Back

Intranasal HSV 1 Infection Drives Region Specific Interferon Dominant Microglial Remodeling

Frietze, S.; Lunn, C.; Oldham, D.; Boyd, J. R.; Bubak, A. N.; Bustillos Saucedo, A.; Nagel, M. A.; Restrepo, D.; Bruce, K. D.; Niemeyer, C. S.

2026-03-17 neuroscience
10.64898/2026.03.13.711627 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Background and ObjectivesHerpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) is a neurotropic pathogen capable of invading the central nervous system (CNS) and increasingly associated with chronic neuroinflammation, cognitive impairment, and neurodegenerative disease. While microglia orchestrate the initial immune response to HSV-1, the molecular mechanisms that regulate their sustained neuroinflammatory activity in vivo remain poorly understood. MethodsTo define the transcriptional and epigenetic mechanisms that shape microglial responses during acute HSV-1 infection in vivo, we have, for the first time, integrated single-nucleus RNA sequencing, chromatin accessibility profiling, and spatial transcriptomics in a physiologically relevant intranasal HSV-1 infection model. ResultsSingle-cell multiome analysis of CD11b nuclei identified transcriptionally and epigenetically distinct microglial and macrophage populations. HSV-1 infection redistributed monocyte-lineage states, with a marked overrepresentation of interferon (IFN)-responsive microglia and macrophage-associated populations. These states exhibited differential amplification of STAT1/2-, IRF1-, and CEBPB-centered regulons, distinguishing IFN-responsive microglia from macrophage-enriched populations rather than reflecting uniform activation. Homeostatic microglial gene signatures (e.g., ApoE, Cst3) were reduced in response to HSV-1 infection. Spatial transcriptomics localized HSV-1 antigen to discrete brainstem regions, which were enriched for predicted STAT-, IRF-, and CEBPB-regulated targets identified through single-nuclei analysis. DiscussionUsing a multiomic framework, we demonstrate that HSV-1 infection drives transcriptional and epigenetic remodeling of microglial populations, characterized by a dominance of IFN-responsive states and a loss of homeostatic signatures. These findings provide mechanistic insight into how localized viral infection can reprogram microglial regulatory landscapes to maintain persistent HSV-1-associated neuroinflammation, contributing to long-term neurological vulnerability and neurodegenerative disease risk.

Matching journals

The top 1 journal accounts for 50% of the predicted probability mass.