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  4. TMPRSS2-mediated SARS-CoV-2 uptake boosts innate immune activation, enhances cytopathology, and drives convergent virus evolution
 
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2024
Journal Article
Title

TMPRSS2-mediated SARS-CoV-2 uptake boosts innate immune activation, enhances cytopathology, and drives convergent virus evolution

Abstract
The accessory protease transmembrane protease serine 2 (TMPRSS2) enhances severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) uptake into ACE2-expressing cells, although how increased entry impacts downstream viral and host processes remains unclear. To investigate this in more detail, we performed infection assays in engineered cells promoting ACE2-mediated entry with and without TMPRSS2 coexpression. Electron microscopy and inhibitor experiments indicated TMPRSS2-mediated cell entry was associated with increased virion internalization into endosomes, and partially dependent upon clathrin-mediated endocytosis. TMPRSS2 increased panvariant uptake efficiency and enhanced early rates of virus replication, transcription, and secretion, with variant-specific profiles observed. On the host side, transcriptional profiling confirmed the magnitude of infection-induced antiviral and proinflammatory responses were linked to uptake efficiency, with TMPRSS2-assisted entry boosting early antiviral responses. In addition, TMPRSS2-enhanced infections increased rates of cytopathology, apoptosis, and necrosis and modulated virus secretion kinetics in a variant-specific manner. On the virus side, convergent signatures of cell-uptake-dependent innate immune induction were recorded in viral genomes, manifesting as switches in dominant coupled Nsp3 residues whose frequencies were correlated to the magnitude of the cellular response to infection. Experimentally, we demonstrated that selected Nsp3 mutations conferred enhanced interferon antagonism. More broadly, we show that TMPRSS2 orthologues from evolutionarily diverse mammals facilitate panvariant enhancement of cell uptake. In summary, our study uncovers previously unreported associations, linking cell entry efficiency to innate immune activation kinetics, cell death rates, virus secretion dynamics, and convergent selection of viral mutations. These data expand our understanding of TMPRSS2’s role in the SARS-CoV-2 life cycle and confirm its broader significance in zoonotic reservoirs and animal models.
Author(s)
Qu, Bingqian
Miskey, Csaba
Gömer, Andre
Kleinert, Robin D.V.
Ibanez, Sara Calvo
Eberle, Regina
Ebenig, Aileen
Postmus, Dylan
Nocke, Maximilian Klaus
Herrmann, Maike
Itotia, Tabitha K.
Herrmann, Simon T.
Heinen, Natalie
Höck, Sebastian
Hastert, Florian D.
Rhein, Christine von
Schürmann, Christoph
Li, Xue
Zandbergen, Ger van
Widera, Marek
Ciesek, Sandra  
Fraunhofer-Institut für Translationale Medizin und Pharmakologie ITMP  
Schnierle, Barbara S.
Tarr, Alexander W.
Steinmann, Eike
Goffinet, Christine
Pfaender, Stephanie
Locker, Jacomina Krijnse
Mühlebach, Michael D.
Todt, Daniel
Brown, Richard J.P.
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America : PNAS  
Open Access
DOI
10.1073/pnas.2407437121
Additional link
Full text
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Translationale Medizin und Pharmakologie ITMP  
Keyword(s)
  • cytolytic responses

  • host-species range

  • innate immunity

  • SARS-CoV-2 entry

  • viral evolution

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