Single-cell transcriptome analysis illuminating the characteristics of species-specific innate immune responses against viral infections

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Abstract

Background

Bats harbor various viruses without severe symptoms and act as their natural reservoirs. The tolerance of bats against viral infections is assumed to originate from the uniqueness of their immune system. However, how immune responses vary between primates and bats remains unclear. Here, we characterized differences in the immune responses by peripheral blood mononuclear cells to various pathogenic stimuli between primates (humans, chimpanzees, and macaques) and bats (Egyptian fruit bats) using single-cell RNA sequencing.

Results

We show that the induction patterns of key cytosolic DNA/RNA sensors and antiviral genes differed between primates and bats. A novel subset of monocytes induced by pathogenic stimuli specifically in bats was identified. Furthermore, bats robustly respond to DNA virus infection even though major DNA sensors are dampened in bats.

Conclusions

Overall, our data suggest that immune responses are substantially different between primates and bats, presumably underlying the difference in viral pathogenicity among the mammalian species tested.

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  1. Bats harbor various viruses without severe symptoms and act as their natural reservoirs. The tolerance of bats against viral infections is assumed to originate from the uniqueness of their immune system. However, how immune responses vary between primates and bats remains unclear. Here, we characterized differences in the immune responses by peripheral blood mononuclear cells to various pathogenic stimuli between primates (humans, chimpanzees, and macaques) and bats (Egyptian fruit bats) using single-cell RNA sequencing. We show that the induction patterns of key cytosolic DNA/RNA sensors and antiviral genes differed between primates and bats. A novel subset of monocytes induced by pathogenic stimuli specifically in bats was identified. Furthermore, bats robustly respond to DNA virus infection even though major DNA sensors are dampened in bats. Overall, our data suggest that immune responses are substantially different between primates and bats, presumably underlying the difference in viral pathogenicity among the mammalian species tested

    This work has been peer reviewed in GigaScience (see https://doi.org/10.1093/gigascience/giad086 ), which carries out open, named peer-review. This review is published under a CC-BY 4.0 license.

    ** Reviewer name: Doreen Ikhuva Lugano **

    This paper gives a good introduction on bats as reservoirs of several viral infections, which studies have shown is due to the uniqueness of their immune system. They and others suggest that bats immune system is dampened exhibiting tolerance to various viruses. This gives the study a good rationale as to why study the bats immune system, compared to other mammals. They also give a good rationale as to why they used single-cell sequencing, to allow the identification of various cell types and the differences in these cell types. From their finding the main conclusions are that differences in the host species are more impactful; than those among the different stimuli. They also suggest that bats initiate an innate immune response after infection with DNA viruses through an alternative pathway. For example, the induction dynamics of PRRs seems to be different in their dataset. They also suggest this could be due to the presence of species-specific cellular subsets. 1. Interesting model system and a good comparison of bats with other mammals. 2. Good technique in using single-cell sequencing, with a clear rationale as to why it was chosen. This advances knowledge on what was already known about bats immune system, but the species-specific cellular subsets are new. 3. Interesting technique to go through the bulk transcriptomic data in four species and four conditions. This allowed findings of the most important genes/pathways. 4. Good rationale / flow of experiments from one to another 5. I liked that they investigated stimuli from different pathogens , including DNA, RNA virus and bacteria and still show that bats had a different immune system, in the different stimuli. Minor comments 1. Do they speculate this occurrence in is this just in Egyptian Fruit bats or all species of bats? 2. Mentioned in the introduction why they used the egyptian fruit bats - which are a model organism, but this could help people who are not in this field understand exactly why use these bats. Advantages? Location? Proximity to the various viruses based on the fact they are mostly found in endemic regions such as Africa etc. 3. Can they include viral load in each species? 4. It is not clear which scRNAseq tools were used for data analysis in identifying the types of cells. Or did they use already established database based on markers?

  2. Bats harbor various viruses without severe symptoms and act as their natural reservoirs. The tolerance of bats against viral infections is assumed to originate from the uniqueness of their immune system. However, how immune responses vary between primates and bats remains unclear. Here, we characterized differences in the immune responses by peripheral blood mononuclear cells to various pathogenic stimuli between primates (humans, chimpanzees, and macaques) and bats (Egyptian fruit bats) using single-cell RNA sequencing. We show that the induction patterns of key cytosolic DNA/RNA sensors and antiviral genes differed between primates and bats. A novel subset of monocytes induced by pathogenic stimuli specifically in bats was identified. Furthermore, bats robustly respond to DNA virus infection even though major DNA sensors are dampened in bats. Overall, our data suggest that immune responses are substantially different between primates and bats, presumably underlying the difference in viral pathogenicity among the mammalian species tested.

    This work has been peer reviewed in GigaScience (see https://doi.org/10.1093/gigascience/giad086 ), which carries out open, named peer-review. This review is published under a CC-BY 4.0 license.

    ** Reviewer name: Urs Greber **

    Hirofumi Aso and colleagues provide a manuscript entitled 'Single-cell transcriptome analysis illuminating the characteristics of species specific innate immune responses against viral infections'. The aim was to describe differences in innate immune responses of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from different primates and bats against various pathogenic stimuli (different viruses and LPS). A major conclusion from the study is that differences in the immune response between primate and bat PBMCs are more pronounced than those between DNA, RNA viruses or LPS, or between the cell types. The topic is of interest as the immunological basis for how bats appear to be largely disease resistant to some viruses that cause severe infections in humans is not well understood. One notion by others has been that bats have a larger spectrum of interferon (IFN) type I related genes, some of which are expressed constitutively even in unstimulated tissue, and there, trigger the expression of IFN stimulated genes (ISGs). Alongside, enhanced ISG levels may need to be compensated for in bats. Accordingly, bats may exhibit reduced diversity of DNA sensing pathways, as well as absence of a range of proinflammatory cytokines triggered in humans upon encountering acute disease causing viruses. The study here uses single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) analysis, and transcript clustering algorithms to explore the profile of different innate immune responses upon viral infections of PBMCs from H sapiens, Chimpanzee, Rhesus macaque, and Egyptian fruit bat. Most commonly referred to cell types were detected in all four species, although naïve CD8+ T cells were not detected in bat PBMCs, which led the authors to focus on B cells, naïve T cells, killer T/NK cells, monocytes, cDCs, and pDCs. The study used three pathogenic stimuli, Herpex simplex virus 1 (HSV1), Sendai virus (SeV), and lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Specific comments The text is well written, concise, and per se interesting, but I have a few questions for clarification.

    1. Can the authors provide quality and purity control data for the virus inocula to document virus homogeneity? E.g., neither the methods, nor the indicated ref 26 specify if or how HSV1 was purified. Same is true for SeV where the provided ref 34 does not indicate if virus was purified or not. If virus inocula were not purified then it remains unclear to what extent the effects on the PBMCs described in the study here were due to virus or some other component in the inoculum. Conditions using inactivated inoculum might help to clarify this issue.

    2. What was the infection period? Was it the same for all viruses?

    3. Upon stimuli application, there was a noteable expansion of B cells and a compression of killer T / NK cells in the bat but not the human samples, as well as compression of monocytes, the latter observed in all four species. Can the authors comment on this observation?

    4. Lines 78-79: I do not think that TLR9 ought to be classified as a cytosolic DNA sensor. Please clarify.

    5. Line 117: please clarify that the upregulation of proinflammatory cytokines, ISGs and IFNB1 was measured at the level of transcripts not protein.

    6. Line 244: DNA sensors. Authors report that bats responded well to DNA viruses, although some of their DNA sensing pathways (e.g., STING downstream of cGAS, AIM2 or IFI16) were attenuated compared to primates (H sapies, Chimpanzee, Macaque). And they elute to the dsRNA PRR TLR3. But I am not sure if TLR3 is the only PRR to compensate for attenuated DNA sensing pathways. The authors might want to explicitly discuss if other RNA sensors, such as RIG-I-like receptors (RIG-I, LGP2, MDA5) were upregulated similarly in bats as in primate cells upon inoculation with HSV1.

    7. Is it known how much TLR3 protein is expressed in bat PBMCs under resting and stimulated conditions? Same question for the DNA and RNA sensor proteins, e.g., cGAS, AIM2 or IFI16, RIG-I, LGP2, MDA5, or effector proteins, such as STING.

    8. Can authors clarify if cGAS is part of the attenuated DNA sensors in the bat samples under study here? And it would be nice to see the attenuated response of DNA sensing pathways in the bat samples, as suspected from the literature, including STING downstream of cGAS, or AIM2 and IFI16.

    9. What are the expression levels of IFN-I and related genes in the bat cells among the different stimuli?

    10. Technical point: where can the raw scRNA-seq data be found?