Human airway epithelia clear rhinovirus-infected cells using two waves of cell extrusion

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Abstract

Rhinoviruses (RV) cause most common colds and asthma attacks. While RV typically infects airway epithelia, most studies infect cell lines that cannot form proper epithelial barriers. Cell extrusion is a highly conserved process that drives most epithelial cell death by seamlessly squeezing out excess live cells to maintain constant cell densities and a tight barrier. We discovered that healthy bronchial epithelia clear RV within 24 hours by selectively extruding infected cells, a process called virus-induced cell extrusion (VICE). In contrast, barrier-defective cells fail to clear the virus and accumulate infection. VICE occurs in two phases: an early wave triggered by mechanical signals, and a later wave dependent on viral replication. Although extrusion removes infection, virus-carrying expelled cells can still spread RV. These findings highlight extrusion’s dual role in both clearing and transmitting rhinovirus, independent of typical inflammation.

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