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Single-cell tracking of flavivirus RNA uncovers species-specific interactions with the immune system dictating disease outcome

Author(s): Douam, Florian; Hrebikova, Gabriela; Albrecht, Yentli E Soto; Sellau, Julie; Sharon, Yael; et al

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Abstract: Positive-sense RNA viruses pose increasing health and economic concerns worldwide. Our limited understanding of how these viruses interact with their host and how these processes lead to virulence and disease seriously hampers the development of anti-viral strategies. Here, we demonstrate the tracking of ( þ ) and ( ) sense viral RNA at single-cell resolution within complex subsets of the human and murine immune system in different mouse models. Our results provide insights into how a prototypic flavivirus, yellow fever virus (YFV-17D), differentially interacts with murine and human hematopoietic cells in these mouse models and how these dynamics influence distinct outcomes of infection. We detect ( ) YFV-17D RNA in specific secondary lymphoid compartments and cell subsets not previously recognized as permissive for YFV replication, and we highlight potential virus–host interaction events that could be pivotal in regulating flavivirus virulence and attenuation.
Publication Date: 14-Mar-2017
Electronic Publication Date: 14-Mar-2017
Citation: Douam, Florian, Hrebikova, Gabriela, Albrecht, Yentli E Soto, Sellau, Julie, Sharon, Yael, Ding, Qiang, Ploss, Alexander. (2017). Single-cell tracking of flavivirus RNA uncovers species-specific interactions with the immune system dictating disease outcome. Nature Communications, 8 (14781 - 14781. doi:10.1038/ncomms14781
DOI: doi:10.1038/ncomms14781
EISSN: 2041-1723
Pages: 14781 - 14781
Type of Material: Journal Article
Journal/Proceeding Title: Nature Communications
Version: Final published version. This is an open access article.



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