| Literature DB >> 34239932 |
Saeid Najafi Fard1, Linda Petrone1, Elisa Petruccioli1, Tonino Alonzi1, Giulia Matusali2, Francesca Colavita2, Concetta Castilletti2, Maria Rosaria Capobianchi2, Delia Goletti1.
Abstract
Coronaviruses (CoVs) are enveloped nonsegmented positive-sense RNA viruses belonging to the family Coronaviridae that contain the largest genome among RNA viruses. Their genome encodes 4 major structural proteins, and among them, the Spike (S) protein plays a crucial role in determining the viral tropism. It mediates viral attachment to the host cell, fusion to the membranes, and cell entry using cellular proteases as activators. Several in vitro models have been developed to study the CoVs entry, pathogenesis, and possible therapeutic approaches. This article is aimed at summarizing the current knowledge about the use of relevant methodologies and cell lines permissive for CoV life cycle studies. The synthesis of this information can be useful for setting up specific experimental procedures. We also discuss different strategies for inhibiting the binding of the S protein to the cell receptors and the fusion process which may offer opportunities for therapeutic intervention.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34239932 PMCID: PMC8221881 DOI: 10.1155/2021/8856018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Coronaviruses (CoVs) are enveloped nonsegmented positive-sense RNA viruses belonging to the family Coronaviridae. Four genera are known: alpha-, beta-, gamma-, and delta-CoVs. Beta-CoVs are accountable for zoonotic outbreaks as severe acute respiratory syndromes- (SARS-) CoV, Middle East respiratory syndrome virus- (MERS-) CoV, and now, the novel SARS-like coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2). CoVs encode several nonstructural and structural proteins as genome-associated nucleocapsid protein (N), envelope protein (E), and spike (S) glycoprotein. In particular, S protein is crucial for viral attachment, fusion, and entry into epithelial cells. SARS-CoV and SARS-CoV-2 bind to ACE2 receptor highly expressed on ciliated epithelial cells, whereas MERS-CoV enters nonciliated epithelial cells binding the CD26/DPP4 receptor. Several host cellular proteases are needed to activate the S protein (e.g., TMPRSS2, furin, and cathepsins) and viral entry into cells.
CD26/DPP4 and ACE2 receptor expression in different primate cell lines.
| Cell line | Origin | Expression marker | Level | Method of evaluation | Virus | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nonhuman cells: | ||||||
| Vero, Vero E6 | African green monkey kidney | CD26/DPP4 | N/R | Immunofluorescence | MERS-CoV | [ |
| CD26/DPP4 | High | Flow cytometry (FACS), immunofluorescence | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
| CD26/DPP4 | High | Flow cytometry (FACS), western blot | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
| CD26/DPP4 | High | Flow cytometry (FACS), protein electrophoresis | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
| CD26/DPP4 | Low | Real-time RT-PCR, western blot | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
| CD26/DPP4 | Int. | Western blot | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
| CD26/DPP4 | High | Flow cytometry (FACS) | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
| CD26/DPP4 | Int. | Quantitative RT-PCR | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
| CD26/DPP4 | Int. | Quantitative RT-PCR, flow cytometry (FACS) | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
| CD26/DPP4 | High | Immunofluorescence | MERS -CoV | [ | ||
| ACE2 | High | Real-time RT-PCR | SARS-CoV | [ | ||
| ACE2 | High | RT-PCR | SARS-CoV | [ | ||
| ACE2 | Int. | Immunofluorescence | SARS-CoV | [ | ||
| ACE2 | High | Western blot | SARS-CoV | [ | ||
| ACE2 | Int. | Flow cytometry (FACS) | SARS-CoV | [ | ||
| ACE2 | High | Immunofluorescence | SARS-CoV | [ | ||
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| LLC-MK2 | Rhesus monkey kidney | ACE2 | High | Flow cytometry (FACS), immunofluorescence | SARS-CoV | [ |
| ACE2 | High | Immunostaining | HCoV-NL63 | [ | ||
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| Human cells: | ||||||
| MRC-5 | Lung cells Medical Research Council-5 | CD26/DPP4 | High | Quantitative RT-PCR | MERS -CoV | [ |
|
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| A549 | Human lung adenocarcinoma | CD26/DPP4 | Low | Enzymatic activities, immunohistochemistry (IHC) | - | [ |
| CD26/DPP4 | N/R | Flow cytometry (FACS) | - | [ | ||
| CD26/DPP4 | N/R | Immunofluorescence | MERS -CoV | [ | ||
| CD26/DPP4 | Low | Western blot | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
| ACE2 | N/R | Western blot | - | [ | ||
| ACE2 | High | Immunostaining | SARS-CoV | [ | ||
| ACE2 | Low | Immunoblot | SARS-CoV | [ | ||
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| Calu-3 | Human lung cancer cells | CD26/DPP4 | High | Immunofluorescence | MERS-CoV | [ |
| CD26/DPP4 | High | Real-time RT-PCR, western blot | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
| CD26/DPP4 | Int. | Real-time RT-PCR | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
| CD26/DPP4 | High | Flow cytometry (FACS) | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
| ACE2 | High | Flow cytometry (FACS), immunofluorescence | SARS-CoV | [ | ||
| ACE2 | High | Real-time RT-PCR | SARS-CoV | [ | ||
| ACE2 | High | Flow cytometry (FACS), western blot | - | [ | ||
| ACE2 | Low | Immunofluorescence | SARS-CoV | [ | ||
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| HEp-2 | Human respiratory tract | ACE2 | High | RT-PCR | SARS-CoV | [ |
| CD26/DPP4 | Neg. | Western blot | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
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| Huh-7 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | CD26/DPP4 | High | Flow cytometry (FACS), immunofluorescence | MERS-CoV | [ |
| CD26/DPP4 | High | Flow cytometry (FACS), western blot | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
| CD26/DPP4 | High | Flow cytometry (FACS), protein electrophoresis | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
| CD26/DPP4 | N/R | Flow cytometry (FACS) | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
| CD26/DPP4 | High | Real-time RT-PCR | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
| CD26/DPP4 | High | Western blot | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
| CD26/DPP4 | Int. | Quantitative RT-PCR | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
| ACE2 | High | Real-time RT-PCR | SARS-CoV | [ | ||
| ACE2 | High | RT-PCR | SARS-CoV | [ | ||
| ACE2 | Neg. | Flow cytometry (FACS), western blot | - | [ | ||
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| LoVo | Human colorectal adenocarcinoma | ACE2 | Int. | Real-time RT-PCR | SARS-CoV | [ |
| CD26/DPP4 | High | Real-time RT-PCR | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
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| Caco-2 | Human intestinal tract | CD26/DPP4 | Int. | Western blot | MERS-CoV | [ |
| CD26/DPP4 | High | Quantitative RT-PCR | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
| CD26/DPP4 | High | Quantitative RT-PCR, flow cytometry (FACS) | MERS-CoV | [ | ||
| ACE2 | Low | Flow cytometry (FACS), western blot | - | [ | ||
| ACE2 | High | Immunofluorescence | SARS-CoV | [ | ||
| ACE2 | High | RT-PCR | - | [ | ||
Abbreviations: ACE2: angiotensin-converting enzyme 2; DPP4: dipeptidyl peptidase 4; CD26: cluster of differentiation 26; SARS-CoV: severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus; MERS-COV: Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus; Int.: intermediate; N/R: not reported.
In vitro models for studying cell entry and tissue tropism of different pathogenic coronaviruses.
| Cell lines | Origin | Virus | Main finding related to cell entry and tissue tropism | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nonhuman cells: | ||||
| Vero | African green monkey kidney | SARS-CoV | TMPRSS2 is involved in virus entry. | [ |
| SARS-CoV | Cathepsin L inhibitor blocked SARS-CoV infection. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | Small-molecule compounds could perturb the infectivity of the virus. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | Sensitivity of S-mediated entry to protease inhibitors. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | ACE2 as SARS-CoV S pseudovirion receptor for entry. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | Receptor blocked by polyclonal goat anti-hACE2. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV-2 | ACE2 as SARS-CoV-2 S pseudovirion receptor for entry. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | Furin inhibitor significantly decreased S-mediated entry. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | DPP4 as the receptor for viral entry. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | DPP4 is expressed on permissive cell. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | HR2P significantly inhibited virus replication. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | Simultaneous treatment with inhibitors of cathepsin L and TMPRSS2 completely blocked virus entry. | [ | ||
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| VeroE6 | African green monkey kidney | SARS-CoV | Rabbit antisera effectively blocked binding of S1 to ACE2. | [ |
| SARS-CoV | ACE2 as the receptor for viral entry. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | Anti-ACE2 blocked viral entry. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | Protease Inhibitors (leupeptin, Z-lll-FMK) blocked SARS-CoV S-mediated entry. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | Proteases enhanced virus entry. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | Vimentin as a coreceptor involved in the virus entry. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | Different host cell proteases activate SARS-S for virus–cell and cell–cell fusion. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | Cholesterol extraction by M | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV-2 | SARS-CoV S polyclonal Abs inhibited SARS-CoV-2 spike mediated entry. | [ | ||
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| LLC-MK2 | Rhesus monkey kidney | SARS-CoV | ACE2 as the receptor for viral entry. | [ |
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| COS-7 | Monkey kidney | MERS-CoV | Expression of human and bat DPP4 allowed MERS-CoV S1–Fc cell surface binding, and viral entry. | [ |
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| BHK | Baby hamster kidney | SARS-CoV | ACE2 as the receptor for viral entry. | [ |
| SARS-CoV | Proteolytic cleavage within S2 exposes a novel internal fusion peptide for SARS-CoV S. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV, SARS-CoV-2 | ACE2 as the receptor for viral entry. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV-2 | ACE2 and host proteases requirement for viral entry. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | hDPP4 transfected cells became permissive. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | Virus could infect human and bat cells expressing DPP4. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | Specific binding between CD26 and MERS-CoV RBD. | [ | ||
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| C6 | Rat glioma-derived | SARS-CoV | No apparent cytopathic effects (CPE) by infection but produced virus with infectivity of 102–5 per ml. No expression of ACE2 | [ |
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| Human cells: | ||||
| A549 | Lung adenocarcinoma | MERS-CoV | DPP4 is expressed on permissive cells. | [ |
|
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| OL | Oligodendroglioma-derived | SARS-CoV | No apparent cytopathic effects (CPE) by infection but produced virus with infectivity of 102–5 per ml. No expression of ACE2 | [ |
|
| ||||
| Calu-3 | Airway epithelium | SARS-CoV | hACE2 was required for cell entry. | [ |
| SARS-CoV | Anti-ACE2 Ab blocked the cell entry in a dose-dependent manner. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | ACE2, the SARS-CoV S pseudovirion receptor for entry. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | Simultaneous treatment of the cells with camostat and EST efficiently prevented both cell entry and the multistep growth of the virus in the cells. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV-2 | ACE2 as the SARS-CoV-2 S pseudovirion receptor for entry. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | DPP4 is expressed on permissive cells. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | TMPRSS2 inhibitor (camostat) blocked virus entry. | [ | ||
|
| ||||
| Huh-7 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | SARS-CoV | S-mediated entry of pseudotypes requires low pH, S is a target for neutralizing antibodies. | [ |
| SARS-CoV | ACE2 as the SARS-CoV S pseudovirion receptor for entry. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV-2 | ACE2 as the SARS-CoV-2 S pseudovirion receptor for entry. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | Anti-CD26 mAbs (2F9) inhibited viral entry. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | pAbs to the MERS-CoV S1 efficiently neutralize virus infection. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | Furin inhibitor significantly decreased S-mediated entry. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | DPP4 as the receptor for viral entry. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | Nanobodies significantly blocked RBD binding to DPP4. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | Antihuman CD26/DPP4 antibody inhibited MERS-CoV infection. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | S protein-mediated cell–cell fusion and syncytium formation. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | Interaction between recombinant RBDs and DPP4. | [ | ||
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| HEK293T | Embryonic kidneys | SARS-CoV | Cathepsin L inhibitor blocked S mediated pseudovirus entry in ACE2+ cells. | [ |
| SARS-CoV | Lactoferrin blocked the binding of S protein to ACE2 transfected cells. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV-2 | Binding of polyclonal rabbit anti-SARS S1 antibodies to SARS-CoV-2. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | hDPP4 transfected cells became permissive. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | High levels of hDPP4 and furin enhanced viral entry. Knocked down furin expression with siRNA significantly reduced the pseudovirus entry. | [ | ||
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| 293T | Embryonic kidney epithelial | SARS-CoV | S Protein efficiently binds ACE2. | [ |
| SARS-CoV | Neutralization of SARS pseudovirus infection by mouse antisera. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | TMPRSS2 protease-dependent viral entry. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | Protease inhibitors (leupeptin, E64c) blocked SARS-CoV S-mediated entry. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | Cytoplasmic domain was not essential for ACE2-mediated viral entry; soluble ACE2 inhibited S-bearing pseudotype entry. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | Rabbit antisera effectively blocked binding of S1 to ACE2. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | ACE2 was required for entry. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | SARS-CoV RBD protein inhibited virus entry. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | ACE2 as the SARS-CoV S pseudovirion receptor for entry. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | MAbs inhibited RBD-Fc binding to ACE2. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | A compound (designated VE607) inhibited pseudovirus entry. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | ACE2 as the SARS-CoV S pseudovirion receptor for entry. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | TMPRSS2-mediated proteolysis of both S and ACE2 enhanced viral entry. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | S-mediated entry of lentiviral-based vectors. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | Proteases activated SARS-S-driven virus-cell fusion. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV | Host cell proteases activated SARS-S for virus–cell and cell–cell fusion. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV-2 | ACE2 as the SARS-CoV-2 S pseudovirion receptor for entry. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV-2 | Protease was required for S-driven entry. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV-2 | SARS-CoV-2 RBD protein inhibited both SARS- and SARS-CoV-2 entry. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | MERS-CoV RBD inhibited MERS-CoV pseudovirus entry. | [ | ||
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| HeLa | Cervical adenocarcinoma | SARS-CoV | TMPRSS2 enhanced pseudotyped SARS-S and authentic SARS-CoV entry, and camostat blocked it. | [ |
| SARS-CoV-2 | ACE2 was required for viral entry. | [ | ||
|
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| JKT-hCD26 | Human T cell leukemia | MERS-CoV | Anti-CD26 mAbs (2F9) inhibited viral entry. | [ |
|
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| LoVo | Colorectal adenocarcinoma | SARS-CoV | ACE2 is expressed on permissive cell. | [ |
| MERS-CoV | DPP4 is expressed on permissive cell. | [ | ||
|
| ||||
| Caco-2 | Colorectal adenocarcinoma | SARS-CoV-2 | Protease was required for S-driven entry. | [ |
| MERS-CoV | Protease (TMPRSS2 and cathepsin B/L) could activate EMC-S for entry. | [ | ||
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| Primary culture | ||||
| HBEpC | Primary bronchial epithelial cell | SARS-CoV, MERS-CoV | Specific receptors were needed for cell entry. | [ |
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| HREpC | Primary renal epithelial cells | SARS-CoV, MERS-CoV | Specific receptors were needed for cell entry. | [ |
|
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| HAE | Airway epithelium | SARS-CoV | hACE2 as the primary receptor for entry. | [ |
| SARS-CoV | S protein-pseudotyped FIV infected differentiated cells abundantly express ACE2 from the apical surface. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | Both type I and type III IFN efficiently reduced MERS-CoV replication. | [ | ||
| MERS-CoV | TMPRSS2 inhibitor (camostat) blocked virus entry. | [ | ||
|
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| NHBE | Normal human bronchial epithelial | MERS-CoV | Furin inhibitor significantly decreased S-mediated entry. | [ |
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| 3D human organoids | Induced pluripotent stem cells- (iPSCs-) derived | SARS-CoV-2 | The impact of SARS-CoV-2 as a neurotropic virus and emphasize that brain organoids could model CNS pathologies of COVID-19 | [ |
| SARS-CoV-2 | Neuronal infection can be prevented either by blocking ACE2 with antibodies or by administering cerebrospinal fluid from a COVID-19 patient. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV-2 | Using hPSCs to generate multiple different cell and organoid derivatives to study the viral tropism and cellular responses to infection. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV-2 | SARS-CoV-2 can infect neural cells. detected the expression of the ACE2 receptor, but not TMPRSS2, in the model. | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV-2 | ACE2 expresses in cultured human pluripotent stem cell- (PSC-) derived mixed neurons. | [ | ||