Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/138780
Title: Genomic programming of human neonatal dendritic cells in congenital systemic and in vitro cytomegalovirus infection reveal plastic and robut immune pathway biology responses
Author: Dantoft, Widad
Martínez Vicente, Pablo
Jafali, James
Pérez Martínez, Lara
Martin, Kimberly
Kotzamanis, Konstantinos
Craigon, Marie
Auer, Manfred
Young, Neil T.
Walsh, Paul
Marchant, Arnaud
Angulo Aguado, Ana
Forster, Thorsten
Ghazal, Peter
Keywords: Infeccions en els infants
Virus
Immunitat
Biologia de sistemes
Infants prematurs
Infection in children
Viruses
Immunity
Systems biology
Premature infants
Issue Date: 25-Sep-2017
Publisher: Frontiers Media
Abstract: Neonates and especially premature infants are highly susceptible to infection but still can have a remarkable resilience that is poorly understood. The view that neonates have an incomplete or deficient immune system is changing. Human neonatal studies are challenging, and elucidating host protective responses and underlying cognate pathway biology, in the context of viral infection in early life, remains to be fully explored. In both resource rich and poor settings, human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is the most common cause of congenital infection. By using unbiased systems analyses of transcriptomic resources for HCMV neonatal infection, we find the systemic response of a preterm congenital HCMV infection, involves a focused IFN regulatory response associated with dendritic cells. Further analysis of transcriptional-programming of neonatal dendritic cells in response to HCMV infection in culture revealed an early dominant IFN-chemokine regulatory subnetworks, and at later times the plasticity of pathways implicated in cell-cycle control and lipid metabolism. Further, we identify previously unknown suppressed networks associated with infection, including a select group of GPCRs. Functional siRNA viral growth screen targeting 516-GPCRs and subsequent validation identified novel GPCR-dependent antiviral (ADORA1) and proviral (GPR146, RGS16, PTAFR, SCTR, GPR84, GPR85, NMUR2, FZ10, RDS, CCL17, and SORT1) roles. By contrast a gene family cluster of protocadherins is significantly differentially induced in neonatal cells, suggestive of possible immunomodulatory roles. Unexpectedly, programming responses of adult and neonatal dendritic cells, upon HCMV infection, demonstrated comparable quantitative and qualitative responses showing that functionally, neonatal dendritic cell are not overly compromised. However, a delay in responses of neonatal cells for IFN subnetworks in comparison with adult-derived cells are notable, suggestive of subtle plasticity differences. These findings support a set-point control mechanism rather than immaturity for explaining not only neonatal susceptibility but also resilience to infection. In summary, our findings show that neonatal HCMV infection leads to a highly plastic and functional robust programming of dendritic cells in vivo and in vitro. In comparison with adults, a minimal number of subtle quantitative and temporal differences may contribute to variability in host susceptibility and resilience, in a context dependent manner.
Note: Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2017.01146
It is part of: Frontiers in Immunology, 2017, vol. 8, p. 1146
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/138780
Related resource: https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2017.01146
ISSN: 1664-3224
Appears in Collections:Articles publicats en revistes (Biomedicina)

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
673590.pdf13.35 MBAdobe PDFView/Open


This item is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons