| Literature DB >> 34452433 |
Maarit Suomalainen1, Urs F Greber1.
Abstract
Cell-to-cell variability of infection has long been known, yet it has remained one of the least understood phenomena in infection research. It impacts on disease onset and development, yet only recently underlying mechanisms have been studied in clonal cell cultures by single-virion immunofluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry. In this review, we showcase how single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq), single-molecule RNA-fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), and copper(I)-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (click) with alkynyl-tagged viral genomes dissect infection variability in human and mouse cells. We show how the combined use of scRNA-FISH and click-chemistry reveals highly variable onsets of adenoviral gene expression, and how single live cell plaques reveal lytic and nonlytic adenovirus transmissions. The review highlights how scRNA-seq profiling and scRNA-FISH of coxsackie, influenza, dengue, zika, and herpes simplex virus infections uncover transcriptional variability, and how the host interferon response tunes influenza and sendai virus infections. We introduce the concept of "cell state" in infection variability, and conclude with advances by single-cell simultaneous measurements of chromatin accessibility and mRNA counts at high-throughput. Such technology will further dissect the sequence of events in virus infection and pathology, and better characterize the genetic and genomic stability of viruses, cell autonomous innate immune responses, and mechanisms of tissue injury.Entities:
Keywords: RNAseq; assembly; cell state; cell-to-cell variability; click chemistry; egress; non-genetic variability; persistence and lysis; replication; single transcript fluorescence in situ hybridization; single-cell infection; transcription; virus entry; virus imaging
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34452433 PMCID: PMC8402812 DOI: 10.3390/v13081568
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Figure 1Schematic depiction of a virus-centric view into single-cell infection and dissemination of progeny to uninfected cells.
Figure 2Cell-to-cell variability in plaque formation by HAdV-C2 revealed by single-cell time lapse fluorescence microscopy. Virus-infected cells and infection foci were visualized by EGFP expressed from the viral genome. Live cell plaque assay was conducted under agarose conditions, which restrict convectional spreading of cell-free extracellular virus particles and give rise to round plaque phenotypes, as described in [11]. Circled areas contain plaquing infections, green arrows indicate persistently infected non-plaquing cells, and white arrows indicate infected cells that were eliminated from the dish between 48 and 112 h pi. Nuclei are stained with Hoechst (weak signal in blue). Data from reference [11].
Figure 3Cell-centric mechanisms underlying virus infection variability. Cells in a given population may be variable at the single-cell level due to at least four principle features: one is heritable genetic variability in the DNA sequence; two is dynamic genetic changes driven by mobile genetic elements or epigenetic differences; three is cell state differences, such as metabolism, infection history, or cell cycle; four is differences in phenotypes, such as macromolecules, organellar positioning with respect to each other (entropy), or the infection state. Figure was prepared by using BioRender.
Single entity assays reveal cell-to-cell variability in HAdV-C infection.
| Infection Step | Variability | Evidence | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Virus binding | 10–15× | Fluorescent HAdV-C2/C5 virions; epithelial cells (CAR)/alveolar macrophages (SR-A6). | [ |
| Endocytosis | 2–3× | Fluorescent HAdV-C5 and immunofluorescence microscopy. | [ |
| Protein VI exposure | 10× | Intensity of immuno-stained protein VI on endocytosed virions at 10 or 20 min pi. | [ |
| Penetration into the cytosol | 2–3× | Streptolysin-O mediated plasma membrane permeabilization and staining of cytosolic HAdV-Alexa488 species B or C by perfused anti-Alexa488 antibody. Penetration inactive HAdV-C2_TS1-Alexa488 served as negative control for variability. Data are in agreement wth thin section electron microscopy resolving single virions in endosomes. | [ |
| Nuclear targeting | low | Fluorescent HAdV-C2/C5 virions. | [ |
| Uncoating of virion DNA | low | Fluorescent HAdV-C2/C5 virions and clickable virion DNA. | [ |
| Nuclear import | 3×/15× | Confocal microscopy of DNA-associated protein VII & clickable viral DNA. Note: the protein VII-based immuno-staining does not detect mis-delivered viral DNA in the cytosol, unlike click-staining. | [ |
| E1A, E1B-55K early transcription | 10–15× | scRNA-FISH, in combination with localization of incoming viral DNA by click chemistry. | [ |
| Major late transcription | 10–15× | scRNA-FISH in human lung epithelial cells. | [ |
| DNA replication | Variable onset | Click chemistry and sc DNA-FISH. | [ |
| Assembly | ? | Co-assembly model of virions from components suggests that there is a large excess of unassembled over virion-incorporated capsomers. | [ |
| Proteolytic maturation | 10% light, 90% heavy particles | HAdV-C5 particles isolated from producer cells by CsCl density gradient centrifugation assays. Two bands are typically visible on the gradient: “light” particles with unprocessed structural proteins and infectious “heavy” particles with proteolytically processed structural proteins. | [ |
| Egress | 73% lytic; 27% nonlytic | Single well, single plaque assays by live cell imaging. | [ |
| Lysis/Persistence | Simultaneous single-cell in situ analyses of HAdV-C5 gene expression, suppression of the E1A promoter by IFN, and activation by Ire1α/XBP1 axis of the unfolded protein response pathway. | [ |