PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Diversity in Compartmental Dynamics of Gene Regulatory Networks: The Immune Response in Primary Influenza A Infection in Mice.

  • Xing Qiu,
  • Shuang Wu,
  • Shannon P Hilchey,
  • Juilee Thakar,
  • Zhi-Ping Liu,
  • Stephen L Welle,
  • Alicia D Henn,
  • Hulin Wu,
  • Martin S Zand

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0138110
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 9
p. e0138110

Abstract

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Current approaches to study transcriptional profiles post influenza infection typically rely on tissue sampling from one or two sites at a few time points, such as spleen and lung in murine models. In this study, we infected female C57/BL6 mice intranasally with mouse-adapted H3N2/Hong Kong/X31 avian influenza A virus, and then analyzed the gene expression profiles in four different compartments (blood, lung, mediastinal lymph nodes, and spleen) over 11 consecutive days post infection. These data were analyzed by an advanced statistical procedure based on ordinary differential equation (ODE) modeling. Vastly different lists of significant genes were identified by the same statistical procedure in each compartment. Only 11 of them are significant in all four compartments. We classified significant genes in each compartment into co-expressed modules based on temporal expression patterns. We then performed functional enrichment analysis on these co-expression modules and identified significant pathway and functional motifs. Finally, we used an ODE based model to reconstruct gene regulatory network (GRN) for each compartment and studied their network properties.