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1.
Cell Death Dis ; 14(12): 838, 2023 12 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38110339

ABSTRACT

Acute infection and chronic infection are the two most common fates of pathogenic virus infections. While several factors that contribute to these fates are described, the critical control points and the mechanisms that underlie infection fate regulation are incompletely understood. Using the acute and chronic lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) infection model of mice, we find that the early dynamic pattern of the IFN-I response is a differentiating trait between both infection fates. Acute-infected mice generate a 2-wave IFN-I response while chronic-infected mice generate only a 1-wave response. The underlying cause is a temporal difference in CD8 T cell-mediated killing of splenic marginal zone CD169+ macrophages. It occurs later in acute infection and thus enables CD169+ marginal zone macrophages to produce the 2nd IFN-I wave. This is required for subsequent immune events including induction of inflammatory macrophages, generation of effector CD8+ T cells and virus clearance. Importantly, these benefits come at a cost for the host in the form of spleen fibrosis. Due to an earlier marginal zone destruction, these ordered immune events are deregulated in chronic infection. Our findings demonstrate the critical importance of kinetically well-coordinated sequential immune events for acute infection control and highlights that it may come at a cost for the host organism.


Subject(s)
Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis , Mice , Animals , Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis/pathology , Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus/physiology , Persistent Infection , Mice, Inbred C57BL , CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes , Macrophages/pathology
2.
Genome Biol ; 23(1): 153, 2022 07 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35804393

ABSTRACT

Nanopore sequencing enables the efficient and unbiased measurement of transcriptomes. Current methods for transcript identification and quantification rely on mapping reads to a reference genome, which precludes the study of species with a partial or missing reference or the identification of disease-specific transcripts not readily identifiable from a reference. We present RATTLE, a tool to perform reference-free reconstruction and quantification of transcripts using only Nanopore reads. Using simulated data and experimental data from isoform spike-ins, human tissues, and cell lines, we show that RATTLE accurately determines transcript sequences and their abundances, and shows good scalability with the number of transcripts.


Subject(s)
Nanopore Sequencing , Nanopores , High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing/methods , Humans , Protein Isoforms/genetics , Transcriptome
3.
Genome Biol ; 20(1): 260, 2019 11 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31783882

ABSTRACT

We describe ReorientExpress, a method to perform reference-free orientation of transcriptomic long sequencing reads. ReorientExpress uses deep learning to correctly predict the orientation of the majority of reads, and in particular when trained on a closely related species or in combination with read clustering. ReorientExpress enables long-read transcriptomics in non-model organisms and samples without a genome reference without using additional technologies and is available at https://github.com/comprna/reorientexpress.


Subject(s)
DNA, Complementary/analysis , Deep Learning , Nanopore Sequencing , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Software
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