DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2600632123 ISSN: 0027-8424

Temperature and developmental stage govern intestinal susceptibility to human coronavirus 229E

Aleksandra Synowiec, Laurensius Kevin Lie, Katarzyna Owczarek, Nina Johannesson, Nina Mickiewicz, Heng-Chang Chen, Artur Szczepański, Madison S. Strine, Renata B. Filler, Maciej Borowiec, Michał Pietrusiński, Izabela Dróżdż, Agnieszka Robaszkiewicz, Michał Bochenek, Matthias Zilbauer, Justyna Rymarowicz, Michał Pędziwiatr, Liza Konnikova, Craig B. Wilen, Dasja Pajkrt, Katja C. Wolthers, Carlemi Calitz, Adithya Sridhar, Krzysztof Pyrc

Human coronaviruses have been primarily associated with upper respiratory tract infections, yet cases of gastrointestinal symptoms in COVID-19 patients have highlighted their potential to cause systemic disease. Here, we detail the infection of intestinal epithelia by an endemic, low-pathogenic human coronavirus, human alphacoronavirus 229E, using patient-derived human intestinal enteroids (HIEs) from donors of various ages. Using fetal, pediatric, and adult HIEs, we investigated how physiologically relevant temperatures: 37 °C and 32 °C, reflecting gastrointestinal and upper-airway conditions, respectively, modulate epithelial responses and viral infection dynamics. We show that there is temperature-dependent transcriptional reprogramming, indicating strong temperature-dependent regulation of virus replication and epithelial responses. Among the seasonal coronaviruses tested, only HCoV-229E productively infects HIEs. At 32 °C, HCoV-229E replicates efficiently in enteroids from all donor ages and releases high titers of infectious progeny. In contrast, at 37 °C, productive replication is largely confined to fetal and a subset of pediatric tissues, revealing a developmental and temperature-sensitive restriction on infection. Confocal and flow cytometry analyses identify enterocytes as the primary target cells for HCoV-229E. Furthermore, we show that camostat, a serine protease inhibitor, significantly reduces HCoV-229E replication in HIEs, confirming a critical role for host serine protease activity. Collectively, these findings establish HIEs as a relevant model for HCoV-229E–host interactions and reveal temperature- and age-dependent determinants governing intestinal permissiveness to this seasonal coronavirus.

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