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The lethal K18-hACE2 knock-in mouse model mimicking the severe pneumonia of COVID-19 is practicable for antiviral development

Version 2 2024-05-26, 20:40
Version 1 2024-05-16, 16:40
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posted on 2024-05-16, 16:40 authored by Zhen Zhang, Li Zhou, Qianyun Liu, Yucheng Zheng, Xue Tan, Zhixiang Huang, Ming Guo, Xin Wang, Xianying Chen, Simeng Liang, Wenkang Li, Kun Song, Kun Yan, Jiali Li, Qiaohong Li, Yuzhen Zhang, Shimin Yang, Zeng Cai, Ming Dai, Qiaoyang Xian, Zheng-Li Shi, Ke Xu, Ke Lan, Yu Chen

Animal models of COVID-19 facilitate the development of vaccines and antivirals against SARS-CoV-2. The efficacy of antivirals or vaccines may differ in different animal models with varied degrees of disease. Here, we introduce a mouse model expressing human angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2). In this model, ACE2 with the human cytokeratin 18 promoter was knocked into the Hipp11 locus of C57BL/6J mouse by CRISPR–Cas9 (K18-hACE2 KI). Upon intranasal inoculation with high (3×105 PFU) or low (2.5×102 PFU) dose of SARS-CoV-2 wildtype (WT), Delta, Omicron BA.1, or Omicron BA.2 variants, all mice showed obvious infection symptoms, including weight loss, high viral loads in the lung, and interstitial pneumonia. 100% lethality was observed in K18-hACE2 KI mice infected by all variants with a delay of endpoint for Delta and BA.1, and a significantly attenuated pathogenicity was observed for BA.2. The pneumonia of infected mice was accompanied by the infiltration of neutrophils and pulmonary fibrosis in the lung. Compared with K18-hACE2 Tg mice and HFH4-hACE2 Tg mice, K18-hACE2 KI mice are more susceptible to SARS-CoV-2. In the antivirals test, REGN10933 and Remdesivir had limited antiviral efficacies in K18-hACE2 KI mice upon the challenge of SARS-CoV-2 infections, while Nirmatrelvir, monoclonal antibody 4G4, and mRNA vaccines potently protected the mice from death. Our results suggest that the K18-hACE2 KI mouse model is lethal and stable for SARS-CoV-2 infection, and is practicable and stringent to antiviral development.

Funding

This work was supported by the National Key R&D Program of China (2021YFF0702000 to Y.C.), National Natural Science Foundation of China (82172243 and 82372223 to Y.C., 82272307 to K.X.), Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (2042023kf1028 and 2042022dx0003 to Y.C.), Special Fund for COVID-19 Research of Wuhan University, Innovation Team Research Program of Hubei Province (2020CFA015 to K.X.), Application & Frontier Research Program of the Wuhan Government (2019020701011463 to K.X.), Advanced Customer Cultivation Project of Wuhan National Biosafety Laboratory (2021ACCP-MS10 to Y.C.), and Natural Science Foundation of Hubei Province (2023AFB201 to Z.Z.). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

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