Pregnant individuals infected with influenza A viruses (IAV) have higher risks of mortality, hospitalization, preterm birth, and stillbirth. The objective was to determine how the transcriptional program induced by IAV infection in the lung differs between pregnant and non-pregnant states. I hypothesized that a cluster of genes linked to aggravation of influenza disease would be upregulated in the pregnant lung early in IAV infection versus the non-pregnant lung. We used a non-human primate model [NHP; pregnant (N=10), non-pregnant (N=10); Macaca nemestrina, pigtail macaque] to investigate the transcriptional response in the lung of pregnant versus non-pregnant NHPs infected with the IAV CA/04/2009 (H1N1) strain. Maternal lung tissues were collected from the animals at necropsy 5 days after infection. mRNA-Seq was performed by first extracting mRNA from tissues, preparing mRNA libraries, and aligning raw sequencing data, using Spliced Transcripts Alignment to a Reference (STAR), to the macaque genome. I performed normalization of the raw gene count matrix using EdgeR in R Studio and alignment to the macaque reference genome. Next, I performed a single gene analysis using Limma-voom to determine differentially expressed genes (DEG). A total of 115 genes were significantly differentially expressed (>2-fold change, p<0.05) with 77 upregulated and 38 downregulated. Remarkably, genes linked to aggravation of influenza A viral disease, tissue injury, or acidification were upregulated in the infected pregnant versus non-pregnant lung 5 days after infection (MMP8, ATP12A, LGR4, NUP58, KBTBD6; log2fold change 1.28 - 2.8, all p<0.05). Next steps include gene set enrichment analysis and ingenuity pathway analysis to further investigate the gene networks linked to these upregulated genes. In summary, pregnancy was associated with upregulation of genes in the lungs 5 days after IAV infection that may predispose to greater tissue injury versus the non-pregnant lung.