Starve a cold or feed a fever? Identifying cellular metabolic changes following infection and exposure to SARS-CoV-2.

IF 2.6 3区 综合性期刊 Q1 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES PLoS ONE Pub Date : 2025-02-12 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0305065
Emma K Loveday, Hope Welhaven, Ayten Ebru Erdogan, Kyle S Hain, Luke F Domanico, Connie B Chang, Ronald K June, Matthew P Taylor
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Abstract

Viral infections induce major shifts in cellular metabolism elicited by active viral replication and antiviral responses. For the virus, harnessing cellular metabolism and evading changes that limit replication are essential for productive viral replication. In contrast, the cellular response to infection disrupts metabolic pathways to prevent viral replication and promote an antiviral state in the host cell and neighboring bystander cells. This competition between the virus and cell results in measurable shifts in cellular metabolism that differ depending on the virus, cell type, and extracellular environment. The resulting metabolic shifts can be observed and analyzed using global metabolic profiling techniques to identify pathways that are critical for either viral replication or cellular defense. SARS-CoV-2 is a respiratory virus that can exhibit broad tissue tropism and diverse, yet inconsistent, symptomatology. While the factors that determine the presentation and severity of SARS-CoV-2 infection remain unclear, metabolic syndromes are associated with more severe manifestations of SARS-CoV-2 disease. Despite these observations a critical knowledge gap remains between cellular metabolic responses and SARS-CoV-2 infection. Using a well-established untargeted metabolomics analysis workflow, we compared SARS-CoV-2 infection of human lung carcinoma cells. We identified significant changes in metabolic pathways that correlate with either productive or non-productive viral infection. This information is critical for characterizing the factors that contribute to SARS-CoV-2 replication that could be targeted for therapeutic interventions to limit viral disease.

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感冒饿着吃还是发烧吃?识别感染和暴露于SARS-CoV-2后的细胞代谢变化。
病毒感染引起细胞代谢的主要变化,由活跃的病毒复制和抗病毒反应引起。对于这种病毒来说,利用细胞代谢和避开限制复制的变化是有效病毒复制的必要条件。相反,细胞对感染的反应会破坏代谢途径,以阻止病毒复制,并促进宿主细胞和邻近的旁观者细胞的抗病毒状态。病毒和细胞之间的这种竞争导致细胞代谢发生可测量的变化,这种变化取决于病毒、细胞类型和细胞外环境。由此产生的代谢变化可以使用全局代谢分析技术来观察和分析,以确定对病毒复制或细胞防御至关重要的途径。SARS-CoV-2是一种呼吸道病毒,可表现出广泛的组织亲和性和多种多样但不一致的症状。虽然决定SARS-CoV-2感染的表现和严重程度的因素尚不清楚,但代谢综合征与SARS-CoV-2疾病更严重的表现有关。尽管有这些观察结果,但细胞代谢反应与SARS-CoV-2感染之间仍存在重要的知识差距。使用一种完善的非靶向代谢组学分析流程,我们比较了SARS-CoV-2感染人肺癌细胞。我们确定了与生产性或非生产性病毒感染相关的代谢途径的显著变化。这一信息对于表征导致SARS-CoV-2复制的因素至关重要,这些因素可能成为限制病毒性疾病的治疗干预的目标。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
PLoS ONE
PLoS ONE 生物-生物学
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
5.40%
发文量
14242
审稿时长
3.7 months
期刊介绍: PLOS ONE is an international, peer-reviewed, open-access, online publication. PLOS ONE welcomes reports on primary research from any scientific discipline. It provides: * Open-access—freely accessible online, authors retain copyright * Fast publication times * Peer review by expert, practicing researchers * Post-publication tools to indicate quality and impact * Community-based dialogue on articles * Worldwide media coverage
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