CCR2-dependent monocyte-derived cells restrict SARS-CoV-2 infection

Author:

Vanderheiden AbigailORCID,Thomas JeronayORCID,Soung Allison L.ORCID,Davis-Gardner Meredith E.ORCID,Floyd Katharine,Jin Fengzhi,Cowan David A.,Pellegrini Kathryn,Creanga Adrian,Pegu Amarendra,Derrien-Colemyn Alexandrine,Shi Pei-Yong,Grakoui Arash,Klein Robyn S.ORCID,Bosinger Steven E.ORCID,Kohlmeier Jacob E.ORCID,Menachery Vineet D.ORCID,Suthar Mehul S.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractSARS-CoV-2 has caused a historic pandemic of respiratory disease (COVID-19) and current evidence suggests severe disease is associated with dysregulated immunity within the respiratory tract. However, the innate immune mechanisms that mediate protection during COVID-19 are not well defined. Here we characterize a mouse model of SARS-CoV-2 infection and find that early CCR2-dependent infiltration of monocytes restricts viral burden in the lung. We find that a recently developed mouse-adapted MA-SARS-CoV-2 strain, as well as the emerging B. 1.351 variant, trigger an inflammatory response in the lung characterized by expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines and interferon-stimulated genes. scRNA-seq analysis of lung homogenates identified a hyper-inflammatory monocyte profile. Using intravital antibody labeling, we demonstrate that MA-SARS-CoV-2 infection leads to increases in circulating monocytes and an influx of CD45+ cells into the lung parenchyma that is dominated by monocyte-derived cells. We utilize this model to demonstrate that mechanistically, CCR2 signaling promotes infiltration of classical monocytes into the lung and expansion of monocyte-derived cells. Parenchymal monocyte-derived cells appear to play a protective role against MA-SARS-CoV-2, as mice lacking CCR2 showed higher viral loads in the lungs, increased lung viral dissemination, and elevated inflammatory cytokine responses. These studies have identified a CCR2-monocyte axis that is critical for promoting viral control and restricting inflammation within the respiratory tract during SARS-CoV-2 infection.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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