Paired single-cell host profiling with multiplex-tagged bacterial mutants reveals intracellular virulence-immune networks

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Abstract

Encounters between host cells and intracellular bacterial pathogens lead to complex phenotypes that determine the outcome of infection. Single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) is increasingly used to study the host factors underlying diverse cellular phenotypes but has limited capacity to analyze the role of bacterial factors. Here, we developed scPAIR-seq, a single-cell approach to analyze infection with a pooled library of multiplex-tagged, barcoded bacterial mutants. Infected host cells and barcodes of intracellular bacterial mutants are both captured by scRNA-seq to functionally analyze mutant-dependent changes in host transcriptomes. We applied scPAIR-seq to macrophages infected with a library of Salmonella Typhimurium secretion system effector mutants. We analyzed redundancy between effectors and mutant-specific unique fingerprints and mapped the global virulence network of each individual effector by its impact on host immune pathways. ScPAIR-seq is a powerful tool to untangle bacterial virulence strategies and their complex interplay with host defense strategies that drive infection outcome.

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Heyman, O., Yehezkel, D., Mattioli, C. C., Blumberger, N., Rosenberg, G., Solomon, A., … Avraham, R. (2023). Paired single-cell host profiling with multiplex-tagged bacterial mutants reveals intracellular virulence-immune networks. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 120(28). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2218812120

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