Temperature-Dependent Replication and Sensitivity to Innate Immunity of Human Coronavirus HKU1

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Abstract The human coronavirus HKU1, causing common colds and occasionally severe illness, remains largely uncharacterized because it has not been successfully grown on immortalized cells. Here, we identified Caco2 cells overexpressing TMPRSS2, the HKU1 receptor, as being highly permissive to infection. HKU1 replicated efficiently, formed syncytia and released infectious progeny in these cells at 33°C, the temperature of the nasal cavity, but was attenuated at 37°C. Viral entry occurred similarly at both temperatures, but subsequent viral RNA synthesis was enhanced at 33°C. Released virions displayed higher stability at 33°C. In Caco2 and primary epithelial nasal cells, HKU1 was sensitive to interferons (IFN), but induction of IFN stimulated genes, such as IFN-Induced Transmembrane Proteins (IFITMs), was delayed at 33°C. Once expressed, IFITMs comparably inhibited HKU1 fusion at both temperatures. In contrast, SARS-CoV-2 robustly replicated at 37°C. Thus, cellular permissiveness, innate immunity and viral properties collectively explain why HKU1 replicates more efficiently at nasal temperature. Our results highlight temperature-sensitivity disparities between coronaviruses, likely associated to different pathogenic outcomes. Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.

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last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00