Abstract

Viruses hijack host metabolic pathways for their replicative advantage. In this study, using patient-derived multiomics data and in vitro infection assays, we aimed to understand the role of key metabolic pathways that can regulate severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 reproduction and their association with disease severity. We used multiomics platforms (targeted and untargeted proteomics and untargeted metabolomics) on patient samples and cell-line models along with immune phenotyping of metabolite transporters in patient blood cells to understand viral-induced metabolic modulations. We also modulated key metabolic pathways that were identified using multiomics data to regulate the viral reproduction in vitro. Coronavirus disease 2019 disease severity was characterized by increased plasma glucose and mannose levels. Immune phenotyping identified altered expression patterns of carbohydrate transporter, glucose transporter 1, in CD8+ T cells, intermediate and nonclassical monocytes, and amino acid transporter, xCT, in classical, intermediate, and nonclassical monocytes. In in vitro lung epithelial cell (Calu-3) infection model, we found that glycolysis and glutaminolysis are essential for virus replication, and blocking these metabolic pathways caused significant reduction in virus production. Taken together, we therefore hypothesized that severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 utilizes and rewires pathways governing central carbon metabolism leading to the efflux of toxic metabolites and associated with disease severity. Thus, the host metabolic perturbation could be an attractive strategy to limit the viral replication and disease severity.

Highlights

  • IntroductionIn this study, using patient-derived multiomics data and in vitro infection assays, we aimed to understand the role of key metabolic pathways that can regulate severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 reproduction and their association with disease severity

  • COVID-19 disease severity was characterized by increased plasma glucose and mannose. Mannose is a strong biomarker of COVID-19 disease severity. Glycolysis and glutaminolysis are essential for virus replication. Blocking the metabolic pathways caused significant reduction in virus production

  • While several studies have shown the role of glycolysis on SARS-CoV-2 infection [25, 32], so far there is no direct evidence linking the role of glutaminolysis to replication and spread of SARS-CoV-2, and here, we show for the first time that both glutaminolysis and glycolysis can be essential for SARS-CoV-2 infection and progressive replication in vitro in the lung epithelial cell line

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Summary

Introduction

In this study, using patient-derived multiomics data and in vitro infection assays, we aimed to understand the role of key metabolic pathways that can regulate severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 reproduction and their association with disease severity. We modulated key metabolic pathways that were identified using multiomics data to regulate the viral reproduction in vitro. Metabolic regulation of an individual always depends on several factors, including age, gender, environmental factors, dietary intake, and lifestyle. Viruses are known to exploit the host metabolic machinery to meet their biosynthetic demands for optimal replication capacity [5]. This cellular exploration is highly connected with the initial host–viral response, thereby determining the disease pathogenesis.

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