:2022-11-16
Issue:11
Volume:20
Page:e3001871
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ISSN:1545-7885
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Container-title:PLOS Biology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:PLoS Biol
Author:
Niemeyer Daniela, Stenzel Saskia, Veith Talitha, Schroeder Simon, Friedmann Kirstin, Weege Friderike, Trimpert Jakob, Heinze Julian, Richter Anja, Jansen Jenny, Emanuel Jackson, Kazmierski Julia, Pott Fabian, Jeworowski Lara M., Olmer Ruth, Jaboreck Mark-Christian, Tenner Beate, Papies Jan, Walper Felix, Schmidt Marie L., Heinemann Nicolas, Möncke-Buchner Elisabeth, Baumgardt Morris, Hoffmann Karen, Widera Marek, Thao Tran Thi Nhu, Balázs Anita, Schulze Jessica, Mache Christin, Jones Terry C., Morkel Markus, Ciesek Sandra, Hanitsch Leif G., Mall Marcus A., Hocke Andreas C., Thiel Volker, Osterrieder Klaus, Wolff Thorsten, Martin Ulrich, Corman Victor M., Müller Marcel A., Goffinet ChristineORCID, Drosten ChristianORCID
Abstract
Epidemiological data demonstrate that Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) variants of concern (VOCs) Alpha and Delta are more transmissible, infectious, and pathogenic than previous variants. Phenotypic properties of VOC remain understudied. Here, we provide an extensive functional study of VOC Alpha replication and cell entry phenotypes assisted by reverse genetics, mutational mapping of spike in lentiviral pseudotypes, viral and cellular gene expression studies, and infectivity stability assays in an enhanced range of cell and epithelial culture models. In almost all models, VOC Alpha spread less or equally efficiently as ancestral (B.1) SARS-CoV-2. B.1. and VOC Alpha shared similar susceptibility to serum neutralization. Despite increased relative abundance of specific sgRNAs in the context of VOC Alpha infection, immune gene expression in infected cells did not differ between VOC Alpha and B.1. However, inferior spreading and entry efficiencies of VOC Alpha corresponded to lower abundance of proteolytically cleaved spike products presumably linked to the T716I mutation. In addition, we identified a bronchial cell line, NCI-H1299, which supported 24-fold increased growth of VOC Alpha and is to our knowledge the only cell line to recapitulate the fitness advantage of VOC Alpha compared to B.1. Interestingly, also VOC Delta showed a strong (595-fold) fitness advantage over B.1 in these cells. Comparative analysis of chimeric viruses expressing VOC Alpha spike in the backbone of B.1, and vice versa, showed that the specific replication phenotype of VOC Alpha in NCI-H1299 cells is largely determined by its spike protein. Despite undetectable ACE2 protein expression in NCI-H1299 cells, CRISPR/Cas9 knock-out and antibody-mediated blocking experiments revealed that multicycle spread of B.1 and VOC Alpha required ACE2 expression. Interestingly, entry of VOC Alpha, as opposed to B.1 virions, was largely unaffected by treatment with exogenous trypsin or saliva prior to infection, suggesting enhanced resistance of VOC Alpha spike to premature proteolytic cleavage in the extracellular environment of the human respiratory tract. This property may result in delayed degradation of VOC Alpha particle infectivity in conditions typical of mucosal fluids of the upper respiratory tract that may be recapitulated in NCI-H1299 cells closer than in highly ACE2-expressing cell lines and models. Our study highlights the importance of cell model evaluation and comparison for in-depth characterization of virus variant-specific phenotypes and uncovers a fine-tuned interrelationship between VOC Alpha- and host cell-specific determinants that may underlie the increased and prolonged virus shedding detected in patients infected with VOC Alpha.
Funder
BMBF NaFoUniMedCovid19 BMBF German Ministry of Health DFG Einstein Stiftung Berlin Berlin Institute of Health Freie Universität Berlin Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main Federal State of Lower Saxony
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Neuroscience
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