MHC class II genes mediate susceptibility and resistance to coronavirus infections in bats

Author:

Schmid Dominik W.1ORCID,Meyer Magdalena1ORCID,Wilhelm Kerstin1,Tilley Tatiana1,Link‐Hessing Thomas1,Fleischer Ramona1ORCID,Badu Ebenezer K.2ORCID,Nkrumah Evans Ewald2ORCID,Oppong Samuel Kingsley2,Schwensow Nina1ORCID,Tschapka Marco1ORCID,Baldwin Heather J.13ORCID,Vallo Peter14ORCID,Corman Victor M.56ORCID,Drosten Christian56ORCID,Sommer Simone1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Evolutionary Ecology and Conservation Genomics Ulm University Ulm Germany

2. Department of Wildlife and Range Management Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology Kumasi Ghana

3. Department of Biological Sciences Macquarie University Sydney New South Wales Australia

4. Institute of Vertebrate Biology Czech Academy of Sciences Brno Czech Republic

5. Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin Institute of Virology German Centre for Infection Research (DZIF) Berlin Germany

6. German Centre for Infection Research (DZIF) Berlin Germany

Abstract

AbstractUnderstanding the immunogenetic basis of coronavirus (CoV) susceptibility in major pathogen reservoirs, such as bats, is central to inferring their zoonotic potential. Members of the cryptic Hipposideros bat species complex differ in CoV susceptibility, but the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. The genes of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) are the best understood genetic basis of pathogen resistance, and differences in MHC diversity are one possible reason for asymmetrical infection patterns among closely related species. Here, we aimed to link asymmetries in observed CoV (CoV‐229E, CoV‐2B and CoV‐2Bbasal) susceptibility to immunogenetic differences amongst four Hipposideros bat species. From the 2072 bats assigned to their respective species using the mtDNA cytochrome b gene, members of the most numerous and ubiquitous species, Hipposideros caffer D, were most infected with CoV‐229E and SARS‐related CoV‐2B. Using a subset of 569 bats, we determined that much of the existent allelic and functional (i.e. supertype) MHC DRB class II diversity originated from common ancestry. One MHC supertype shared amongst all species, ST12, was consistently linked to susceptibility with CoV‐229E, which is closely related to the common cold agent HCoV‐229E, and infected bats and those carrying ST12 had a lower body condition. The same MHC supertype was connected to resistance to CoV‐2B, and bats with ST12 were less likely be co‐infected with CoV‐229E and CoV‐2B. Our work suggests a role of immunogenetics in determining CoV susceptibility in bats. We advocate for the preservation of functional genetic and species diversity in reservoirs as a means of mitigating the risk of disease spillover.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference133 articles.

1. Human Betacoronavirus 2c EMC/2012–related Viruses in Bats, Ghana and Europe

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3. Human–Bat Interactions in Rural West Africa

4. Baldwin H. J.(2015).Epidemiology and ecology of virus and host: Bats and coronaviruses in Ghana West Africa. (Thesis). Macquarie University. p. 194.

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