4.8 Article

Single-cell sequencing of rotavirus-infected intestinal epithelium reveals cell-type specific epithelial repair and tuft cell infection

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2112814118

Keywords

rotavirus; damage; single-cell RNA-sequencing; tuft cell; interferon

Funding

  1. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Disorders (NIDDK) of the NIH [U01 DK103168]
  2. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) of the NIH [U01 DK103168]
  3. Center for Comparative Medicine and several Advanced Technology Cores at Baylor College of Medicine
  4. Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT) Core Facility Support Award [CPRIT-RP180672]
  5. NIH [CA125123, RR024574, DK56338, 1S10OD02346901, S10OD018033, S10OD023469, S10OD025240, P30EY002520]
  6. Digestive Disease Center
  7. Public Health Service Grant [P30 DK56338]
  8. Integrated Microscopy Core
  9. CPRIT [RP150578, RP170719, RP170005, RP200504]
  10. Dan L. Duncan Comprehensive Cancer Center
  11. John S. Dunn Gulf Coast Consortiumfor Chemical Genomics
  12. Genomic and RNA profiling Core
  13. P30 Digestive Disease Center Support Grant [NIDDK-DK56338]
  14. P30 Cancer Center Support Grant [NCI-CA125123]
  15. Single Cell Technology Core
  16. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) [P30 GC-CPEH ES030285]
  17. NIEHS [P42 ES027725]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Intestinal epithelial damage is associated with most digestive diseases, impacting nutrient absorption, hormone production, and antimicrobial defense. Understanding epithelial repair and regeneration is crucial for developing therapeutics. Research shows that stem cells drive a repair program, involving tuft cells and immature enterocytes in the repair of damaged epithelium.
Intestinal epithelial damage is associated with most digestive diseases and results in detrimental effects on nutrient absorption and production of hormones and antimicrobial defense molecules. Thus, understanding epithelial repair and regeneration following damage is essential in developing therapeutics that assist in rapid healing and restoration of normal intestinal function. Here we used a well-characterized enteric virus (rotavirus) that damages the epithelium at the villus tip but does not directly damage the intestinal stem cell, to explore the regenerative transcriptional response of the intestinal epithelium at the single-cell level. We found that there are specific Lgr5+ cell subsets that exhibit increased cycling frequency associated with significant expansion of the epithelial crypt. This was accompanied by an increase in the number of immature enterocytes. Unexpectedly, we found rotavirus infects tuft cells. Transcriptional profiling indicates tuft cells respond to viral infection through interferon-related pathways. Together these data provide insights as to how the intestinal epithelium responds to insults by providing evidence of stimulation of a repair program driven by stem cells with involvement of tuft cells that results in the production of immature enterocytes that repair the damaged epithelium.

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