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Article: Influenza A virus modulation of

D'Mello, Adonis / Lane, Jessica R / Tipper, Jennifer L / Martínez, Eriel / Roussey, Holly N / Harrod, Kevin S / Orihuela, Carlos J / Tettelin, Hervé

bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology

2023  

Abstract: Background: Streptococcus pneumoniae: Methods: We investigated the pneumococcal (serotype 19F, strain EF3030) and host transcriptomes with and without influenza A virus (A/California/07 2009 pH1N1) infection at this transition. This was done using ... ...

Abstract Background: Streptococcus pneumoniae
Methods: We investigated the pneumococcal (serotype 19F, strain EF3030) and host transcriptomes with and without influenza A virus (A/California/07 2009 pH1N1) infection at this transition. This was done using primary, differentiated Human Bronchial Epithelial Cells (nHBEC) in a transwell monolayer model at an Air-Liquid Interface (ALI), with multispecies deep RNA-seq.
Results: Distinct pneumococcal gene expression profiles were observed in the presence and absence of influenza. Influenza coinfection allowed for significantly greater pneumococcal growth and triggered the differential expression of bacterial genes corresponding to multiple metabolic pathways; in totality suggesting a fundamentally altered bacterial metabolic state and greater nutrient availability when coinfecting with influenza. Surprisingly, nHBEC transcriptomes were only modestly perturbed by infection with EF3030 alone in comparison to that resulting from Influenza A infection or coinfection, which had drastic alterations in thousands of genes. Influenza infected host transcriptomes suggest significant loss of ciliary function in host nHBEC cells.
Conclusions: Influenza A virus infection of nHBEC promotes pneumococcal infection. One reason for this is an altered metabolic state by the bacterium, presumably due to host components made available as result of viral infection. Influenza infection had a far greater impact on the host response than did bacterial infection alone, and this included down regulation of genes involved in expressing cilia. We conclude that influenza infection promotes a pneumococcal metabolic shift allowing for transition from colonization to disseminated disease.
Language English
Publishing date 2023-01-30
Publishing country United States
Document type Preprint
DOI 10.1101/2023.01.29.526157
Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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