The aim of this question is to determine how topological group actions of manifolds differs away from more rigid actions (like smooth actions).

Let $M$ be a connected, second-countable and boundless manifold of dimension $m$. Let $d$ and $d'$ be $2$ complete metrics on it, both inducing the manifold topology. The isometry group of $(M,d)$ is denoted as $\mathrm{Iso}(d)$, which is a subgroup of $\mathrm{Aut}(M)$.

$\mathrm{Iso}(d)$ is said to be **homotopically *embedded into/isomorphic to*** $\mathrm{Iso}(d')$ if there exists an ***embedding/isomorphism*** from $\mathrm{Iso}(d)$ to $\mathrm{Iso}(d')$ that sends each element to its homotopic equivalent.

$(M,d)$ is said to be **simple at infinity** if $M$ is homeomorphic to the interior of a compact manifold. It is said to achieve **maximal symmetry** if there exists no other complete metric $d'$ such that $\mathrm{Iso}(d)$ can be **strictly** homotopically embedded into $\mathrm{Iso}(d')$.

**Q$1$**: Does $\Bbb{R}^n$, $\Bbb{S}^n$ and $\Bbb{H}^n$ with their constantly curved metrics achieve maximal symmetries?

**Q$2$**: If $M$ is smoothable, $(M,d)$ is simple at infinity and achieves maximal metric symmetry, is it true that there exists a Riemann structure $(M,g)$ achieving the same symmetry (i.e. $\mathrm{Iso}(g)$ is homotopically isomorphic to $\mathrm{Iso}(d)$)? What can we say about maximal symmetries when $M$ is not smoothable?