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Endothelial cell damage is the central part of COVID-19 and a mouse model induced by injection of the S1 subunit of the spike protein☆

Authors :
Benjamin Liechty
Sheridan Mikhail
Hamdy Awad
Esmerina Tili
Gerard J. Nuovo
David Suster
Bing He
Toni Shaffer
Cynthia M. Magro
Jean Jacques Michaille
Source :
Annals of Diagnostic Pathology
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier Inc., 2020.

Abstract

Neurologic complications of symptomatic COVID-19 are common. Brain tissues from 13 autopsies of people who died of COVID-19 were examined. Cultured endothelial and neuronal cells were incubated with and wild type mice were injected IV with different spike subunits. In situ analyses were used to detect SARS-CoV-2 proteins and the host response. In 13/13 brains from fatal COVID-19, pseudovirions (spike, envelope, and membrane proteins without viral RNA) were present in the endothelia of microvessels ranging from 0 to 14 positive cells/200× field (mean 4.3). The pseudovirions strongly co-localized with caspase-3, ACE2, IL6, TNFα, and C5b-9. The surrounding neurons demonstrated increased NMDAR2 and neuronal NOS plus decreased MFSD2a and SHIP1 proteins. Tail vein injection of the full length S1 spike subunit in mice led to neurologic signs (increased thirst, stressed behavior) not evident in those injected with the S2 subunit. The S1 subunit localized to the endothelia of microvessels in the mice brain and showed co-localization with caspase-3, ACE2, IL6, TNFα, and C5b-9. The surrounding neurons showed increased neuronal NOS and decreased MFSD2a. It is concluded that ACE2+ endothelial damage is a central part of SARS-CoV2 pathology and may be induced by the spike protein alone. Thus, the diagnostic pathologist can use either hematoxylin and eosin stain or immunohistochemistry for caspase 3 and ACE2 to document the endothelial cell damage of COVID-19.<br />Highlights • The S1 subunit of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein has the ACE2 recognition site. • The S1 subunit causes degeneration of endothelial cells and motor neurons in cell culture. • The S1 subunit alone when injected into mice causes a systemic endothelialopathy. • Damage to ACE2+ endothelial cells is the key feature of human COVID-19 and the mouse model of the disease.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15328198 and 10929134
Volume :
51
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Diagnostic Pathology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0df423a1c707868dc33ee7fe0987fb03