作者
Liangqin Tong,Xiaoping Xiao,Min Li,Shisong Fang,Enhao Ma,Xi Yu,Yibin Zhu,Chunli Wu,Deyu Tian,Fan Yang,Jing Sun,Jing Qu,Nianzhen Zheng,Shumin Liao,Wanbo Tai,Shengyong Feng,Liming Zhang,Yuhan Li,Lin Wang,Xuelian Han,Shihui Sun,Long Yang,Hui Zhong,Jincun Zhao,Wenjun Liu,Xiaohui Liu,Penghua Wang,Liang Li,Guangyu Zhao,Renli Zhang,Gong Cheng
摘要
The severity and mortality of COVID-19 are associated with pre-existing medical comorbidities such as diabetes mellitus. However, the underlying causes for increased susceptibility to viral infection in patients with diabetes is not fully understood. Here we identify several small-molecule metabolites from human blood with effective antiviral activity against SARS-CoV-2, one of which, 1,5-anhydro-D-glucitol (1,5-AG), is associated with diabetes mellitus. The serum 1,5-AG level is significantly lower in patients with diabetes. In vitro, the level of SARS-CoV-2 replication is higher in the presence of serum from patients with diabetes than from healthy individuals and this is counteracted by supplementation of 1,5-AG to the serum from patients. Diabetic (db/db) mice undergo SARS-CoV-2 infection accompanied by much higher viral loads and more severe respiratory tissue damage when compared to wild-type mice. Sustained supplementation of 1,5-AG in diabetic mice reduces SARS-CoV-2 loads and disease severity to similar levels in nondiabetic mice. Mechanistically, 1,5-AG directly binds the S2 subunit of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, thereby interrupting spike-mediated virus-host membrane fusion. Our results reveal a mechanism that contributes to COVID-19 pathogenesis in the diabetic population and suggest that 1,5-AG supplementation may be beneficial to diabetic patients against severe COVID-19.