Abstract

BackgroundViral infection causes multiple forms of human cancer, and HPV infection is the primary factor in cervical carcinomas. Recent single-cell RNA-seq studies highlight the tumor heterogeneity present in most cancers, but virally induced tumors have not been studied. HeLa is a well characterized HPV+ cervical cancer cell line.ResultWe developed a new high throughput platform to prepare single-cell RNA on a nanoliter scale based on a customized microwell chip. Using this method, we successfully amplified full-length transcripts of 669 single HeLa S3 cells and 40 of them were randomly selected to perform single-cell RNA sequencing. Based on these data, we obtained a comprehensive understanding of the heterogeneity of HeLa S3 cells in gene expression, alternative splicing and fusions. Furthermore, we identified a high diversity of HPV-18 expression and splicing at the single-cell level. By co-expression analysis we identified 283 E6, E7 co-regulated genes, including CDC25, PCNA, PLK4, BUB1B and IRF1 known to interact with HPV viral proteins.ConclusionOur results reveal the heterogeneity of a virus-infected cell line. It not only provides a transcriptome characterization of HeLa S3 cells at the single cell level, but is a demonstration of the power of single cell RNA-seq analysis of virally infected cells and cancers.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13742-015-0091-4) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Viral infection causes multiple forms of human cancer, and Human papilloma virus (HPV) infection is the primary factor in cervical carcinomas

  • Our results reveal the heterogeneity of a virus-infected cell line

  • HeLa is a good object for a pilot study to investigate the tumor heterogeneity in cervical cancer and other virus-infected cancers based on single-cell transcriptome analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Viral infection causes multiple forms of human cancer, and HPV infection is the primary factor in cervical carcinomas. Whole genome and transcriptome sequencing of different HeLa strains were used to comprehensively understand the HeLa cell line [26, 27]. These studies indicate that HeLa has a high level of aneuploidy, numerous large structural variants, extensive point mutations and extensive genomic rearrangement, especially at chromosome 8q24.21, the hotspot site HPV-18 genome integration [26, 27]. HeLa is a good object for a pilot study to investigate the tumor heterogeneity in cervical cancer and other virus-infected cancers based on single-cell transcriptome analysis

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