The findings, published today in Cell, hold promise as a
treatment capable of stopping early infection of the novel coronavirus
that, as of April 2, has affected more than 981,000 people and claimed
the lives of 50,000 people worldwide.
The study provides new insights into key aspects of SARS-CoV-2, the
virus that causes COVID-19, and its interactions on a cellular level, as
well as how the virus can infect blood vessels and kidneys.
"We are hopeful our results have implications for the development of a
novel drug for the treatment of this unprecedented pandemic," says
Penninger, professor in UBC's faculty of medicine, director of the Life
Sciences Institute and the Canada 150 Research Chair in Functional
Genetics at UBC.
"This work stems from an amazing collaboration among academic
researchers and companies, including Dr. Ryan Conder's gastrointestinal
group at STEMCELL Technologies in Vancouver, Nuria Montserrat in Spain,
Drs. Haibo Zhang and Art Slutsky from Toronto and especially Ali
Mirazimi's infectious biology team in Sweden, who have been working
tirelessly day and night for weeks to better understand the pathology of
this disease and to provide breakthrough therapeutic options."
ACE2 -- a protein on the surface of the cell membrane -- is now at
centre-stage in this outbreak as the key receptor for the spike
glycoprotein of SARS-CoV-2. In earlier work, Penninger and colleagues at
the University of Toronto and the Institute of Molecular Biology in
Vienna first identified ACE2, and found that in living organisms, ACE2
is the key receptor for SARS, the viral respiratory illness recognized
as a global threat in 2003. His laboratory also went on to link the
protein to both cardiovascular disease and lung failure.
While the COVID-19 outbreak continues to spread around the globe, the
absence of a clinically proven antiviral therapy or a treatment
specifically targeting the critical SARS-CoV-2 receptor ACE2 on a
molecular level has meant an empty arsenal for health care providers
struggling to treat severe cases of COVID-19.
"Our new study provides very much needed direct evidence that a drug
-- called APN01 (human recombinant soluble angiotensin-converting enzyme
2 -- hrsACE2) -- soon to be tested in clinical trials by the European
biotech company Apeiron Biologics, is useful as an antiviral therapy for
COVID-19," says Dr. Art Slutsky, a scientist at the Keenan Research
Centre for Biomedical Science of St. Michael's Hospital and professor at
the University of Toronto who is a collaborator on the study.
In cell cultures analyzed in the current study, hrsACE2 inhibited the
coronavirus load by a factor of 1,000-5,000. In engineered replicas of
human blood vessel and kidneys -- organoids grown from human stem cells
-- the researchers demonstrated that the virus can directly infect and
duplicate itself in these tissues. This provides important information
on the development of the disease and the fact that severe cases of
COVID-19 present with multi-organ failure and evidence of cardiovascular
damage. Clinical grade hrsACE2 also reduced the SARS-CoV-2 infection in
these engineered human tissues.
"Using organoids allows us to test in a very agile way treatments
that are already being used for other diseases, or that are close to
being validated. In these moments in which time is short, human
organoids save the time that we would spend to test a new drug in the
human setting," says NĂºria Montserrat, ICREA professor at the Institute
for Bioengineering of Catalonia in Spain.
"The virus causing COVID-19 is a close sibling to the first SARS
virus," adds Penninger. "Our previous work has helped to rapidly
identify ACE2 as the entry gate for SARS-CoV-2, which explains a lot
about the disease. Now we know that a soluble form of ACE2 that catches
the virus away, could be indeed a very rational therapy that
specifically targets the gate the virus must take to infect us. There is
hope for this horrible pandemic."
This research was supported in part by the Canadian federal
government through emergency funding focused on accelerating the
development, testing, and implementation of measures to deal with the
COVID-19 outbreak.
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