Heterogeneous Infectivity and Pathogenesis of SARS-CoV-2 Variants Beta, Delta and Omicron in Transgenic K18-hACE2 and Wildtype Mice.

SARS-CoV-2 变种 β、δ 和 δν 在转基因 K18-hACE2 小鼠和野生型小鼠中的异质性感染性和致病性

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作者:Tarrés-Freixas Ferran, Trinité Benjamin, Pons-Grífols Anna, Romero-Durana Miguel, Riveira-Muñoz Eva, Ávila-Nieto Carlos, Pérez Mónica, Garcia-Vidal Edurne, Perez-Zsolt Daniel, Muñoz-Basagoiti Jordana, Raïch-Regué Dàlia, Izquierdo-Useros Nuria, Andrés Cristina, Antón Andrés, Pumarola Tomàs, Blanco Ignacio, Noguera-Julián Marc, Guallar Victor, Lepore Rosalba, Valencia Alfonso, Urrea Victor, Vergara-Alert Júlia, Clotet Bonaventura, Ballana Ester, Carrillo Jorge, Segalés Joaquim, Blanco JuliÃ
The emerging SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern (VOCs) may display enhanced transmissibility, more severity and/or immune evasion; however, the pathogenesis of these new VOCs in experimental SARS-CoV-2 models or the potential infection of other animal species is not completely understood. Here we infected K18-hACE2 transgenic mice with B.1, B.1.351/Beta, B.1.617.2/Delta and BA.1.1/Omicron isolates and demonstrated heterogeneous infectivity and pathogenesis. B.1.351/Beta variant was the most pathogenic, while BA.1.1/Omicron led to lower viral RNA in the absence of major visible clinical signs. In parallel, we infected wildtype (WT) mice and confirmed that, contrary to B.1 and B.1.617.2/Delta, B.1.351/Beta and BA.1.1/Omicron can infect them. Infection in WT mice coursed without major clinical signs and viral RNA was transient and undetectable in the lungs by day 7 post-infection. In silico modeling supported these findings by predicting B.1.351/Beta receptor binding domain (RBD) mutations result in an increased affinity for both human and murine ACE2 receptors, while BA.1/Omicron RBD mutations only show increased affinity for murine ACE2.

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