Human airway and nasal organoids reveal escalating replicative fitness of SARS-CoV-2 emerging variants

人类呼吸道和鼻腔类器官揭示 SARS-CoV-2 新变体不断升级的复制适应性

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作者:Cun Li, Jingjing Huang, Yifei Yu, Zhixin Wan, Man Chun Chiu, Xiaojuan Liu, Shuxin Zhang, Jian-Piao Cai, Hin Chu, Gang Li, Jasper Fuk-Woo Chan, Kelvin Kai-Wang To, Zifeng Yang, Shibo Jiang, Kwok-Yung Yuen, Hans Clevers, Jie Zhou

Abstract

The high transmissibility of SARS-CoV-2 Omicron subvariants was generally ascribed to immune escape. It remained unclear whether the emerging variants have gradually acquired replicative fitness in human respiratory epithelial cells. We sought to evaluate the replicative fitness of BA.5 and earlier variants in physiologically active respiratory organoids. BA.5 exhibited a dramatically increased replicative capacity and infectivity than B.1.1.529 and an ancestral strain wildtype (WT) in human nasal and airway organoids. BA.5 spike pseudovirus showed a significantly higher entry efficiency than that carrying WT or B.1.1.529 spike. Notably, we observed prominent syncytium formation in BA.5-infected nasal and airway organoids, albeit elusive in WT- and B.1.1.529-infected organoids. BA.5 spike-triggered syncytium formation was verified by lentiviral overexpression of spike in nasal organoids. Moreover, BA.5 replicated modestly in alveolar organoids, with a significantly lower titer than B.1.1.529 and WT. Collectively, the higher entry efficiency and fusogenic activity of BA.5 spike potentiated viral spread through syncytium formation in the human airway epithelium, leading to enhanced replicative fitness and immune evasion, whereas the attenuated replicative capacity of BA.5 in the alveolar organoids may account for its benign clinical manifestation.

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