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Ribosome-Profiling Reveals Restricted Post Transcriptional Expression of Antiviral Cytokines and Transcription Factors during SARS-CoV-2 Infection
Authors:Marina R. Alexander  Aaron M. Brice  Petrus Jansen van Vuren  Christina L. Rootes  Leon Tribolet  Christopher Cowled  Andrew G. D. Bean  Cameron R. Stewart
Affiliation:CSIRO Health & Biosecurity, the Australian Centre for Disease Preparedness, Private Bag 24, Geelong 3220, Australia; (A.M.B.); (P.J.v.V.); (C.L.R.); (L.T.); (C.C.); (A.G.D.B.); (C.R.S.)
Abstract:The global COVID-19 pandemic caused by SARS-CoV-2 has resulted in over 2.2 million deaths. Disease outcomes range from asymptomatic to severe with, so far, minimal genotypic change to the virus so understanding the host response is paramount. Transcriptomics has become incredibly important in understanding host-pathogen interactions; however, post-transcriptional regulation plays an important role in infection and immunity through translation and mRNA stability, allowing tight control over potent host responses by both the host and the invading virus. Here, we apply ribosome profiling to assess post-transcriptional regulation of host genes during SARS-CoV-2 infection of a human lung epithelial cell line (Calu-3). We have identified numerous transcription factors (JUN, ZBTB20, ATF3, HIVEP2 and EGR1) as well as select antiviral cytokine genes, namely IFNB1, IFNL1,2 and 3, IL-6 and CCL5, that are restricted at the post-transcriptional level by SARS-CoV-2 infection and discuss the impact this would have on the host response to infection. This early phase restriction of antiviral transcripts in the lungs may allow high viral load and consequent immune dysregulation typically seen in SARS-CoV-2 infection.
Keywords:SARS-CoV-2   ribosome profiling   translation   interferon   cytokines   transcriptome   translatome   host response   innate immunity
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