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biorxiv; 2022.
Preprint in English | bioRxiv | ID: ppzbmed-10.1101.2022.09.23.509261

ABSTRACT

Bats have evolved features unique amongst mammals, including flight, laryngeal echolocation, and certain species have been shown to have a unique immune response that may enable them to tolerate viruses such as SARS-CoVs, MERS-CoVs, Nipah, and Marburg viruses. Robust cellular models have yet to be developed for bats, hindering our ability to further understand their special biology and handling of viral pathogens. To establish bats as new model study species, we generated induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) from a wild greater horseshoe bat ( Rhinolophus ferrumequinum ) using a modified Yamanaka protocol. Rhinolophids are amongst the longest living bat species and are asymptomatic carriers of coronaviruses, including one of the viruses most closely related to SARS-CoV-2. Bat induced pluripotent stem (BiPS) cells were stable in culture, readily differentiated into all three germ layers, and formed complex embryoid bodies, including organoids. The BiPS cells were found to have a core pluripotency gene expression program similar to that of other species, but it also resembled that of cells attacked by viruses. The BiPS cells produced a rich set of diverse endogenized viral sequences and in particular retroviruses. We further validated our protocol by developing iPS cells from an evolutionary distant bat species Myotis myotis (greater mouse-eared bat) non-lethally sampled in the wild, which exhibited similar attributes to the greater horseshoe bat iPS cells, suggesting that this unique pluripotent state evolved in the ancestral bat lineage. Although previous studies have suggested that bats have developed powerful strategies to tame their inflammatory response, our results argue that they have also evolved mechanisms to accommodate a substantial load of endogenous viral sequences and suggest that the natural history of bats and viruses is more profoundly intertwined than previously thought. Further study of bat iPS cells and their differentiated progeny should advance our understanding of the role bats play as virus hosts, provide a novel method of disease surveillance, and enable the functional studies required to ascertain the molecular basis of bats’ unique traits.

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