Cargando…

Tropism and replication of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus from dromedary camels in the human respiratory tract: an in-vitro and ex-vivo study

BACKGROUND: Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) is a zoonotic infection causing severe viral pneumonia, with index cases having resided in or recently travelled to the Arabian peninsula, and is a global concern for public health. Limited human-to-human transmission, leading to so...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Chan, Renee W Y, Hemida, Maged G, Kayali, Ghazi, Chu, Daniel K W, Poon, Leo L M, Alnaeem, Abdelmohsen, Ali, Mohamed A, Tao, Kin P, Ng, Hoi Y, Chan, Michael C W, Guan, Yi, Nicholls, John M, Peiris, J S Malik
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier Ltd. 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7164818/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25174549
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2213-2600(14)70158-4
_version_ 1783523360923189248
author Chan, Renee W Y
Hemida, Maged G
Kayali, Ghazi
Chu, Daniel K W
Poon, Leo L M
Alnaeem, Abdelmohsen
Ali, Mohamed A
Tao, Kin P
Ng, Hoi Y
Chan, Michael C W
Guan, Yi
Nicholls, John M
Peiris, J S Malik
author_facet Chan, Renee W Y
Hemida, Maged G
Kayali, Ghazi
Chu, Daniel K W
Poon, Leo L M
Alnaeem, Abdelmohsen
Ali, Mohamed A
Tao, Kin P
Ng, Hoi Y
Chan, Michael C W
Guan, Yi
Nicholls, John M
Peiris, J S Malik
author_sort Chan, Renee W Y
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) is a zoonotic infection causing severe viral pneumonia, with index cases having resided in or recently travelled to the Arabian peninsula, and is a global concern for public health. Limited human-to-human transmission, leading to some case clusters, has been reported. MERS-CoV has been reported in dromedary camels but phenotypic characterisation of such viruses is limited. We aimed to compare MERS-CoV isolates from dromedaries in Saudi Arabia and Egypt with a prototype human MERS-CoV to assess virus replication competence and cell tropism in ex-vivo cultures of human bronchus and lung. METHODS: We characterised MERS-CoV viruses from dromedaries in Saudi Arabia and Egypt and compared them with a human MERS-CoV reference strain. We assessed viral replication kinetics and competence in Vero-E6 cells (rhesus monkey), tissue tropism in cultures of ex-vivo human bronchial and lung tissues, and cytokine and chemokine induction, gene expression, and quantification of viral RNA in Calu-3 cells (human respiratory tract). We used mock-infected tissue as negative controls for ex-vivo experiments and influenza A H5N1 as a positive control for cytokine and chemokine induction experiments in Calu-3 cells. FINDINGS: We isolated three dromedary strains, two from Saudi Arabia (Dromedary/Al-Hasa-KFU-HKU13/2013 [AH13] and Dromedary/Al-Hasa-KFU-HKU19D/2013 [AH19D]), and one from Egypt (Dromedary/Egypt-NRCE-HKU270/2013 [NRCE-HKU270]). The human and dromedary MERS-CoV strains had similar viral replication competence in Vero-E6 cells and respiratory tropism in ex-vivo cultures of the human respiratory tract, and had similar ability to evade interferon responses in the human-respiratory-tract-derived cell line Calu-3. INTERPRETATION: The similarity of virus tropism and replication competence of human and dromedary MERS-CoV from the Arabian peninsula, and genetically diverse dromedary viruses from Egypt, in ex-vivo cultures of the human respiratory tract suggests that dromedary viruses from Saudi Arabia and Egypt are probably infectious to human beings. Exposure to zoonotic MERS-CoV is probably occurring in a wider geographical region beyond the Arabian peninsula. FUNDING: King Faisal University, Egyptian National Research Centre, Hong Kong Food and Health Bureau, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and European Community Seventh Framework Program.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7164818
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2014
publisher Elsevier Ltd.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-71648182020-04-20 Tropism and replication of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus from dromedary camels in the human respiratory tract: an in-vitro and ex-vivo study Chan, Renee W Y Hemida, Maged G Kayali, Ghazi Chu, Daniel K W Poon, Leo L M Alnaeem, Abdelmohsen Ali, Mohamed A Tao, Kin P Ng, Hoi Y Chan, Michael C W Guan, Yi Nicholls, John M Peiris, J S Malik Lancet Respir Med Article BACKGROUND: Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) is a zoonotic infection causing severe viral pneumonia, with index cases having resided in or recently travelled to the Arabian peninsula, and is a global concern for public health. Limited human-to-human transmission, leading to some case clusters, has been reported. MERS-CoV has been reported in dromedary camels but phenotypic characterisation of such viruses is limited. We aimed to compare MERS-CoV isolates from dromedaries in Saudi Arabia and Egypt with a prototype human MERS-CoV to assess virus replication competence and cell tropism in ex-vivo cultures of human bronchus and lung. METHODS: We characterised MERS-CoV viruses from dromedaries in Saudi Arabia and Egypt and compared them with a human MERS-CoV reference strain. We assessed viral replication kinetics and competence in Vero-E6 cells (rhesus monkey), tissue tropism in cultures of ex-vivo human bronchial and lung tissues, and cytokine and chemokine induction, gene expression, and quantification of viral RNA in Calu-3 cells (human respiratory tract). We used mock-infected tissue as negative controls for ex-vivo experiments and influenza A H5N1 as a positive control for cytokine and chemokine induction experiments in Calu-3 cells. FINDINGS: We isolated three dromedary strains, two from Saudi Arabia (Dromedary/Al-Hasa-KFU-HKU13/2013 [AH13] and Dromedary/Al-Hasa-KFU-HKU19D/2013 [AH19D]), and one from Egypt (Dromedary/Egypt-NRCE-HKU270/2013 [NRCE-HKU270]). The human and dromedary MERS-CoV strains had similar viral replication competence in Vero-E6 cells and respiratory tropism in ex-vivo cultures of the human respiratory tract, and had similar ability to evade interferon responses in the human-respiratory-tract-derived cell line Calu-3. INTERPRETATION: The similarity of virus tropism and replication competence of human and dromedary MERS-CoV from the Arabian peninsula, and genetically diverse dromedary viruses from Egypt, in ex-vivo cultures of the human respiratory tract suggests that dromedary viruses from Saudi Arabia and Egypt are probably infectious to human beings. Exposure to zoonotic MERS-CoV is probably occurring in a wider geographical region beyond the Arabian peninsula. FUNDING: King Faisal University, Egyptian National Research Centre, Hong Kong Food and Health Bureau, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and European Community Seventh Framework Program. Elsevier Ltd. 2014-10 2014-08-28 /pmc/articles/PMC7164818/ /pubmed/25174549 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2213-2600(14)70158-4 Text en Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Since January 2020 Elsevier has created a COVID-19 resource centre with free information in English and Mandarin on the novel coronavirus COVID-19. The COVID-19 resource centre is hosted on Elsevier Connect, the company's public news and information website. Elsevier hereby grants permission to make all its COVID-19-related research that is available on the COVID-19 resource centre - including this research content - immediately available in PubMed Central and other publicly funded repositories, such as the WHO COVID database with rights for unrestricted research re-use and analyses in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for free by Elsevier for as long as the COVID-19 resource centre remains active.
spellingShingle Article
Chan, Renee W Y
Hemida, Maged G
Kayali, Ghazi
Chu, Daniel K W
Poon, Leo L M
Alnaeem, Abdelmohsen
Ali, Mohamed A
Tao, Kin P
Ng, Hoi Y
Chan, Michael C W
Guan, Yi
Nicholls, John M
Peiris, J S Malik
Tropism and replication of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus from dromedary camels in the human respiratory tract: an in-vitro and ex-vivo study
title Tropism and replication of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus from dromedary camels in the human respiratory tract: an in-vitro and ex-vivo study
title_full Tropism and replication of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus from dromedary camels in the human respiratory tract: an in-vitro and ex-vivo study
title_fullStr Tropism and replication of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus from dromedary camels in the human respiratory tract: an in-vitro and ex-vivo study
title_full_unstemmed Tropism and replication of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus from dromedary camels in the human respiratory tract: an in-vitro and ex-vivo study
title_short Tropism and replication of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus from dromedary camels in the human respiratory tract: an in-vitro and ex-vivo study
title_sort tropism and replication of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus from dromedary camels in the human respiratory tract: an in-vitro and ex-vivo study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7164818/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25174549
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2213-2600(14)70158-4
work_keys_str_mv AT chanreneewy tropismandreplicationofmiddleeastrespiratorysyndromecoronavirusfromdromedarycamelsinthehumanrespiratorytractaninvitroandexvivostudy
AT hemidamagedg tropismandreplicationofmiddleeastrespiratorysyndromecoronavirusfromdromedarycamelsinthehumanrespiratorytractaninvitroandexvivostudy
AT kayalighazi tropismandreplicationofmiddleeastrespiratorysyndromecoronavirusfromdromedarycamelsinthehumanrespiratorytractaninvitroandexvivostudy
AT chudanielkw tropismandreplicationofmiddleeastrespiratorysyndromecoronavirusfromdromedarycamelsinthehumanrespiratorytractaninvitroandexvivostudy
AT poonleolm tropismandreplicationofmiddleeastrespiratorysyndromecoronavirusfromdromedarycamelsinthehumanrespiratorytractaninvitroandexvivostudy
AT alnaeemabdelmohsen tropismandreplicationofmiddleeastrespiratorysyndromecoronavirusfromdromedarycamelsinthehumanrespiratorytractaninvitroandexvivostudy
AT alimohameda tropismandreplicationofmiddleeastrespiratorysyndromecoronavirusfromdromedarycamelsinthehumanrespiratorytractaninvitroandexvivostudy
AT taokinp tropismandreplicationofmiddleeastrespiratorysyndromecoronavirusfromdromedarycamelsinthehumanrespiratorytractaninvitroandexvivostudy
AT nghoiy tropismandreplicationofmiddleeastrespiratorysyndromecoronavirusfromdromedarycamelsinthehumanrespiratorytractaninvitroandexvivostudy
AT chanmichaelcw tropismandreplicationofmiddleeastrespiratorysyndromecoronavirusfromdromedarycamelsinthehumanrespiratorytractaninvitroandexvivostudy
AT guanyi tropismandreplicationofmiddleeastrespiratorysyndromecoronavirusfromdromedarycamelsinthehumanrespiratorytractaninvitroandexvivostudy
AT nichollsjohnm tropismandreplicationofmiddleeastrespiratorysyndromecoronavirusfromdromedarycamelsinthehumanrespiratorytractaninvitroandexvivostudy
AT peirisjsmalik tropismandreplicationofmiddleeastrespiratorysyndromecoronavirusfromdromedarycamelsinthehumanrespiratorytractaninvitroandexvivostudy