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PXD052229

PXD052229 is an original dataset announced via ProteomeXchange.

Dataset Summary
TitleMulti-omics analysis reveals the impact of influenza A virus host adaptation on immune signatures in pig tracheal tissue
DescriptionInfluenza A virus (IAV) infection is a global respiratory disease, which annually leads to 3-5 million cases of severe illness, resulting in 290,000-650,000 deaths. Additionally, during the past century, four global IAV pandemics have claimed millions of human lives. The epithelial lining of the trachea plays a vital role during IAV infection, both as point of viral entry and replication as well as in the antiviral immune response. Tracheal tissue is generally inaccessible from human patients, which makes animal models crucial for the study of the tracheal host immune response. In this study, pigs were inoculated with swine- or human-adapted H1N1 IAV to gain insight into how host adaptation of IAV shapes the innate immune response during infection. In-depth multi-omics analysis (global proteomics and RNA sequencing) of the host response in upper and lower tracheal tissue was conducted, and results were validated by microfluidic qPCR. Additionally, a subset of samples was selected for histopathological examination. A classical innate antiviral immune response was induced in both upper and lower trachea after infection with either swine- or human-adapted IAV with upregulation of genes and higher abundance of proteins associated with viral infection and recognition, accompanied by a significant induction of interferon stimulated genes with corresponding higher proteins concentrations. Infection with the swine-adapted virus induced a much stronger immune response compared to infection with a human-adapted IAV strain in the lower trachea, which could be a consequence of a higher viral load and a higher degree of inflammation. Central components of the JAK-STAT pathway, apoptosis, pyrimidine metabolism, and the cytoskeleton were significantly altered depending on infection with swine- or human-adapted virus and might be relevant mechanisms in relation to antiviral immunity against putative zoonotic IAV. Based on our findings, we hypothesize that during host adaptation, IAV evolve to modulate important host cell elements to favor viral infectivity and replication.
HostingRepositoryPRIDE
AnnounceDate2024-10-22
AnnouncementXMLSubmission_2024-10-22_06:52:58.186.xml
DigitalObjectIdentifier
ReviewLevelPeer-reviewed dataset
DatasetOriginOriginal dataset
RepositorySupportUnsupported dataset by repository
PrimarySubmitterKonstantinos Kalogeropoulos
SpeciesList scientific name: Sus scrofa domesticus (domestic pig); NCBI TaxID: 9825;
ModificationListacetylated residue; monohydroxylated residue; deamidated residue
InstrumentOrbitrap Exploris 480
Dataset History
RevisionDatetimeStatusChangeLog Entry
02024-05-13 09:55:18ID requested
12024-08-08 04:48:51announced
22024-10-22 06:52:58announced2024-10-22: Updated project metadata.
Publication List
Dataset with its publication pending
Keyword List
submitter keyword: immune regulation,Influenza A virus, global proteomics, host adaptation, RNA-seq, host metabolism
Contact List
Kerstin Skovgaard
contact affiliationTechnical University of Denmark, Department of Biotechnology and Biomedicine
contact emailkesk@dtu.dk
lab head
Konstantinos Kalogeropoulos
contact affiliationTechnical University of Denmark
contact emailkonskalogero@gmail.com
dataset submitter
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Dataset FTP location
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