Extreme heterogeneity of influenza virus infection in single cells
Viral infection can dramatically alter a cell's transcriptome. However, these changes have mostly been studied by bulk measurements on many cells. Here we use single-cell mRNA sequencing to examine the transcriptional consequences of influenza virus infection. We find extremely wide cell-to-cell variation in production of viral gene transcripts -- viral transcripts compose less than a percent of total mRNA in many infected cells, but a few cells derive over half their mRNA from virus. Some infected cells fail to express at least one viral gene, and this gene absence partially explains variation in viral transcriptional load. Despite variation in total viral load, the relative abundances of viral mRNAs are fairly consistent across infected cells. Activation of innate immune pathways is rare, but some cellular genes co-vary in abundance with the amount of viral mRNA. Overall, our results highlight the complexity of viral infection at the level of single cells.
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Atlas
Analysis Portals
Project Label
InfluenzaVirusInfectionSingleCellsSpecies
Homo sapiens
Sample Type
cellLines
Anatomical Entity
lung
Organ Part
Unspecified
Selected Cell Types
Unspecified
Model Organ
lung
Disease Status (Specimen)
adenocarcinoma
Disease Status (Donor)
adenocarcinoma
Development Stage
human adult stage
Library Construction Method
10x 3' v1
Nucleic Acid Source
single cell
Paired End
falseAnalysis Protocol
analysis_protocol_1File Format
Cell Count Estimate
15.0kDonor Count
1