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Global landscape of the host response to SARS-CoV-2 variants reveals viral evolutionary trajectories

Authors :
Mehdi Bouhaddou
Ann-Kathrin Reuschl
Benjamin J. Polacco
Lucy G. Thorne
Manisha R. Ummadi
Chengjin Ye
Romel Rosales
Adrian Pelin
Jyoti Batra
Gwendolyn M. Jang
Jiewei Xu
Jack M. Moen
Alicia Richards
Yuan Zhou
Bhavya Harjai
Erica Stevenson
Ajda Rojc
Roberta Ragazzini
Matthew V.X. Whelan
Wilhelm Furnon
Giuditta De Lorenzo
Vanessa Cowton
Abdullah M. Syed
Alison Ciling
Noa Deutsch
Daniel Pirak
Giulia Dowgier
Dejan Mesner
Jane L. Turner
Briana L. McGovern
M. Luis Rodriguez
Rocio Leiva-Rebollo
Alistair S. Dunham
Xiaofang Zhong
Manon Eckhardt
Andrea Fossati
Nicholas Liotta
Thomas Kehrer
Anastasija Cupic
Magda Rutkowska
Nacho Mena
Sadaf Aslam
Alyssa Hoffert
Helene Foussard
John Pham
Molly Lyons
Laura Donahue
Aliesha Griffin
Rebecca Nugent
Kevin Holden
Robert Deans
Pablo Aviles
José Antonio López-Martín
Jose M. Jimeno
Kirsten Obernier
Jacqueline M. Fabius
Margaret Soucheray
Ruth Hüttenhain
Irwin Jungreis
Manolis Kellis
Ignacia Echeverria
Kliment Verba
Paola Bonfanti
Pedro Beltrao
Roded Sharan
Jennifer A. Doudna
Luis Martinez-Sobrido
Arvind Patel
Massimo Palmarini
Lisa Miorin
Kris White
Danielle L. Swaney
Adolfo García-Sastre
Clare Jolly
Lorena Zuliani-Alvarez
Greg J. Towers
Nevan J. Krogan
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

A series of SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern (VOCs) have evolved in humans during the COVID-19 pandemic—Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta, and Omicron. Here, we used global proteomic and genomic analyses during infection to understand the molecular responses driving VOC evolution. We discovered VOC-specific differences in viral RNA and protein expression levels, including for N, Orf6, and Orf9b, and pinpointed several viral mutations responsible. An analysis of the host response to VOC infection and comprehensive interrogation of altered virus-host protein-protein interactions revealed conserved and divergent regulation of biological pathways. For example, regulation of host translation was highly conserved, consistent with suppression of VOC replication in mice using the translation inhibitor plitidepsin. Conversely, modulation of the host inflammatory response was most divergent, where we found Alpha and Beta, but not Omicron BA.1, antagonized interferon stimulated genes (ISGs), a phenotype that correlated with differing levels of Orf6. Additionally, Delta more strongly upregulated proinflammatory genes compared to other VOCs. Systematic comparison of Omicron subvariants revealed BA.5 to have evolved enhanced ISG and proinflammatory gene suppression that similarly correlated with Orf6 expression, effects not seen in BA.4 due to a mutation that disrupts the Orf6-nuclear pore interaction. Our findings describe how VOCs have evolved to fine-tune viral protein expression and protein-protein interactions to evade both innate and adaptive immune responses, offering a likely explanation for increased transmission in humans.One sentence summarySystematic proteomic and genomic analyses of SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern reveal how variant-specific mutations alter viral gene expression, virus-host protein complexes, and the host response to infection with applications to therapy and future pandemic preparedness.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8c8567a33da825246dd5aa0c0571375e