Abstract

Cellular immunity is critical for controlling intracellular pathogens, but individual cellular dynamics and cell–cell cooperativity in evolving human immune responses remain poorly understood. Single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) represents a powerful tool for dissecting complex multicellular behaviors in health and disease1,2 and nominating testable therapeutic targets3. Its application to longitudinal samples could afford an opportunity to uncover cellular factors associated with the evolution of disease progression without potentially confounding inter-individual variability4. Here, we present an experimental and computational methodology that uses scRNA-seq to characterize dynamic cellular programs and their molecular drivers, and apply it to HIV infection. By performing scRNA-seq on peripheral blood mononuclear cells from four untreated individuals before and longitudinally during acute infection5, we were powered within each to discover gene response modules that vary by time and cell subset. Beyond previously unappreciated individual- and cell-type-specific interferon-stimulated gene upregulation, we describe temporally aligned gene expression responses obscured in bulk analyses, including those involved in proinflammatory T cell differentiation, prolonged monocyte major histocompatibility complex II upregulation and persistent natural killer (NK) cell cytolytic killing. We further identify response features arising in the first weeks of infection, for example proliferating natural killer cells, which potentially may associate with future viral control. Overall, our approach provides a unified framework for characterizing multiple dynamic cellular responses and their coordination.

Highlights

  • Despite advances in pre-exposure prophylaxis, there were 1.7 million new cases of HIV infection in 2018, highlighting the need for effective HIV vaccines

  • Beyond previously unappreciated individual- and cell-typespecific interferon-stimulated gene upregulation, we describe temporally aligned gene expression responses obscured in bulk analyses, including those involved in proinflammatory T cell differentiation, prolonged monocyte major histocompatibility complex II upregulation and persistent natural killer (NK) cell cytolytic killing

  • Having mapped cell type frequency dynamics during acute HIV-1 infection, we examined how different cellular phenotypes shifted over time

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Summary

Year b

Pre-infect0ioWn ee1ksW2eeWk e3ekWs e4ekWs e6ekMsonth1sYear Pre-infect0ioWn ee1ksW2eeWk e3ekWs e4ekWs e6ekMsonth1sYear log (viral load) (copies ml–1) 10. Despite being generated in distinct cell types, each GM included IFI27, IFI44L, IFI6, IFIT3, ISG15 and XAF1 (Fig. 2c and Extended Data Fig. 3a), in addition to other interferon (IFN)-stimulated genes (ISGs)[13]. These expression patterns reveal cell-type-specific genes and functions correlated with a core ISG signature in P1, including monocyte antiviral activity (CXCL10, DEFB1)[14,15], dendritic cell (DC) activation (PARP9, STAT1)[16,17], naive CD4+ T cell differentiation (CD52, TIGIT)[18,19] and NK cell trafficking (CX3CR1, ICAM2)[20].

Test for temporal variation in scores
Cell count by patient
Methods
Code availability
Findings
Methodology
Full Text
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