PLoS Pathogens (Aug 2024)

SARS-CoV-2 spike-induced syncytia are senescent and contribute to exacerbated heart failure.

  • Huilong Li,
  • Luming Wan,
  • Muyi Liu,
  • Enhao Ma,
  • Linfei Huang,
  • Yilong Yang,
  • Qihong Li,
  • Yi Fang,
  • Jingfei Li,
  • Bingqing Han,
  • Chang Zhang,
  • Lijuan Sun,
  • Xufeng Hou,
  • Haiyang Li,
  • Mingyu Sun,
  • Sichong Qian,
  • Xuejing Duan,
  • Ruzhou Zhao,
  • Xiaopan Yang,
  • Yi Chen,
  • Shipo Wu,
  • Xuhui Zhang,
  • Yanhong Zhang,
  • Gong Cheng,
  • Gengye Chen,
  • Qi Gao,
  • Junjie Xu,
  • Lihua Hou,
  • Congwen Wei,
  • Hui Zhong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012291
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 8
p. e1012291

Abstract

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SARS-CoV-2 spike protein (SARS-2-S) induced cell-cell fusion in uninfected cells may occur in long COVID-19 syndrome, as circulating SARS-2-S or extracellular vesicles containing SARS-2-S (S-EVs) were found to be prevalent in post-acute sequelae of COVID-19 (PASC) for up to 12 months after diagnosis. Although isolated recombinant SARS-2-S protein has been shown to increase the SASP in senescent ACE2-expressing cells, the direct linkage of SARS-2-S syncytia with senescence in the absence of virus infection and the degree to which SARS-2-S syncytia affect pathology in the setting of cardiac dysfunction are unknown. Here, we found that the senescent outcome of SARS-2-S induced syncytia exacerbated heart failure progression. We first demonstrated that syncytium formation in cells expressing SARS-2-S delivered by DNA plasmid or LNP-mRNA exhibits a senescence-like phenotype. Extracellular vesicles containing SARS-2-S (S-EVs) also confer a potent ability to form senescent syncytia without de novo synthesis of SARS-2-S. However, it is important to note that currently approved COVID-19 mRNA vaccines do not induce syncytium formation or cellular senescence. Mechanistically, SARS-2-S syncytia provoke the formation of functional MAVS aggregates, which regulate the senescence fate of SARS-2-S syncytia by TNFα. We further demonstrate that senescent SARS-2-S syncytia exhibit shrinked morphology, leading to the activation of WNK1 and impaired cardiac metabolism. In pre-existing heart failure mice, the WNK1 inhibitor WNK463, anti-syncytial drug niclosamide, and senolytic dasatinib protect the heart from exacerbated heart failure triggered by SARS-2-S. Our findings thus suggest a potential mechanism for COVID-19-mediated cardiac pathology and recommend the application of WNK1 inhibitor for therapy especially in individuals with post-acute sequelae of COVID-19.