PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Host gene expression signatures discriminate between ferrets infected with genetically similar H1N1 strains.

  • Karl Ljungberg,
  • Alexis McBrayer,
  • Jeremy V Camp,
  • Yong-Kyu Chu,
  • Ronald Tapp,
  • Diana L Noah,
  • Sheila Grimes,
  • Mary L Proctor,
  • Peter Liljeström,
  • Colleen B Jonsson,
  • Carl E Bruder

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0040743
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 7
p. e40743

Abstract

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Different respiratory viruses induce virus-specific gene expression in the host. Recent evidence, including those presented here, suggests that genetically related isolates of influenza virus induce strain-specific host gene regulation in several animal models. Here, we identified systemic strain-specific gene expression signatures in ferrets infected with pandemic influenza A/California/07/2009, A/Mexico/4482/2009 or seasonal influenza A/Brisbane/59/2007. Using uncorrelated shrunken centroid classification, we were able to accurately identify the infecting influenza strain with a combined gene expression profile of 10 selected genes, independent of the severity of disease. Another gene signature, consisting of 7 genes, could classify samples based on lung pathology. Furthermore, we identified a gene expression profile consisting of 31 probes that could classify samples based on both strain and severity of disease. Thus, we show that expression-based analysis of non-infected tissue enables distinction between genetically related influenza viruses as well as lung pathology. These results open for development of alternative tools for influenza diagnostics.