| Literature DB >> 34921308 |
Esen Sefik1, Benjamin Israelow1,2, Haris Mirza1,3, Jun Zhao1,3, Rihao Qu1,3, Eleanna Kaffe1, Eric Song1, Stephanie Halene4, Eric Meffre1, Yuval Kluger3, Michel Nussenzweig5, Craig B Wilen1,6, Akiko Iwasaki1,7, Richard A Flavell8,9.
Abstract
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is an infectious disease that can present as an uncontrolled, hyperactive immune response, causing severe immunological injury. Existing rodent models do not recapitulate the sustained immunopathology of patients with severe disease. Here we describe a humanized mouse model of COVID-19 that uses adeno-associated virus to deliver human ACE2 to the lungs of humanized MISTRG6 mice. This model recapitulates innate and adaptive human immune responses to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 infection up to 28 days after infection, with key features of chronic COVID-19, including weight loss, persistent viral RNA, lung pathology with fibrosis, a human inflammatory macrophage response, a persistent interferon-stimulated gene signature and T cell lymphopenia. We used this model to study two therapeutics on immunopathology, patient-derived antibodies and steroids and found that the same inflammatory macrophages crucial to containing early infection later drove immunopathology. This model will enable evaluation of COVID-19 disease mechanisms and treatments.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34921308 PMCID: PMC9203605 DOI: 10.1038/s41587-021-01155-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Biotechnol ISSN: 1087-0156 Impact factor: 68.164