Litcius/Paper detail

<i>In Vivo</i>Profiling of Individual Multiciliated Cells during Acute Influenza A Virus Infection

Cait E. Hamele, Alistair B. Russell, Nicholas S. Heaton

2022Journal of Virology26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

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.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyVirologyInfluenza A virusVirusIn vivoOrthomyxoviridaeProfiling (computer programming)GeneticsOperating systemComputer scienceInfluenza Virus Research StudiesSARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 ResearchRespiratory viral infections research