Phenotypic and genetic characterization of MERS coronaviruses from Africa to understand their zoonotic potential

Author:

Zhou Ziqi,Hui Kenrie P. Y.ORCID,So Ray T. Y.ORCID,Lv Huibin,Perera Ranawaka A. P. M.,Chu Daniel K. W.,Gelaye EsayasORCID,Oyas Harry,Njagi ObadiahORCID,Abayneh TakeleORCID,Kuria Wilson,Walelign Elias,Wanglia Rinah,El Masry Ihab,Von Dobschuetz Sophie,Kalpravidh Wantanee,Chevalier Véronique,Miguel Eve,Fassi-Fihri Ouafaa,Trarore Amadou,Liang Weiwen,Wang Yanqun,Nicholls John M.ORCID,Zhao Jincun,Chan Michael C. W.,Poon Leo L. M.,Mok Chris Ka PunORCID,Peiris Malik

Abstract

Coronaviruses are pathogens of pandemic potential. Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) causes a zoonotic respiratory disease of global public health concern, and dromedary camels are the only proven source of zoonotic infection. More than 70% of MERS-CoV–infected dromedaries are found in East, North, and West Africa, but zoonotic MERS disease is only reported from the Arabian Peninsula. We compared viral replication competence of clade A and B viruses from the Arabian Peninsula with genetically diverse clade C viruses found in East (Egypt, Kenya, and Ethiopia), North (Morocco), and West (Nigeria and Burkina Faso) Africa. Viruses from Africa had lower replication competence in ex vivo cultures of the human lung and in lungs of experimentally infected human-DPP4 (hDPP4) knockin mice. We used lentivirus pseudotypes expressing MERS-CoV spike from Saudi Arabian clade A prototype strain (EMC) or African clade C1.1 viruses and demonstrated that clade C1.1 spike was associated with reduced virus entry into the respiratory epithelial cell line Calu-3. Isogenic EMC viruses with spike protein from EMC or clade C1.1 generated by reverse genetics showed that the clade C1.1 spike was associated with reduced virus replication competence in Calu-3 cells in vitro, in ex vivo human bronchus, and in lungs of hDPP4 knockin mice in vivo. These findings may explain why zoonotic MERS disease has not been reported from Africa so far, despite exposure to and infection with MERS-CoV.

Funder

FHB | Health and Medical Research Fund

HHS | National Institutes of Health

Guangdong Province International Scientific and TEchnological Cooperation Projects

United Nations

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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