Wenwen Xiao , Zhuang Li , Chaoqun Chen , Yuting Shi , Puxian Fang , Shaobo Xiao , Liurong Fang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Porcine deltacoronavirus (PDCoV) is an emerging enteric coronavirus with the potential for interspecies transmission. Trypsin has been shown to play a positive role in the isolation and multiplication of PDCoV in vitro, however, the functions of trypsin during PDCoV replication cycle remain controversial. In this study, we revisited the roles of trypsin for PDCoV infection by utilizing two kinds of PDCoV, PDCoVT+ and PDCoVT−, which were prepared in the presence or absence of trypsin, respectively. We found that PDCoVT+ was able to continuously proliferate in the medium containing trypsin, achieving a higher titer as the infection progress in LLC-PK1 and other tested porcine-derived cells. However, its replication was only transiently improved at 12 hours post-infection, and lower viral titers were observed under trypsin-free culture conditions. Furthermore, the trypsin-mediated enhancement of viral replication could be inhibited by trypsin inhibitor SBTI, suggesting that the second-round viral reproduction of PDCoVT+ might be impeded without trypsin. We further investigated the replication dynamics of PDCoVT− in LLC-PK1 cells in the presence or absence of trypsin. The results indicated that PDCoVT− generated lower viral titers under trypsin-free culture conditions, while the addition of trypsin reverted the infectivity of PDCoVT−. Additionally, we demonstrated that trypsin cleaved the PDCoV spike protein, activating viral attachment and internalization. Moreover, trypsin promoted viral replication and release, accelerating PDCoV maturation and facilitating second-round infection. Taken together, this study systematically revaluated and emphasized an essential role of trypsin in PDCoV infection, providing mechanistic insights into the productive infection of PDCoV in porcine-derived cells.
期刊介绍:
Launched in 1955, Virology is a broad and inclusive journal that welcomes submissions on all aspects of virology including plant, animal, microbial and human viruses. The journal publishes basic research as well as pre-clinical and clinical studies of vaccines, anti-viral drugs and their development, anti-viral therapies, and computational studies of virus infections. Any submission that is of broad interest to the community of virologists/vaccinologists and reporting scientifically accurate and valuable research will be considered for publication, including negative findings and multidisciplinary work.Virology is open to reviews, research manuscripts, short communication, registered reports as well as follow-up manuscripts.