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Oxford University Press - PMC COVID-19 Collection logoLink to Oxford University Press - PMC COVID-19 Collection
. 2020 Mar 26:ciaa325. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciaa325

Simulation of the clinical and pathological manifestations of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) in golden Syrian hamster model: implications for disease pathogenesis and transmissibility

Jasper Fuk-Woo Chan 1,2,3,#,, Anna Jinxia Zhang 1,#, Shuofeng Yuan 1,#, Vincent Kwok-Man Poon 1, Chris Chung-Sing Chan 1, Andrew Chak-Yiu Lee 1, Wan-Mui Chan 1, Zhimeng Fan 1, Hoi-Wah Tsoi 1, Lei Wen 1, Ronghui Liang 1, Jianli Cao 1, Yanxia Chen 1, Kaiming Tang 1, Cuiting Luo 1, Jian-Piao Cai 1, Kin-Hang Kok 1, Hin Chu 1, Kwok-Hung Chan 1, Siddharth Sridhar 1,2,3, Zhiwei Chen 1, Honglin Chen 1, Kelvin Kai-Wang To 1,2,3, Kwok-Yung Yuen 1,2,3,
PMCID: PMC7184405  PMID: 32215622

Abstract

Background

A physiological small animal model that resembles COVID-19 with low mortality is lacking.

Methods

Molecular docking on the binding between angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) of common laboratory mammals and the receptor-binding domain of the surface spike protein of SARS-CoV-2 suggested that the golden Syrian hamster is an option. Virus challenge, contact transmission, and passive immunoprophylaxis were performed. Serial organ tissues and blood were harvested for histopathology, viral load and titre, chemokine/cytokine assay, and neutralising antibody titre.

Results

The Syrian hamster could be consistently infected by SARS-CoV-2. Maximal clinical signs of rapid breathing, weight loss, histopathological changes from the initial exudative phase of diffuse alveolar damage with extensive apoptosis to the later proliferative phase of tissue repair, airway and intestinal involvement with virus nucleocapsid protein expression, high lung viral load, and spleen and lymphoid atrophy associated with marked cytokine activation were observed within the first week of virus challenge. The lung virus titre was between 105-107 TCID50/g. Challenged index hamsters consistently infected naïve contact hamsters housed within the same cage, resulting in similar pathology but not weight loss. All infected hamsters recovered and developed mean serum neutralising antibody titre ≥1:427 fourteen days post-challenge. Immunoprophylaxis with early convalescent serum achieved significant decrease in lung viral load but not in lung pathology. No consistent non-synonymous adaptive mutation of the spike was found in viruses isolated from infected hamsters.

Conclusions

Besides satisfying the Koch’s postulates, this readily available hamster model is an important tool for studying transmission, pathogenesis, treatment, and vaccination against SARS-CoV-2.

Keywords: coronavirus, COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2, animal, transmission


Articles from Clinical Infectious Diseases: An Official Publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

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