Kinetics of virus production from single cells |
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Authors: | Timm Andrea Yin John |
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Affiliation: | Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Systems Biology Theme, Wisconsin Institute for Discovery, University of Wisconsin - Madison, 330 N Orchard Street, Madison, WI 53715, United States |
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Abstract: | The production of virus by infected cells is an essential process for the spread and persistence of viral diseases, the effectiveness of live-viral vaccines, and the manufacture of viruses for diverse applications. Yet despite its importance, methods to precisely measure virus production from cells are lacking. Most methods test infected-cell populations, masking how individual cells behave. Here we measured the kinetics of virus production from single cells. We combined simple steps of liquid-phase infection, serial dilution, centrifugation, and harvesting, without specialized equipment, to track the production of virus particles from BHK cells infected with vesicular stomatitis virus. Remarkably, cell-to-cell differences in latent times to virus release were within a factor of two, while production rates and virus yields spanned over 300-fold, highlighting an extreme diversity in virus production for cells from the same population. These findings have fundamental and technological implications for health and disease. |
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Keywords: | Single-cell sampling Virus-cell interactions Cell heterogeneity Kinetics Stochastic Intracellular resources Vesicular stomatitis virus Virus yield |
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