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Coronaviruses exploit a host cysteine-aspartic protease for replication.

Hin ChuYuxin HouDong YangLei WenHuiping ShuaiChaemin YoonJialu ShiYue ChaiTerrence Tsz-Tai YuenBingjie HuCun LiXiaoyu ZhaoYixin WangXiner HuangKin Shing LeeCuiting LuoJian-Piao CaiVincent Kwok-Man PoonChris Chung-Sing ChanAnna Jian-Xia ZhangShuofeng YuanKo-Yung SitDominic Chi-Chung FooWing-Kuk AuKenneth Kak Yuen WongJie ZhouRaven K H KokDong-Yan JinJasper Fuk-Woo ChanKwok-Yung Yuen
Published in: Nature (2022)
Highly pathogenic coronaviruses, including severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (refs.  1,2 ) (SARS-CoV-2), Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus 3 (MERS-CoV) and SARS-CoV-1 (ref.  4 ), vary in their transmissibility and pathogenicity. However, infection by all three viruses results in substantial apoptosis in cell culture 5-7 and in patient tissues 8-10 , suggesting a potential link between apoptosis and pathogenesis of coronaviruses. Here we show that caspase-6, a cysteine-aspartic protease of the apoptosis cascade, serves as an important host factor for efficient coronavirus replication. We demonstrate that caspase-6 cleaves coronavirus nucleocapsid proteins, generating fragments that serve as interferon antagonists, thus facilitating virus replication. Inhibition of caspase-6 substantially attenuates lung pathology and body weight loss in golden Syrian hamsters infected with SARS-CoV-2 and improves the survival of mice expressing human DPP4 that are infected with mouse-adapted MERS-CoV. Our study reveals how coronaviruses exploit a component of the host apoptosis cascade to facilitate virus replication.
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