Transcriptome Analysis in Air-Liquid Interface Porcine Respiratory Epithelial Cell Cultures Reveals That the Betacoronavirus Porcine Encephalomyelitis Hemagglutinating Virus Induces a Robust Interferon Response to Infection.
Kaitlyn M Sarlo DavilaRahul Kumar NelliJuan-Carlos Mora-DíazYongming SangLaura C MillerLuis Gabriel Gimenez-LirolaPublished in: Viruses (2024)
Porcine hemagglutinating encephalomyelitis virus (PHEV) replicates in the upper respiratory tract and tonsils of pigs. Using an air-liquid interface porcine respiratory epithelial cells (ALI-PRECs) culture system, we demonstrated that PHEV disrupts respiratory epithelia homeostasis by impairing ciliary function and inducing antiviral, pro-inflammatory cytokine, and chemokine responses. This study explores the mechanisms driving early innate immune responses during PHEV infection through host transcriptome analysis. Total RNA was collected from ALI-PRECs at 24, 36, and 48 h post inoculation (hpi). RNA-seq analysis was performed using an Illumina Hiseq 600 to generate 100 bp paired-end reads. Differential gene expression was analyzed using DeSeq2. PHEV replicated actively in ALI-PRECs, causing cytopathic changes and progressive mucociliary disruption. Transcriptome analysis revealed downregulation of cilia-associated genes such as CILK1 , DNAH11 , LRRC-23 , -49 , and -51 , and acidic sialomucin CD164L2 . PHEV also activated antiviral signaling pathways, significantly increasing the expression of interferon-stimulated genes ( RSAD2 , MX1 , IFIT , and ISG15 ) and chemokine genes ( CCL5 and CXCL10 ), highlighting inflammatory regulation. This study contributes to elucidating the molecular mechanisms of the innate immune response to PHEV infection of the airway epithelium, emphasizing the critical roles of the mucociliary, interferon, and chemokine responses.
Keyphrases
- respiratory tract
- immune response
- rna seq
- gene expression
- single cell
- dendritic cells
- genome wide
- signaling pathway
- innate immune
- dna methylation
- ionic liquid
- poor prognosis
- multiple sclerosis
- cell proliferation
- oxidative stress
- genome wide identification
- transcription factor
- induced apoptosis
- endoplasmic reticulum stress