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Cell-to-Cell Variation in Defective Virus Expression and Effects on Host Responses during Influenza Virus Infection

Changjiang Wang, Christian V. Forst, Tsui-Wen Chou, Adam Geber, Minghui Wang, Wissam Hamou, Melissa Smith, Robert Sebra, Bin Zhang, Bin Zhou, Elodie Ghedin

2020mBio62 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Defective influenza virus particles generated during viral replication carry incomplete viral genomes and can interfere with the replication of competent viruses. These defective genomes are thought to modulate the disease severity and pathogenicity of an influenza virus infection. Different defective viral genomes also introduce another source of variation across a heterogeneous cell population. Evaluating the impact of defective virus genomes on host cell responses cannot be fully resolved at the population level, requiring single-cell transcriptional profiling. Here, we characterized virus and host transcriptomes in individual influenza virus-infected cells, including those of defective viruses that arise during influenza A virus infection. We established an association between defective virus transcription and host responses and validated interfering and immunostimulatory functions of identified dominant defective viral genome species in vitro . This study demonstrates the intricate effects of defective viral genomes on host transcriptional responses and highlights the importance of capturing host-virus interactions at the single-cell level.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyVirusViral replicationVirologyInfluenza A virusPopulationViral sheddingViral entryGenomeTranscriptomeViral pathogenesisGeneGene expressionGeneticsSociologyDemographyInfluenza Virus Research StudiesRespiratory viral infections researchinterferon and immune responses
Cell-to-Cell Variation in Defective Virus Expression and Effects on Host Responses during Influenza Virus Infection | Litcius