Popis: |
Basal airway epithelial cells are a multipotent stem cell population which gives rise to several airway cell types. Basal cells are known to be critical to airway epithelium homeostasis and repair, and altered basal cell phenotypes have been reported in cystic fibrosis and idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. However, very little is known about how basal cells respond to stimuli in the cystic fibrosis airway environment. Cystic fibrosis patients experience chronic infection with Pseudomonas aeruginosa and contain both high quantities of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) as well as the filamentous bacteriophage Pf produced by biofilm-state P. aeruginosa in the airway. In this study, we sought to investigate the transcriptional responses of human basal cells from both healthy controls and patients with cystic fibrosis to LPS and Pf phage. Basal cells from wildtype and cystic fibrosis donors were cultured in vitro and exposed to LPS and/or Pf phage, followed by single-cell sequencing on the 10x platform. We report that basal cells show strong antiviral responses and neutrophil chemokine production in response to Pf phage. We validate these findings in additional donors by qRT-PCR and show that Pf phage is internalized by basal cells. We also show that Pf decreases basal cell migration and proliferation. We demonstrate that Pf phage, a bacteria-infecting virus which does not replicate in mammalian cells, is taken up by basal cells and activates immune responses. Further studies are needed to determine the impact of this antiviral response to bacterial clearance.Author SummaryWhen we experience a lung infection or injury, the stem cells of the airway—called basal epithelial cells—are crucial for healing the affected tissue. Basal cells proliferate and migrate to close gaps in the epithelium and replace injured and dead cells. We are also learning that basal cells can directly contribute to the immune response against lung pathogens, although little is understood about how basal cells sense viruses and bacteria, and what molecules they secrete in response. In our work, we sought to investigate the role that basal cells play in the course of an infection with the common human pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa. We stimulated basal cells with lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a potent immunogen produced by Pseudomonas, as well as the Pseudomonas-infecting virus Pf4. We have previously shown that Pf4, which is produced in high amounts by lung-infecting Pseudomonas, affects the immune response to this bacterium. In our work here, we show that Pf4 is recognized as a virus by basal cells and changes the transcriptional response to LPS, derailing the antibacterial immune response to Pseudomonas. These findings raise the question of whether other bacteria-infecting viruses alter immune responses, and how these viruses interact with other airway cells. |