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SARS-CoV-2 evolution in the absence of selective immune pressures, results in antibody resistance, interferon suppression and phenotypic differences by lineage

Authors :
Julian Daniel Sunday Willett
Annie Gravel
Isabelle Dubuc
Leslie Gudimard
Ana Claudia dos Santos Pereira Andrade
Émile Lacasse
Paul Fortin
Ju-Ling Liu
Jose Avila Cervantes
Jose Hector Galvez
Haig Hugo Vrej Djambazian
Melissa Zwaig
Anne-Marie Roy
Sally Lee
Shu-Huang Chen
Jiannis Ragoussis
Louis Flamand
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

The persistence of COVID-19 is partly due to viral evolution reducing vaccine and treatment efficacy. Serial infections of Wuhan-like SARS-CoV-2 in Balb/c mice yielded mouse-adapted strains with greater infectivity and mortality. We investigated if passaging unmodified B.1.351 (Beta) and B.1.617.2 (Delta) 20 times in K18-ACE2 mice, expressing human ACE2 receptor, in a BSL-3 laboratory without selective pressures, would drive human health-relevant evolution and if evolution was lineage-dependent. Late-passage virus caused more severe disease, at organism and lung tissue scales, with late-passage Delta demonstrating antibody resistance and interferon suppression. This resistance co-occurred with ade novospike S371F mutation, linked with both traits. S371F, an Omicron-characteristic mutation, was co-inherited at times with spike E1182G per Nanopore sequencing, existing in different quasi-species at others. Both are linked to mammalian GOLGA7 and ZDHHC5 interactions, which mediate viral-cell entry and antiviral response. This study demonstrates SARS-CoV-2’s tendency to evolve with phenotypic consequences, its evolution varying by lineage, and suggests non-dominant quasi-species contribute.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........39def01c4e7d1876e7ca690a34b45f4e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.01.16.523994