Adaptation of SARS-CoV-2 to ACE2 H353K mice reveals new spike residues that drive mouse infection.
Kun LiAbhishek VermaPengfei LiMiguel E OrtizGrant M HawkinsNicholas J SchnickerPeter J SzachowiczAlejandro PezulloChristine L Wohlford-LenaneTom KicmalDavid K MeyerholzThomas GallagherStanley PerlmanPaul B McCrayPublished in: Journal of virology (2024)
serial passage, a virulent mouse-adapted strain was obtained. In aged mACE2H353K mice, the mouse-adapted strain caused diffuse alveolar disease. The mouse-adapted virus also infected standard BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice, causing severe disease. The mouse-adapted virus acquired five new missense mutations including two in spike (K417E, Q493K), one each in nsp4, nsp9, and M and a single nucleotide change in the 5' untranslated region. The Q493K spike mutation arose early in serial passage and is predicted to provide affinity-enhancing molecular interactions with mACE2 and further increase the stability and affinity to the receptor. This new model and mouse-adapted virus will be useful to evaluate COVID-19 disease and prophylactic and therapeutic interventions.