The furin cleavage site of SARS-CoV-2 spike protein is a key determinant for transmission due to enhanced replication in airway cells

Thomas P. Peacock(Imperial College London), Daniel H. Goldhill(Imperial College London), Jie Zhou(Imperial College London), Laury Baillon(Imperial College London), Rebecca Frise(Imperial College London), Olivia C. Swann(Imperial College London), Ruthiran Kugathasan(Imperial College London), Rebecca Penn(Imperial College London), Jonathan C. Brown(Imperial College London), Raul Y. Sanchez-David(Imperial College London), Luca Braga(King's College London), Maia Kavanagh Williamson(University of Bristol), Jack A. Hassard(Imperial College London), Ecco Staller(Imperial College London), Brian Hanley(North West London Pathology), Michael Osborn(North West London Pathology), Mauro Giacca(King's College London), Andrew D. Davidson(University of Bristol), David A. Matthews(University of Bristol), William Barclay(Imperial College London)
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
September 30, 2020
Cited by 103Open Access
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Abstract

Summary SARS-CoV-2 enters cells via its spike glycoprotein which must be cleaved sequentially at the S1/S2, then the S2’ cleavage sites (CS) to mediate membrane fusion. SARS-CoV-2 has a unique polybasic insertion at the S1/S2 CS, which we demonstrate can be cleaved by furin. Using lentiviral pseudotypes and a cell-culture adapted SARS-CoV-2 virus with a S1/S2 deletion, we show that the polybasic insertion is selected for in lung cells and primary human airway epithelial cultures but selected against in Vero E6, a cell line used for passaging SARS-CoV-2. We find this selective advantage depends on expression of the cell surface protease, TMPRSS2, that allows virus entry independent of endosomes thus avoiding antiviral IFITM proteins. SARS-CoV-2 virus lacking the S1/S2 furin CS was shed to lower titres from infected ferrets and was not transmitted to cohoused sentinel animals. Thus, the polybasic CS is a key determinant for efficient SARS-CoV-2 transmission.


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