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© Institut Pasteur
Corne d'Ammon (ou hippocampe) de renard atteint de rage sauvage. Coloration avec un conjugué fluorescent sur la nucléocapside du virus.
Publication : Cell reports

Human brain cell types shape host-rabies virus transcriptional interactions revealing a preexisting pro-viral astrocyte subpopulation.

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in Cell reports - 25 Aug 2025

Feige L, Young K, Cerapio JP, Kozaki T, Kergoat L, Libri V, Ginhoux F, Hasan M, Ben Ameur L, Chin G, Goode Z, Bourhy H, Saunders A

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 40864551

Link to DOI – 10.1016/j.celrep.2025.116159

Cell Rep 2025 Aug; 44(9): 116159

How virus-host cell interactions and innate immune antagonism shape neurotropic infection dynamics across diverse brain cell types is largely unknown. To “unmask” and study how innate immune inhibition affects cell-type-specific transcriptional regulation of the human and viral genome, we perform single-cell RNA sequencing of human brain cell co-cultures, comparing an isolate of rabies virus (RABV) to its mutant incapable of antagonizing interferon- and nuclear factor (NF)-κB-dependent responses. RABV gene expression is shaped by host cell type. RABV induces small-scale, cell-type-conserved transcriptional programs that likely support infection by (1) hijacking negative transcriptional feedback of pro-viral factors while (2) reducing anti-viral RNAs. Unexpectedly, disinhibited innate immune signaling increases RABV transcription, most strikingly in an infection-independent “pro-viral” astrocyte subpopulation. Further analysis suggests that pro-viral-like astrocytes are a rare subtype in the human brain and are primed to protect the brain during viral infection in concert with interferon-sensitive microglia recalcitrant to infection.