Yao Zhenlan, Alvarez Pablo A, Chavez Carolina, Delgado Yennifer, Kaushal Prashant, Austin David, Li Qian, Yu Yanying, Zaiss Anne K, Arumugaswami Vaithilingaraja, Ding Qiang, Hsu Jeffrey J, Damoiseaux Robert, Bouhaddou Mehdi, Hoffmann Alexander, Li Melody M H
Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Molecular Genetics, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA.
Molecular Biology Institute, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA.
bioRxiv. 2025 Aug 28:2025.08.28.672752. doi: 10.1101/2025.08.28.672752.
Tens of thousands of severe COVID-19 cases are hospitalized weekly in the U.S., often driven by an imbalance between antiviral responses and inflammatory signaling, leading to uncontrolled cytokine secretion. The SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid (N) protein is a known immune antagonist, but its role in macrophage-driven cytokine storms is unclear. We demonstrate that N functions in a pathway-specific manner, specifically amplifying nuclear factor κB-related transcripts upon Toll-like receptor 7/8 stimulation. Moreover, we show that this is a conserved feature of pathogenic coronaviruses, with the delta variant N being the most pro-inflammatory. Our interaction networks suggest the delta variant N drives inflammation through interactions with several stress granule-related proteins. Profiling of secreted cytokines revealed that supernatants from the delta variant N-expressing macrophages disrupt brain and heart endothelial barriers, implicating N in COVID-19-associated cognitive and cardiac complications. Our findings highlight N-mediated immune imbalance as a driver of severe COVID-19 and identify N as a promising therapeutic target to mitigate hyperinflammation.
在美国,每周都有成千上万例严重的新冠病毒疾病(COVID-19)患者住院,这通常是由抗病毒反应和炎症信号之间的失衡所驱动,导致细胞因子分泌失控。严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(SARS-CoV-2)核衣壳(N)蛋白是一种已知的免疫拮抗剂,但其在巨噬细胞驱动的细胞因子风暴中的作用尚不清楚。我们证明,N以一种途径特异性的方式发挥作用,特别是在Toll样受体7/8刺激后增强核因子κB相关转录本。此外,我们表明这是致病性冠状病毒的一个保守特征,其中德尔塔变体N的促炎作用最强。我们的相互作用网络表明,德尔塔变体N通过与几种应激颗粒相关蛋白的相互作用来驱动炎症。对分泌的细胞因子进行分析发现,表达德尔塔变体N的巨噬细胞的上清液会破坏脑和心脏内皮屏障,这表明N与COVID-19相关的认知和心脏并发症有关。我们的研究结果突出了N介导的免疫失衡是严重COVID-19的驱动因素,并确定N是减轻过度炎症的一个有前景的治疗靶点。