A single-cell view on host immune transcriptional response to in vivo BCG-induced trained immunity
Summary
Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccination is a prototype model for the study of trained immunity (TI) in humans, and results in a more effective response of innate immune cells upon stimulation with heterologous stimuli. Here, we investigate the heterogeneity of TI induction by single-cell RNA sequencing of immune cells collected from 156 samples. We observe that both monocytes and CD8+ T cells show heterologous transcriptional responses to lipopolysaccharide, with an active crosstalk between these two cell types. Furthermore, the interferon-γ pathway is crucial in BCG-induced TI, and it is upregulated in functional high responders. Data-driven analyses and functional experiments reveal STAT1 to be one of the important transcription factors for TI shared in all identified monocyte subpopulations. Finally, we report the role of type I interferon-related and neutrophil-related TI transcriptional programs in patients with sepsis. These findings provide comprehensive insights into the importance of monocyte heterogeneity during TI in humans.
Overall design
We have paired 39 individuals in 4 conditions: T0_RPMI (baseline, before BCG and without LPS); T0_LPS (before BCG and with LPS); T3m_RPMI (3 months after BCG, without LPS); T3m_LPS (3 months after BCG, with LPS).
Contributors
To be supplemented.
Contact
To be supplemented.
Sample name | Sample title | Disease | Gender | Age | Source | Treatment | Technology | Platform | Omics | Sample ID | Dataset ID | Action |
---|