What makes SARS-CoV-2, the virus behind COVID-19, such a threat? A
new study, led by Jose Ordovas-Montanes, Ph.D. at Boston Children’s
Hospital and Alex K. Shalek, Ph.D. at MIT, pinpoints the likely cell
types the virus infects. Unexpectedly, it also shows that one of the
body’s main defenses against viral infections may actually help the
virus infect those very cells. Findings were published April 21 by the
journal Cell.
The peer-reviewed study, published as a preprint, will help focus
efforts to understand what SARS-COV-2 does in the body, why some people
are more susceptible, and how best to search for treatments, the
researchers say.
Multiple research models
When news broke about a new coronavirus in China, Ordovas-Montanes
and Shalek had already been studying different cell types from
throughout the human respiratory system and intestine. They also had
gathered data from primates and mice.
In February, they began diving into these data.
“We started to look at cells from tissues such as the lining of the
nasal cavity, the lungs, and gut, based on reported symptoms and where
the virus
has been detected,” says Ordovas-Montanes. “We wanted to provide the
best information possible across our entire spectrum of research
models.”
COVID-19-susceptible cells
Recent research had found that SARS-CoV-2—like the closely related
SARS-CoV that caused the SARS pandemic, uses a receptor called ACE2 to
gain entry into human cells,
aided by an enzyme called TMPRSS2. That led Ordovas-Montanes and Shalek
and colleagues to ask a simple question: Which cells in respiratory and
intestinal tissue express both ACE2 and TMPRSS2?
To address this question, the team turned to single-cell RNA
sequencing, which identifies which of roughly 20,000 genes are “on” in
individual cells. They found that only a tiny percentage of human
respiratory and intestinal cells, often well below 10 percent, make both
ACE2 and TMPRSS2. Those cells fall in three types: goblet cells in the
nose that secrete mucus; lung cells known as type II pneumocytes that
help maintain the alveoli (the sacs where oxygen is taken in); and one
type of so-called enterocytes that line the small intestine and are
involved in nutrient absorption.
Sampling from non-human primates showed a similar pattern of susceptible cells.
“Many existing respiratory cell lines may not contain the full mix of
cell types, and may miss the types that are relevant,” Ordovas-Montanes
notes. “Once you understand which cells are infected, you can start to
ask, ‘How do these cells work?’ ‘Is there anything within these cells
that is critical for the virus’s life cycle?’ With more refined cellular
models, we can perform better screens to find what existing drugs
target that biology, providing a stepping stone to go into mice or non-human primates.”
Interferon: Helpful or harmful?
But it was the study’s second finding that most intrigues the
scientists. They discovered that the ACE2 gene, which encodes the
receptor used by SARS-CoV-2 to enter human cells, is stimulated by
interferon—one of the body’s main defenses when it detects a virus.
Interferon actually turned the ACE2 gene on at higher levels,
potentially giving the virus new portals to get in.
“ACE2 is also critical in protecting people during various types of
lung injury,” notes Ordovas-Montanes. “When ACE2 comes up, that’s
usually a productive response. But since the virus uses ACE2 as a
target, we speculate that it might be exploiting that normal protective
response.”
Interferons, in fact, are being tested as a treatment for COVID-19.
Would they help, or would they do more harm than good? That’s not yet
clear.
“It might be that in some patients, because of the timing or the
dose, interferon can contain the virus, while in others, interferon
promotes more infection,” says Ordovas-Montanes. “We want to better
understand where the balance lies, and how we can maintain a productive
antiviral response without producing more target cells for the virus to
infect.”
ACE inhibitors and cytokine storms
The findings may also raise new lines of inquiry around ACE
inhibitors. These drugs are commonly used to treat hypertension, which
has been linked to more severe COVID-19 disease. Are ACE inhibitors
affecting people’s risk?
“ACE and ACE2 work in the same pathway, but they actually have
different biochemical properties,” Ordovas-Montanes cautions. “It’s
complex biology, but it will be important to understand the impact of
ACE inhibitors on people’s physiological response to the virus.”
It’s also too soon to try to relate the study findings to the
“cytokine storm,” a runaway inflammatory response that has been reported
in very sick COVID-19 patients. Cytokines are a family of chemicals
that rally the body’s immune responses to fight infections, and
interferon is part of the family.
“It might be that we’re seeing a cytokine storm because of a failure
of interferon to restrict the virus to begin with, so the lungs start
calling for more help. That’s exactly what we’re trying to understand
right now.”
Future directions
The team also wants to explore what the virus is doing in the cells
it targets, and to study tissue samples from children and adults to
understand why COVID-19 is typically less severe in younger people.
Studies will continue at Boston Children’s with the support of Benjamin
Raby, MD, MPH, chief of pulmonary medicine, Bruce Horwitz, MD, Ph.D., in
emergency medicine, and Scott Snapper, MD, Ph.D., chief of
gastroenterology.
Carly Ziegler, Samuel Allon, and Sarah Nyquist, of MIT and Harvard,
and Ian Mbano of the Africa Health Research Institute were co-first
authors on the paper in Cell. The study was done in collaboration
with the Human Cell Atlas (HCA) Lung Biological Network group. The
authors report no competing interests.
“This has been an incredible community effort—not just within Boston,
but also with collaborators around the world who have all shared their
unpublished data to try and make potentially relevant information
available as rapidly as possible,” says Shalek, who was co-senior author
on the paper with Ordovas-Montanes. “It’s inspiring to see how much can
be accomplished when everyone comes together to tackle a problem.”
More information: Cell (2020). DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2020.04.035 , https://www.cell.com/pb-assets … _CELL-D-20-00767.pdf
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-04-sars-cov-respiratory-tissueand-exploit-defenses.html
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