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ACE2 is the critical in vivo receptor for SARS-CoV-2 in a novel COVID-19 mouse model with TNF-and IFN?-driven immunopathology
Authors
Benedikt Agerer
Andreas Bergthaler
+22 more
Louis Boon
Tümay Capraz
Domagoj Cikes
Shane J. F. Cronin
Lukas Endler
Riem Gawish
Astrid Hagelkrüys
Anastasiya Hladik
Sylvia Knapp
Rubina Koglgruber
Karin Lakovits
Ali Mirazimi
Núria Montserrat Pulido
Felicitas Oberndorfer
Anna Ohradanova-Repic
Chris Oostenbrink
Josef M. Penninger
Jan W. Perthold
Lisabeth Pimenov
Philipp Starkl
Hannes Stockinger
Gerald Wirnsberger
Publication date
13 January 2022
Publisher
'eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
Despite tremendous progress in the understanding of COVID-19, mechanistic insight into immunological, disease-driving factors remains limited. We generated maVie16, a mouse-adapted SARS-CoV-2, by serial passaging of a human isolate. In silico modeling revealed how only three Spike mutations of maVie16 enhanced interaction with murine ACE2. maVie16 induced profound pathology in BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice, and the resulting mouse COVID-19 (mCOVID-19) replicated critical aspects of human disease, including early lymphopenia, pulmonary immune cell infiltration, pneumonia, and specific adaptive immunity. Inhibition of the proinflammatory cyto-kines IFN? and TNF substantially reduced immunopathology. Importantly, genetic ACE2-deficiency completely prevented mCOVID-19 development. Finally, inhalation therapy with recombinant ACE2 fully protected mice from mCOVID-19, revealing a novel and efficient treatment. Thus, we here present maVie16 as a new tool to model COVID-19 for the discovery of new therapies and show that disease severity is determined by cytokine-driven immunopathology and critically dependent on ACE2 in vivo. © Gawish et al
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Last time updated on 08/07/2022
Diposit Digital de la Universitat de Barcelona
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oai:diposit.ub.edu:2445/185033
Last time updated on 11/05/2022