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iGATE analysis improves the interpretability of single-cell immune landscape of influenza infection
Brett D. Hill, Andrew J. Zak, Sanjeev Raja, Luke F. Bugada, Syed M. Rizvi, Saiful B. Roslan, Hong Nhi Nguyen, Judy Chen, Hui Jiang, Akira Ono, Daniel R. Goldstein, Fei Wen
Brett D. Hill, Andrew J. Zak, Sanjeev Raja, Luke F. Bugada, Syed M. Rizvi, Saiful B. Roslan, Hong Nhi Nguyen, Judy Chen, Hui Jiang, Akira Ono, Daniel R. Goldstein, Fei Wen
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Research Article Immunology Virology

iGATE analysis improves the interpretability of single-cell immune landscape of influenza infection

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Abstract

Influenza poses a persistent health burden worldwide. To design equitable vaccines effective across all demographics, it is essential to better understand how host factors such as genetic background and aging affect the single-cell immune landscape of influenza infection. Cytometry by time-of-flight (CyTOF) represents a promising technique in this pursuit, but interpreting its large, high-dimensional data remains difficult. We have developed a new analytical approach, in silico gating annotating training elucidating (iGATE), based on probabilistic support vector machine classification. By rapidly and accurately “gating” tens of millions of cells in silico into user-defined types, iGATE enabled us to track 25 canonical immune cell types in mouse lung over the course of influenza infection. Applying iGATE to study effects of host genetic background, we show that the lower survival of C57BL/6 mice compared with BALB/c was associated with a more rapid accumulation of inflammatory cell types and decreased IL-10 expression. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the most prominent effect of aging is a defective T cell response, reducing survival of aged mice. Finally, iGATE reveals that the 25 canonical immune cell types exhibited differential influenza infection susceptibility and replication permissiveness in vivo, but neither property varied with host genotype or aging. The software is available at https://github.com/UmichWenLab/iGATE.

Authors

Brett D. Hill, Andrew J. Zak, Sanjeev Raja, Luke F. Bugada, Syed M. Rizvi, Saiful B. Roslan, Hong Nhi Nguyen, Judy Chen, Hui Jiang, Akira Ono, Daniel R. Goldstein, Fei Wen

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Figure 4

Differential iHA and sHA expression profiles in cells with varying abilities for phagocytosis, susceptibility to influenza infection, and permissiveness to influenza replication.

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Differential iHA and sHA expression profiles in cells with varying abili...
(A) Intracellular HA (iHA) signal results from either viral infection or phagocytosis of infected cells, whereas surface HA (sHA) signal can only result from productive viral replication — at least up to the point of viral protein surface expression. In vitro influenza A/PR/8/34 (PR8) infection of (B) MDCK and (C) RAW264.7 cells at an MOI of 0.05. PBS-treated cells were included as controls. (D) In vitro phagocytosis of PBS-treated MDCK cells (middle panel) and PR8-infected MDCK cells (right panel) by RAW264.7 cells. PBS-treated RAW264.7 cells were included as another control. (E) Representative biaxial plots of sHA and iHA staining of C57Y CD45+ cells. iHA+sHA+ (Q2) cells actively support viral replication, while iHA+sHA– (Q3) cells are either infected or have phagocytosed infected cells but have not succumbed to viral replication up to the point of sHA expression. (F) Mean iHA+ cell counts per lung by cell type (n = 10).

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