Core mitochondrial genes are down-regulated during SARS-CoV-2 infection of rodent and human hosts

Joseph W. Guarnieri(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Joseph M. Dybas(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Hossein Fazelinia(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Man S. Kim(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Justin J. Frere(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Yuanchao Zhang(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Yentli E. Soto Albrecht(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Deborah G. Murdock(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Alessia Angelin(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Larry N. Singh(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Scott L. Weiss(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Sonja M. Best(Cambridge Systematics (United States)), Marie T. Lott(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Shiping Zhang(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Henry Cope(University of Nottingham), Victoria Zaksas(University of Chicago), Amanda Saravia-Butler(Ames Research Center), Cem Meydan(Cornell University), Jonathan Foox(Cornell University), Christopher Mozsary(Cornell University), Yaron Bram(Cornell University), Yared Kidane(Texas Scottish Rite Hospital for Children), Waldemar Priebe(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Mark R. Emmett(Cambridge Systematics (United States)), Robert Meller(Cambridge Systematics (United States)), Sam Demharter(Det Danske Sprog- og Litteraturselskab (Denmark)), Valdemar Stentoft-Hansen(Det Danske Sprog- og Litteraturselskab (Denmark)), Marco Salvatore(Det Danske Sprog- og Litteraturselskab (Denmark)), Diego Galeano(Cambridge Systematics (United States)), Francisco J. Enguita(University of Lisbon), Peter Grabham(Columbia University), Nídia S. Trovão(National Institutes of Health), Urminder Singh(Iowa State University), Jeffrey Haltom(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Mark T. Heise(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Nathaniel J. Moorman(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Victoria K. Baxter(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Emily A. Madden(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Sharon Taft-Benz(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Elizabeth J. Anderson(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Wes Sanders(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Rebekah J. Dickmander(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Stephen B. Baylin(Johns Hopkins University), Eve Syrkin Wurtele(Iowa State University), Pedro M. Moraes‐Vieira(Universidade Estadual de Campinas (UNICAMP)), Deanne Taylor(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Christopher E. Mason(Cornell University), Jonathan C. Schisler(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Robert E. Schwartz(Cornell University), Afshin Beheshti(Broad Institute), Douglas C. Wallace(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia)
Science Translational Medicine
August 9, 2023
Cited by 180Open Access
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Abstract

Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) viral proteins bind to host mitochondrial proteins, likely inhibiting oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) and stimulating glycolysis. We analyzed mitochondrial gene expression in nasopharyngeal and autopsy tissues from patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). In nasopharyngeal samples with declining viral titers, the virus blocked the transcription of a subset of nuclear DNA (nDNA)-encoded mitochondrial OXPHOS genes, induced the expression of microRNA 2392, activated HIF-1α to induce glycolysis, and activated host immune defenses including the integrated stress response. In autopsy tissues from patients with COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2 was no longer present, and mitochondrial gene transcription had recovered in the lungs. However, nDNA mitochondrial gene expression remained suppressed in autopsy tissue from the heart and, to a lesser extent, kidney, and liver, whereas mitochondrial DNA transcription was induced and host-immune defense pathways were activated. During early SARS-CoV-2 infection of hamsters with peak lung viral load, mitochondrial gene expression in the lung was minimally perturbed but was down-regulated in the cerebellum and up-regulated in the striatum even though no SARS-CoV-2 was detected in the brain. During the mid-phase SARS-CoV-2 infection of mice, mitochondrial gene expression was starting to recover in mouse lungs. These data suggest that when the viral titer first peaks, there is a systemic host response followed by viral suppression of mitochondrial gene transcription and induction of glycolysis leading to the deployment of antiviral immune defenses. Even when the virus was cleared and lung mitochondrial function had recovered, mitochondrial function in the heart, kidney, liver, and lymph nodes remained impaired, potentially leading to severe COVID-19 pathology.


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