Respiratory syncytial virus load-dependent ciliated cell dedifferentiation and downregulation of immune response genes
Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) can cause severe lower respiratory tract infections in infants, older adults, and individuals with chronic or immunocompromising conditions. To understand how RSV affects airway cells, we infected primary human airway epithelial cultures with RSV and analyzed infected and bystander cells using time-resolved single-cell RNA sequencing and imaging. RSV mainly infected ciliated cells, triggering a virus load-dependent shutdown of genes involved in ciliogenesis, antigen presentation, and innate sensing, including key interferon (IFN) and pattern recognition pathways. Only a subset of infected cells produced type I and III IFNs, while bystander cells exhibited strong IFN-stimulated gene (ISG) signatures. Neither IFN treatment nor ISG induction eliminated infection, but IRF1, an antiviral transcription factor not suppressed by RSV, remained robustly expressed. Ectopic IRF1 expression in vitro reduced viral replication. These findings reveal how RSV evades antiviral defenses and highlight IRF1 as a potential target for therapeutic intervention.