Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, Duke Universitygrid.26009.3d School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Division of Biological Sciences, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, California, USA.
J Virol. 2022 Jul 27;96(14):e0050522. doi: 10.1128/jvi.00505-22. Epub 2022 Jul 6.
Influenza virus infections are thought to be initiated in a small number of cells; however, the heterogeneity across the cellular responses of the epithelial cells during establishment of disease is incompletely understood. Here, we used an H1N1 influenza virus encoding a fluorescent reporter gene, a cell lineage-labeling transgenic mouse line, and single-cell RNA sequencing to explore the range of responses in a susceptible epithelial cell population during an acute influenza A virus (IAV) infection. Focusing on multiciliated cells, we identified a subpopulation that basally expresses interferon-stimulated genes (ISGs), which we hypothesize may be important for the early response to infection. We subsequently found that a population of infected ciliated cells produce most of the ciliated cell-derived inflammatory cytokines, and nearly all bystander ciliated cells induce a broadly antiviral state. From these data together, we propose that variable preexisting gene expression patterns in the initial cells targeted by the virus may ultimately affect the establishment of viral disease. Influenza A virus poses a significant threat to public health, and each year, millions of people in the United States alone are exposed to the virus. We do not currently, however, fully understand why some individuals clear the infection asymptomatically and others become severely ill. Understanding how these divergent phenotypes arise could eventually be leveraged to design therapeutics that prevent severe disease. As a first step toward understanding these different infection states, we used a technology that allowed us to determine how thousands of individual murine lung epithelial cells behaved before and during IAV infection. We found that small subsets of epithelial cells exhibited an antiviral state prior to infection, and similarly, some cells made high levels of inflammatory cytokines during infection. We propose that different ratios of these individual cellular responses may contribute to the broader antiviral state of the lung and may ultimately affect disease severity.
流感病毒感染被认为是由少数细胞引发的;然而,在疾病发生过程中,上皮细胞的细胞反应异质性尚不完全清楚。在这里,我们使用了一种编码荧光报告基因的 H1N1 流感病毒、一种细胞谱系标记的转基因小鼠系和单细胞 RNA 测序,来探索在急性甲型流感病毒 (IAV) 感染过程中易感上皮细胞群体的反应范围。我们专注于多纤毛细胞,发现了一个亚群在基础状态下表达干扰素刺激基因 (ISGs),我们假设这可能对感染的早期反应很重要。随后我们发现,一群受感染的纤毛细胞产生了大部分纤毛细胞衍生的炎性细胞因子,几乎所有的旁观者纤毛细胞都诱导了广泛的抗病毒状态。综合这些数据,我们提出,病毒最初靶向的初始细胞中预先存在的基因表达模式的可变性可能最终影响病毒病的建立。 流感病毒对公共卫生构成重大威胁,仅在美国,每年就有数百万人接触到这种病毒。然而,我们目前并不完全了解为什么有些人无症状地清除感染,而另一些人则病重。了解这些不同表型的出现机制,最终可能被用来设计预防严重疾病的治疗方法。作为了解这些不同感染状态的第一步,我们使用了一种允许我们确定数千个单独的鼠肺上皮细胞在 IAV 感染前后行为的技术。我们发现,上皮细胞的一小部分在感染前表现出抗病毒状态,同样,一些细胞在感染过程中产生高水平的炎性细胞因子。我们提出,这些单个细胞反应的不同比例可能有助于肺部的更广泛抗病毒状态,并可能最终影响疾病的严重程度。