A Prenylated dsRNA Sensor Protects Against Severe COVID-19 and is Absent in Horseshoe Bats

A. Wickenhagen, E. Sugrue, S. Lytras,S. Kuchi, M. L. Turnbull, C. Loney,V. Herder, J. Allan, I. Jarmson, N. Cameron-Ruiz,M. Varjak,R. M. Pinto, D. G. Stewart, S. Swingler,M. Noerenberg, E. J. D. Greenwood,T. W. M. Crozier,Q. Gu,S. Clohisey,B. Wang,F. Trindade Maranhao Costa, M. Freire Santana, L. Carlos de Lima Ferreira, ISARICC-Investigators, J. Luiz Da Silva Filho,M. Marti,R. J. Stanton,E. C. Y. Wang, A. Castello-Palomares,A. Ho,K. Baillie,R. F. Jarrett, D. L. Robertson,M. Palmarini,P. J. Lehner,S. J. Rihn,S. J. Wilson

medRxiv(2021)

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摘要
Cell autonomous antiviral defenses can inhibit the replication of viruses and reduce transmission and disease severity. To better understand the antiviral response to SARS-CoV-2, we used interferon-stimulated gene (ISG) expression screening to reveal that OAS1, through RNase L, potently inhibits SARS-CoV-2. We show that while some people can express a prenylated OAS1 variant, that is membrane-associated and blocks SARS-CoV-2 infection, other people express a cytosolic, nonprenylated OAS1 variant which does not detect SARS-CoV-2 (determined by the splice-acceptor SNP Rs10774671). Alleles encoding nonprenylated OAS1 predominate except in people of African descent. Importantly, in hospitalized patients, expression of prenylated OAS1 was associated with protection from severe COVID-19, suggesting this antiviral defense is a major component of a protective antiviral response. Remarkably, approximately 55 million years ago, retrotransposition ablated the OAS1 prenylation signal in horseshoe bats (the presumed source of SARS-CoV-2). Thus, SARS-CoV-2 never had to adapt to evade this defense. As prenylated OAS1 is widespread in animals, the billions of people that lack a prenylated OAS1 could make humans particularly vulnerable to the spillover of coronaviruses from horseshoe bats.
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prenylated dsrna sensor protects
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