Tight junction protein claudin-1 is a novel internalization factor for swine enteric coronaviruses infection
Zhongyuan Li, Jianfei Chen, Yunyan Chen, Shouping Hu, Huan Li, Liang Li, Mei Xue, Li Feng

TL;DR
This study identifies claudin-1 as a new factor that helps swine enteric coronaviruses infect cells, including SARS-CoV-2, by promoting viral internalization.
Contribution
Claudin-1 is newly identified as an internalization factor for multiple swine coronaviruses and SARS-CoV-2.
Findings
Claudin-1 overexpression increases susceptibility to TGEV, PEDV, and PDCoV infections.
Claudin-1 interacts with the S1 protein of SeCoVs and SARS-CoV-2, promoting viral internalization.
Upregulation of claudin-1 in infected piglets correlates with increased viral infection in the intestine.
Abstract
Swine enteric coronaviruses (SeCoVs), including transmissible gastroenteritis virus (TGEV), porcine epidemic diarrhea virus (PEDV), and porcine deltacoronavirus (PDCoV), have been reported to use aminopeptidase N (APN) as a cellular receptor. However, APN alone cannot effectively explain the infection of both APN-positive and APN-negative enterocytes by PEDV and TGEV, nor the wide host range of PDCoV, suggesting the involvement of other host factors. In this study, we demonstrate that TGEV infection in piglets upregulates claudin-1 expression not only in infected cells but also in uninfected cells. Claudin-1 levels correlated strongly with TGEV N protein levels in the jejunum of infected piglets. Functional studies revealed that claudin-1 overexpression enhanced cellular susceptibility to TGEV, PEDV, and PDCoV, whereas its knockout significantly attenuated infection. Mechanistically,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBarrier Structure and Function Studies · Animal Virus Infections Studies · Microbial infections and disease research
