Abstract

SARS-CoV-2, the virus responsible for COVID-19, causes widespread damage in the lungs in the setting of an overzealous immune response whose origin remains unclear. We present a scalable, propagable, personalized, cost-effective adult stem cell-derived human lung organoid model that is complete with both proximal and distal airway epithelia. Monolayers derived from adult lung organoids (ALOs), primary airway cells, or hiPSC-derived alveolar type II (AT2) pneumocytes were infected with SARS-CoV-2 to create in vitro lung models of COVID-19. Infected ALO monolayers best recapitulated the transcriptomic signatures in diverse cohorts of COVID-19 patient-derived respiratory samples. The airway (proximal) cells were critical for sustained viral infection, whereas distal alveolar differentiation (AT2→AT1) was critical for mounting the overzealous host immune response in fatal disease; ALO monolayers with well-mixed proximodistal airway components recapitulated both. Findings validate a human lung model of COVID-19, which can be immediately utilized to investigate COVID-19 pathogenesis and vet new therapies and vaccines. This work was supported by the National Institutes for Health (NIH) grants 1R01DK107585-01A1, 3R01DK107585-05S1 (to SD); R01-AI141630, CA100768 and CA160911 (to PG) and R01-AI 155696 (to PG, DS and SD); R00-CA151673 and R01-GM138385 (to DS), R01- HL32225 (to PT), UCOP-R00RG2642 (to SD and PG), UCOP-R01RG3780 (to P.G. and D.S) and a pilot award from the Sanford Stem Cell Clinical Center at UC San Diego Health (P.G, S.D, D.S). GDK was supported through The American Association of Immunologists Intersect Fellowship Program for Computational Scientists and Immunologists. L.C.A's salary was supported in part by the VA San Diego Healthcare System. This manuscript includes data generated at the UC San Diego Institute of Genomic Medicine (IGC) using an Illumina NovaSeq 6000 that was purchased with funding from a National Institutes of Health SIG grant (#S10 OD026929).

Highlights

  • SARS-­CoV-2, the virus responsible for COVID-19, causes widespread inflammation and injury in the lungs, giving rise to diffuse alveolar damage (DAD) (Andrea Valeria Arrossi and Farver, 2020; Damiani et al, 2021; Borczuk et al, 2020; Li et al, 2021; Roden, 2020), featuring marked infection and viral burden leading to apoptosis of alveolar pneumocytes (Hussman, 2020), along with pulmonary edema (Bratic and Larsson, 2013; Carsana et al, 2020)

  • COVID-19 patients, we observed by H&E (Figure 1—figure supplement 1B) that gas-­exchanging flattened AT1 pneumocytes are virtually replaced by cuboidal cells that were subsequently confirmed to be Alveolar epithelial type 2 (AT2)-­like cells via immunofluorescent staining with the AT2-s­pecific marker, surfactant protein

  • When we analyzed the kinetics of viral E gene expression during the late phase (48–72 hpi window), we found that proximal airway models showed high levels of sustained infectivity than distal models to viral replication (Figure 3—figure supplement 3C); the adult lung organoids (ALOs) monolayers showed intermediate sustained infectivity

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Summary

Introduction

SARS-­CoV-2, the virus responsible for COVID-19, causes widespread inflammation and injury in the lungs, giving rise to diffuse alveolar damage (DAD) (Andrea Valeria Arrossi and Farver, 2020; Damiani et al, 2021; Borczuk et al, 2020; Li et al, 2021; Roden, 2020), featuring marked infection and viral burden leading to apoptosis of alveolar pneumocytes (Hussman, 2020), along with pulmonary edema (Bratic and Larsson, 2013; Carsana et al, 2020). SARS-­CoV-2, the virus responsible for COVID-19, causes widespread damage in the lungs in the setting of an overzealous immune response whose origin remains unclear. Monolayers derived from adult lung organoids (ALOs), primary airway cells, or hiPSC-­derived alveolar type II (AT2) pneumocytes were infected with SARS-­CoV-2 to create in vitro lung models of COVID-19. The airway (proximal) cells were critical for sustained viral infection, whereas distal alveolar differentiation (AT2→AT1) was critical for mounting the overzealous host immune response in fatal disease; ALO monolayers with well-­mixed proximodistal airway components recapitulated both. Conclusions: Findings validate a human lung model of COVID-19, which can be immediately utilized to investigate COVID-19 pathogenesis and vet new therapies and vaccines

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