Single-cell genome-wide association reveals a nonsynonymous variant in ERAP1 confers increased susceptibility to influenza virus
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Supporting information
Published version
OA Location
Author(s)
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
During pandemics, individuals exhibit differences in risk and clinical outcomes. Here, we developed single-cell high-throughput human in vitro susceptibility testing (scHi-HOST), a method for rapidly identifying genetic variants that confer resistance and susceptibility. We applied this method to influenza A virus (IAV), the cause of four pandemics since the start of the 20th century. scHi-HOST leverages single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) to simultaneously assign genetic identity to cells in mixed infections of cell lines of European, African, and Asian origin, reveal associated genetic variants for viral burden, and identify expression quantitative trait loci. Integration of scHi-HOST with human challenge and experimental validation demonstrated that a missense variant in endoplasmic reticulum aminopeptidase 1 (ERAP1; rs27895) increased IAV burden in cells and human volunteers. rs27895 exhibits population differentiation, likely contributing to greater permissivity of cells from African populations to IAV. scHi-HOST is a broadly applicable method and resource for decoding infectious-disease genetics.
Date Issued
2022-11-09
Date Acceptance
2022-10-07
Citation
Cell Genomics, 2022, 2 (11)
ISSN
2666-979X
Publisher
Cell Press
Journal / Book Title
Cell Genomics
Volume
2
Issue
11
Copyright Statement
© 2022 The Author(s). This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4/)
License URL
Sponsor
Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (UK)
Grant Number
2832958
Publication Status
Published
Article Number
ARTN 100207
Date Publish Online
2022-11-09