Transcriptomic responses of bat cells to European bat lyssavirus 1 infection under conditions simulating euthermia and hibernation

Archive ouverte

Harazim, Markéta | Perrot, Juliette | Varet, Hugo | Bourhy, Hervé | Lannoy, Julien | Pikula, Jiri | Seidlová, Veronika | Dacheux, Laurent | Martínková, Natália

Edité par CCSD ; BioMed Central -

International audience. BackgroundCoevolution between pathogens and their hosts decreases host morbidity and mortality. Bats host and can tolerate viruses which can be lethal to other vertebrate orders, including humans. Bat adaptations to infection include localized immune response, early pathogen sensing, high interferon expression without pathogen stimulation, and regulated inflammatory response. The immune reaction is costly, and bats suppress high-cost metabolism during torpor. In the temperate zone, bats hibernate in winter, utilizing a specific behavioural adaptation to survive detrimental environmental conditions and lack of energy resources. Hibernation torpor involves major physiological changes that pose an additional challenge to bat-pathogen coexistence. Here, we compared bat cellular reaction to viral challenge under conditions simulating hibernation, evaluating the changes between torpor and euthermia.ResultsWe infected the olfactory nerve-derived cell culture of Myotis myotis with an endemic bat pathogen, European bat lyssavirus 1 (EBLV-1). After infection, the bat cells were cultivated at two different temperatures, 37 °C and 5 °C, to examine the cell response during conditions simulating euthermia and torpor, respectively. The mRNA isolated from the cells was sequenced and analysed for differential gene expression attributable to the temperature and/or infection treatment. In conditions simulating euthermia, infected bat cells produce an excess signalling by multitude of pathways involved in apoptosis and immune regulation influencing proliferation of regulatory cell types which can, in synergy with other produced cytokines, contribute to viral tolerance. We found no up- or down-regulated genes expressed in infected cells cultivated at conditions simulating torpor compared to non-infected cells cultivated under the same conditions. When studying the reaction of uninfected cells to the temperature treatment, bat cells show an increased production of heat shock proteins (HSPs) with chaperone activity, improving the bat’s ability to repair molecular structures damaged due to the stress related to the temperature change.ConclusionsThe lack of bat cell reaction to infection in conditions simulating hibernation may contribute to the virus tolerance or persistence in bats. Together with the cell damage repair mechanisms induced in response to hibernation, the immune regulation may promote bats’ ability to act as reservoirs of zoonotic viruses such as lyssaviruses.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Large circulation of a novel vesiculovirus in bats in the Mediterranean region

Archive ouverte | Luo, Dong-Sheng | CCSD

International audience. Abstract Bats are the natural reservoirs of a variety of emerging or re-emerging viruses. Among them, rabies virus (genus Lyssavirus , family Rhabdoviridae ) is of the first and most iconic d...

[Bats and viruses: Balancing infection control and immune tolerance]. Des chauves-souris et des virus : Entre contrôle de l’infection et tolérance immunitaire

Archive ouverte | Perrot, Juliette | CCSD

International audience. In recent decades, bats have been associated with numerous viral pandemics. Bats harbor a large variety of viruses, some of which have a high zoonotic potential for humans. While infection wi...

Somatic and direct reprogramming of bat cells provide new cellular substrates for studying host-pathogen interactions

Archive ouverte | Aurine, Noémie | CCSD

International audience. Bats represent the second group of mammals after rodents, but are also and above all the asymptomatic reservoir of many zoonotic viruses, some highly pathogenic. Better understanding how bats...

Chargement des enrichissements...