SARS-CoV-2 infection engenders heterogeneous ribonucleoprotein interactions to impede translation elongation in the lungs

Author:

Kim Junsoo,Youn Daehwa,Choi Seunghoon,Lee Youn Woo,Sumberzul Dulguun,Yoon Jeongeun,Lee HanjuORCID,Bae Jong Woo,Noh HyunaORCID,On Dain,Hong Seung-Min,An Se-Hee,Jang Hui Jeong,Kim Seo Yeon,Kim Young Been,Hwang Ji-Yeon,Lee Hyo-Jung,Bin Kim HongORCID,Park Jun Won,Yun Jun-Won,Shin Jeon-SooORCID,Seo Jun-Young,Nam Ki TaekORCID,Choi Kang-Seuk,Lee Ho-Young,Chang HyeshikORCID,Seong Je KyungORCID,Cho Jun

Abstract

AbstractTranslational regulation in tissue environments during in vivo viral pathogenesis has rarely been studied due to the lack of translatomes from virus-infected tissues, although a series of translatome studies using in vitro cultured cells with viral infection have been reported. In this study, we exploited tissue-optimized ribosome profiling (Ribo-seq) and severe-COVID-19 model mice to establish the first temporal translation profiles of virus and host genes in the lungs during SARS-CoV-2 pathogenesis. Our datasets revealed not only previously unknown targets of translation regulation in infected tissues but also hitherto unreported molecular signatures that contribute to tissue pathology after SARS-CoV-2 infection. Specifically, we observed gradual increases in pseudoribosomal ribonucleoprotein (RNP) interactions that partially overlapped the trails of ribosomes, being likely involved in impeding translation elongation. Contemporaneously developed ribosome heterogeneity with predominantly dysregulated 5 S rRNP association supported the malfunction of elongating ribosomes. Analyses of canonical Ribo-seq reads (ribosome footprints) highlighted two obstructive characteristics to host gene expression: ribosome stalling on codons within transmembrane domain-coding regions and compromised translation of immunity- and metabolism-related genes with upregulated transcription. Our findings collectively demonstrate that the abrogation of translation integrity may be one of the most critical factors contributing to pathogenesis after SARS-CoV-2 infection of tissues.

Funder

National Research Foundation of Korea

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Clinical Biochemistry,Molecular Biology,Molecular Medicine,Biochemistry

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