Williamson Scott
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Kansas, USA.
Mol Biol Evol. 2003 Aug;20(8):1318-25. doi: 10.1093/molbev/msg144. Epub 2003 May 30.
The exact mechanisms by which HIV overwhelms the immune system remain poorly understood. Among the several explanations of HIV disease progression, most include adaptation of the viral genome to the host environment as a causal factor. Therefore, quantifying the rate and pattern of adaptive evolution within infected patients is critical to understanding the development of AIDS. Using sequence data from infected individuals sampled at multiple time points, I estimate the within-host adaptation rate of the HIV-1 env gene for viral populations from 50 different patients. I find that, averaging across patients, one adaptive substitution occurs every 3.3 months. Also, one adaptive mutation is driven to a high frequency (>50% but <100%) every 2.5 months. Taken together, such adaptive events occur once every 25 viral generations, which is the fastest adaptation rate ever recorded for a single protein-coding gene. Within the entire env gene, I estimate that a majority ( approximately 55%) of both nonsynonymous substitutions and high-frequency polymorphisms are adaptive. Further, in the C2-V5 region of env, I find that patients with longer asymptomatic periods have virus populations with higher adaptation rates, corroborating the notion that a broad, strong immune response against epitopes in the env gene product leads to longer asymptomatic periods. I conclude by discussing the distribution of nonsynonymous changes over the env gene.
人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)击溃免疫系统的确切机制仍鲜为人知。在对HIV疾病进展的几种解释中,大多数都将病毒基因组对宿主环境的适应性作为一个致病因素。因此,量化受感染患者体内适应性进化的速率和模式对于理解艾滋病的发展至关重要。利用来自多个时间点采样的受感染个体的序列数据,我估算了来自50名不同患者的病毒群体中HIV-1 env基因的宿主内适应率。我发现,平均到每个患者,每3.3个月会发生一次适应性替换。此外,每2.5个月会有一个适应性突变达到高频(>50%但<100%)。综合来看,此类适应性事件每25个病毒世代发生一次,这是单个蛋白质编码基因有记录以来最快的适应率。在整个env基因中,我估计非同义替换和高频多态性中大部分(约55%)是适应性的。此外,在env基因的C2-V5区域,我发现无症状期较长的患者其病毒群体的适应率更高,这证实了针对env基因产物中表位的广泛、强烈免疫反应会导致更长无症状期的观点。最后我讨论了env基因上非同义变化的分布情况。