HerpesLabNL, Department of Viroscience, Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
J Virol. 2024 Apr 16;98(4):e0185823. doi: 10.1128/jvi.01858-23. Epub 2024 Mar 6.
Most individuals are latently infected with herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1), and it is well-established that HSV-1 establishes latency in sensory neurons of peripheral ganglia. However, it was recently proposed that latent HSV-1 is also present in immune cells recovered from the ganglia of experimentally infected mice. Here, we reanalyzed the single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-Seq) data that formed the basis for that conclusion. Unexpectedly, off-target priming in 3' scRNA-Seq experiments enabled the detection of non-polyadenylated HSV-1 () intronic RNAs. However, reads were near-exclusively detected in mixed populations of cells undergoing cell death. Specific loss of HSV-1 and neuronal transcripts during quality control filtering indicated widespread destruction of neurons, supporting the presence of contaminating cell-free RNA in other cells following tissue processing. In conclusion, the reported detection of latent HSV-1 in non-neuronal cells is best explained using compromised scRNA-Seq datasets.IMPORTANCEMost people are infected with herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) during their life. Once infected, the virus generally remains in a latent (silent) state, hiding within the neurons of peripheral ganglia. Periodic reactivation (reawakening) of the virus may cause fresh diseases such as cold sores. A recent study using single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-Seq) proposed that HSV-1 can also establish latency in the immune cells of mice, challenging existing dogma. We reanalyzed the data from that study and identified several flaws in the methodologies and analyses performed that invalidate the published conclusions. Specifically, we showed that the methodologies used resulted in widespread destruction of neurons which resulted in the presence of contaminants that confound the data analysis. We thus conclude that there remains little to no evidence for HSV-1 latency in immune cells.
大多数人在其一生中都会感染单纯疱疹病毒 1 型(HSV-1)。一旦感染,病毒通常会处于潜伏(静默)状态,隐藏在周围神经节的神经元中。病毒的周期性再激活(重新觉醒)可能导致新的疾病,如唇疱疹。最近的一项使用单细胞 RNA 测序(scRNA-Seq)的研究提出,HSV-1 也可以在小鼠的免疫细胞中建立潜伏状态,这挑战了现有的定论。我们重新分析了该研究的数据,发现所使用的方法和分析中存在几个缺陷,使已发表的结论无效。具体来说,我们表明,所使用的方法导致神经元广泛破坏,从而存在干扰数据分析的污染物。因此,我们的结论是,几乎没有证据表明 HSV-1 潜伏在免疫细胞中。