Synthetic Reconstruction of Zoonotic and Early Human Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus Isolates That Produce Fatal Disease in Aged Mice
Open Access
- 15 July 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Virology
- Vol. 81 (14), 7410-7423
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.00505-07
Abstract
The severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) epidemic was characterized by high mortality rates in the elderly. The molecular mechanisms that govern enhanced susceptibility of elderly populations are not known, and robust animal models are needed that recapitulate the increased pathogenic phenotype noted with increasing age. Using synthetic biology and reverse genetics, we describe the construction of a panel of isogenic SARS coronavirus (SARS-CoV) strains bearing variant spike glycoproteins that are representative of zoonotic strains found in palm civets and raccoon dogs, as well as isolates spanning the early, middle, and late phases of the SARS-CoV epidemic. The recombinant viruses replicated efficiently in cell culture and demonstrated variable sensitivities to neutralization with antibodies. The human but not the zoonotic variants replicated efficiently in human airway epithelial cultures, supporting earlier hypotheses that zoonotic isolates are less pathogenic in humans but can evolve into highly pathogenic strains. All viruses replicated efficiently, but none produced clinical disease or death in young animals. In contrast, severe clinical disease, diffuse alveolar damage, hyaline membrane formation, alveolitis, and death were noted in 12-month-old mice inoculated with the palm civet HC/SZ/61/03 strain or early-human-phase GZ02 variants but not with related middle- and late-phase epidemic or raccoon dog strains. This panel of SARS-CoV recombinants bearing zoonotic and human epidemic spike glycoproteins will provide heterologous challenge models for testing vaccine efficacy against zoonotic reintroductions as well as provide the appropriate model system for elucidating the complex virus-host interactions that contribute to more-severe and fatal SARS-CoV disease and acute respiratory distress in the elderly.Keywords
This publication has 67 references indexed in Scilit:
- SARS molecular epidemiology: a Chinese fairy tale of controlling an emerging zoonotic disease in the genomics eraPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2007
- Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus Infection of Mice Transgenic for the Human Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme 2 Virus ReceptorJournal of Virology, 2007
- Lethal Infection of K18- hACE2 Mice Infected with Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome CoronavirusJournal of Virology, 2007
- A Mouse-Adapted SARS-Coronavirus Causes Disease and Mortality in BALB/c MicePLoS Pathogens, 2007
- Vaccine Efficacy in Senescent Mice Challenged with Recombinant SARS-CoV Bearing Epidemic and Zoonotic Spike VariantsPLoS Medicine, 2006
- Cooperative Involvement of the S1 and S2 Subunits of the Murine Coronavirus Spike Protein in Receptor Binding and Extended Host RangeJournal of Virology, 2006
- Mucosal Immunization with Surface-Displayed Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus Spike Protein onLactobacillus caseiInduces Neutralizing Antibodies in MiceJournal of Virology, 2006
- Evaluation of Human Monoclonal Antibody 80R for Immunoprophylaxis of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome by an Animal Study, Epitope Mapping, and Analysis of Spike VariantsJournal of Virology, 2005
- Multiple sequence alignment with the Clustal series of programsNucleic Acids Research, 2003
- The rapid generation of mutation data matrices from protein sequencesBioinformatics, 1992