scholarly journals Single-cell analysis of HIV-1 transcriptional activity reveals expression of proviruses in expanded clones during ART

2017 ◽  
Vol 114 (18) ◽  
pp. E3659-E3668 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ann Wiegand ◽  
Jonathan Spindler ◽  
Feiyu F. Hong ◽  
Wei Shao ◽  
Joshua C. Cyktor ◽  
...  

Little is known about the fraction of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) proviruses that express unspliced viral RNA in vivo or about the levels of HIV RNA expression within single infected cells. We developed a sensitive cell-associated HIV RNA and DNA single-genome sequencing (CARD-SGS) method to investigate fractional proviral expression of HIV RNA (1.3-kb fragment of p6, protease, and reverse transcriptase) and the levels of HIV RNA in single HIV-infected cells from blood samples obtained from individuals with viremia or individuals on long-term suppressive antiretroviral therapy (ART). Spiking experiments show that the CARD-SGS method can detect a single cell expressing HIV RNA. Applying CARD-SGS to blood mononuclear cells in six samples from four HIV-infected donors (one with viremia and not on ART and three with viremia suppressed on ART) revealed that an average of 7% of proviruses (range: 2–18%) expressed HIV RNA. Levels of expression varied from one to 62 HIV RNA molecules per cell (median of 1). CARD-SGS also revealed the frequent expression of identical HIV RNA sequences across multiple single cells and across multiple time points in donors on suppressive ART consistent with constitutive expression of HIV RNA in infected cell clones. Defective proviruses were found to express HIV RNA at levels similar to those proviruses that had no obvious defects. CARD-SGS is a useful tool to characterize fractional proviral expression in single infected cells that persist despite ART and to assess the impact of experimental interventions on proviral populations and their expression.

2016 ◽  
Vol 54 (6) ◽  
pp. 1641-1643 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sylvie Zida ◽  
Edouard Tuaillon ◽  
Makoura Barro ◽  
Arnaud Kwimatouo Lekpa Franchard ◽  
Thérèse Kagoné ◽  
...  

The impact of HIV-1 DNA coamplification during HIV-1 RNA quantification on dried blood spots (DBS) was explored. False-positive HIV RNA detection (22/62, 35%) was associated with high HIV-1 DNA levels. Specificity of HIV-1 RNA assays on DBS should be evaluated following manufacturer protocols on samples with HIV-1 DNA levels of ≥1,000 copies/106peripheral blood mononuclear cells.


Author(s):  
Daniele Ramazzotti ◽  
Fabrizio Angaroni ◽  
Davide Maspero ◽  
Gianluca Ascolani ◽  
Isabella Castiglioni ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTThe rise of longitudinal single-cell sequencing experiments on patient-derived cell cultures, xenografts and organoids is opening new opportunities to track cancer evolution in single tumors and to investigate intra-tumor heterogeneity. This is particularly relevant when assessing the efficacy of therapies over time on the clonal composition of a tumor and in the identification of resistant subclones.We here introduce LACE (Longitudinal Analysis of Cancer Evolution), the first algorithmic framework that processes single-cell somatic mutation profiles from cancer samples collected at different time points and in distinct experimental settings, to produce longitudinal models of cancer evolution. Our approach solves a Boolean matrix factorization problem with phylogenetic constraints, by maximizing a weighted likelihood function computed on multiple time points, and we show with simulations that it outperforms state-of-the-art methods for both bulk and single-cell sequencing data.Remarkably, as the results are robust with respect to high levels of data-specific errors, LACE can be employed to process single-cell mutational profiles as generated by calling variants from the increasingly available scRNA-seq data, thus obviating the need of relying on rarer and more expensive genome sequencing experiments. This also allows to investigate the relation between genomic clonal evolution and phenotype at the single-cell level.To illustrate the capabilities of LACE, we show its application to a longitudinal scRNA-seq dataset of patient-derived xenografts of BRAFV600E/K mutant melanomas, in which we characterize the impact of concurrent BRAF/MEK-inhibition on clonal evolution, also by showing that distinct genetic clones reveal different sensitivity to the therapy. Furthermore, the analysis of a longitudinal dataset of breast cancer PDXs from targeted scDNA-sequencing experiments delivers a high-resolution characterization of intra-tumor heterogeneity, also allowing the detection of a late de novo subclone.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (1) ◽  
pp. 100-111 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diana Y. Chen ◽  
Arumugam Balamurugan ◽  
Hwee L. Ng ◽  
William G. Cumberland ◽  
Otto O. Yang

AbstractThe impact of HIV-1 Nef-mediated HLA-I down-regulation on CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) varies by epitope, but the determining factors have not been elucidated. In the present study, we investigated the impact of Nef on the antiviral efficiency of HIV-1–specific CTLs targeting 17 different epitopes to define properties that determine susceptibility to Nef. The impact of Nef was not correlated with the presenting HLA-I type or functional avidity of CTLs, but instead was related directly to the kinetics of infected cell clearance. Whereas Gag-specific CTLs generally were less susceptible to Nef than those targeting other proteins, this was determined by the ability to eliminate infected cells before de novo synthesis of viral proteins, which was also observed for CTLs targeting a Nef epitope. This very early clearance of infected cells depended on virus inoculum, and the required inoculum varied by epitope. These results suggest that whereas Gag-specific CTLs are more likely to recognize infected cells before Nef-mediated HLA-I down-regulation, this varies depending on the specific epitope and virus inoculum. Reduced susceptibility to Nef therefore may contribute to the overall association of Gag-specific CTL responses to better immune control if a sufficient multiplicity of infection is attained in vivo, but this property is not unique to Gag.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adam K. Savage ◽  
Miriam V. Gutschow ◽  
Tony Chiang ◽  
Kathy Henderson ◽  
Richard Green ◽  
...  

SummaryMulti-omic profiling of human peripheral blood is increasingly utilized to identify biomarkers and pathophysiologic mechanisms of disease. The importance of these platforms in clinical and translational studies led us to investigate the impact of delayed blood processing on the numbers and state of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and on the plasma proteome. Similar to previous studies, we show minimal effects of delayed processing on the numbers and general phenotype of PBMCs up to 18 hours. In contrast, profound changes in the single-cell transcriptome and composition of the plasma proteome become evident as early as 6 hours after blood draw. These reflect patterns of cellular activation across diverse cell types that lead to progressive distancing of the gene expression state and plasma proteome from native in vivo biology. Differences accumulating during an overnight rest (18 hours) could confound relevant biologic variance related to many underlying disease states.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xingjian Zhang ◽  
Trevor Chan ◽  
Michael Mak

AbstractCancer cell metastasis is a major factor in cancer-related mortality. During the process of metastasis, cancer cells exhibit migratory phenotypes and invade through pores in the dense extracellular matrix. However, the characterization of morphological and subcellular features of cells in similar migratory phenotypes and the effects of geometric confinement on cell morphodynamics are not well understood. Here, we investigate the phenotypes of highly aggressive MDA-MB-231 cells in single cell and cell doublet (an initial and simplified collective state) forms in confined microenvironments. We group phenotypically similar single cells and cell doublets and characterize related morphological and subcellular features. We further detect two distinct migratory phenotypes, fluctuating and non-fluctuating, within the fast migrating single cell group. In addition, we demonstrate an increase in the number of protrusions formed at the leading edge of cells after invasion through geometric confinement. Finally, we track the short and long term effects of varied degrees of confinement on protrusion formation. Overall, our findings elucidate the underlying morphological and subcellular features associated with different single cell and cell doublet phenotypes and the impact of invasion through confined geometry on cell behavior.


2017 ◽  
Vol 25 (5) ◽  
pp. 1062-1064 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harshana S. De Silva Feelixge ◽  
Keith R. Jerome
Keyword(s):  

Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 2520-2520
Author(s):  
Parashar Dhapola ◽  
Mikael Sommarin ◽  
Mohamed Eldeeb ◽  
Amol Ugale ◽  
David Bryder ◽  
...  

Single-cell transcriptomics (scRNA-Seq) has accelerated the investigation of hematopoietic differentiation. Based on scRNA-Seq data, more refined models of lineage determination in stem- and progenitor cells are now available. Despite such advances, characterizing leukemic cells using single-cell approaches remains challenging. The conventional strategies of scRNA-Seq analysis map all cells on the same low dimensional space using approaches like tSNE and UMAP. However, when used for comparing normal and leukemic cells, such methods are often inadequate as the transcriptome of the leukemic cells has systematically diverged, resulting in irrelevant separation of leukemic subpopulations from their healthy counterpart. Here, we have developed a new computational approach bundled into a tool called Nabo (nabo.readthedocs.io) that has the capacity to directly compare cells that are otherwise unalignable. First, Nabo creates a shared nearest neighbor graph of the reference population, and the heterogeneity of this population is subsequently defined by performing clustering on the graph and calculating a low dimensional representation using t-SNE or UMAP. Nabo then calculates the similarity of incoming cells from a target population to each cell in the reference graph using a modified Canberra metric. The reference cells with higher similarity to the target cells obtain higher mapping scores. The built-in classifier is used to assign each target cell a reference cluster identity. We tested Nabo's accuracy on control datasets and found that Nabo's performance in terms of accuracy and robustness of projection is comparable to state-of-art methods. Moreover, Nabo is a generalized domain adaptation algorithm and hence can perform classification of target cells that are arbitrarily dissimilar to reference cells. Nabo could identify the cell-identity of sorted CD19+ B cells, CD14+ monocytes and CD56+ by projecting these unlabeled cells onto labelled peripheral blood mononuclear cells with an average specificity higher than 0.98. The general applicability of Nabo was demonstrated by successfully integrating pancreatic cells, sequenced in three different studies using different sequencing chemistries with comparable or better accuracy than existing methods. Also, it was conclusively demonstrated that Nabo can predict the identity of human HSPC subpopulations to the same accuracy as can be achieved by established cell-surface markers. Having Nabo at hand, we aimed to uncover the heterogeneity of hematopoietic cells from different stages of AML. Nabo showed that AML cells lacked the heterogeneity of normal CD34+ cells and were devoid of cells with HSC gene signature. A large patient-to-patient variability was found where leukemic cells mapped to distinct stages of myeloid progenitors. To ask whether this variability could reflect differences in leukemia-initiating cell identity, we induced leukemia in murine granulocyte-monocyte-lymphoid progenitors (GMLPs) using an inducible model for MLL-ENL-driven AML. On projection, more than 70% of MLL-ENL-activated cells mapped to a distinct Flt3+ subpopulation present within healthy GMLPs. Statistical validity of this projection was verified using two novel null models for testing cell projections: 1) ablated node model, wherein the mapping strength of target cells are evaluated after removal of high mapping score source nodes, and 2) high entropy features model, which rules out the background noise effect. By separating Flt3+ and Flt3- cells prior to activation of the fusion gene and performing in vitro replating assays, we could demonstrate that Flt3+ GMLPs contained 3-4 fold more leukemia-initiating cells (1/1.34 cells) than Flt3- GMLPs (1/4.89 cells), indicating that leukemia-initiating cells within GMLPs express Flt3. Taken together, Nabo represents a robust cell projection strategy for relevant analysis of scRNA-Seq data that permits an interpretable inference of cross-population relationships. Nabo is designed to compare disparate cellular populations by using the heterogeneity of one population as a point of reference allowing for cell-type specification even following perturbations that have resulted in large molecular changes to the cells of interest. As such, Nabo has critical implementation for delineation of leukemia heterogeneity and identification of leukemia-initiating cell population. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cantong Zhang ◽  
Xiaoping Hong ◽  
Haiyan Yu ◽  
Hongwei Wu ◽  
Huixuan Xu ◽  
...  

Abstract Rheumatoid arthritis is a chronic autoinflammatory disease with an elusive etiology. Assays for transposase-accessible chromatin with single-cell sequencing (scATAC-seq) contribute to the progress in epigenetic studies. However, the impact of epigenetic technology on autoimmune diseases has not been objectively analyzed. Therefore, scATAC-seq was performed to generate a high-resolution map of accessible loci in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of RA patients at the single-cell level. The purpose of our project was to discover the transcription factors (TFs) that were involved in the pathogenesis of RA at single-cell resolution. In our research, we obtained 22 accessible chromatin patterns. Then, 10 key TFs were involved in the RA pathogenesis by regulating the activity of MAP kinase. Consequently, two genes (PTPRC, SPAG9) regulated by 10 key TFs were found that may be associated with RA disease pathogenesis and these TFs were obviously enriched in RA patients (p<0.05, FC>1.2). With further qPCR validation on PTPRC and SPAG9 in monocytes, we found differential expression of these two genes, which were regulated by eight TFs (ZNF384, HNF1B, DMRTA2, MEF2A, NFE2L1, CREB3L4 (var. 2), FOSL2::JUNB (var. 2), MEF2B). What is more, the eight TFs showed highly accessible binding sites in RA patients. These findings demonstrate the value of using scATAC-seq to reveal transcriptional regulatory variation in RA-derived PBMCs, providing insights on therapy from an epigenetic perspective.


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