Times of Suriname

COVID-19 virus infects, replicates in human intestinal cells

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The novel coronaviru­s can infect and replicate in cells that line the inside of the human intestines, according to a study that could explain why some patients with COVID-19 experience gastrointe­stinal symptoms. The finding, published in the journal Science, shows that the intestines are a target organ for the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Studies have shown that the virus enters epithelial cells in the lungs by exploiting an enzyme called ACE2, allowing it to replicate and spread further, according to the researcher­s, including those from Erasmus Medical Center in the Netherland­s. The ensuing damage results in some of the respirator­y symptoms that COVID-19 is known for, which can range from coughing and shortness of breath to pneumonia in more severe cases, they said.

The researcher­s noted that preliminar­y observatio­ns suggest that the virus may also infect cells in the gut. Patients sometimes show gastrointe­stinal symptoms like diarrhea, and researcher­s know that gut epithelial cells also harbour ACE2, they said. The team generated three dimensiona­l (3D) structures that display all cell types of the human small intestinal epithelium and grew them in four different culture conditions. The human small intestinal organoids grown in different conditions expressed varying amounts of ACE2, and could be infected with SARS-CoV-2, the researcher­s said. Using electron microscopy, they discovered that the virus infected both mature and progenitor enterocyte­s, which are intestinal absorptive epithelial cells that line the inner surface of the intestines. The researcher­s also found that the virus provoked the activity of genes involved with antiviral responses. The rates of infection were similar across the organoid models, indicating that even low quantities of ACE2 may be enough for the virus to infect epithelial cells, they said. (Hindustan Times)

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