Holmes Edward C
Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PS. UK.
Mol Ecol. 2004 Apr;13(4):745-56. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-294x.2003.02051.x.
Viruses, especially those with RNA genomes, represent ideal organisms to study the dynamics of microevolutionary change. In particular, their rapid rate of nucleotide substitution means that the epidemiological processes that shape their diversity act on the same time-scale as mutations are fixed in viral populations. Consequently, the branching structure of virus phylogenies provides a unique insight into spatial and temporal dynamics. Herein, I describe the key processes in virus phylogeography. These are generally associated with the relative rates of dispersal among populations and virus-host codivergence (vicariance), and the division between acute (short-term) and persistent (long-term) infections. These processes will be illustrated by important human viruses - HIV, dengue, rabies, polyomavirus JC and human papillomavirus - which display varying spatial and temporal structures and virus-host relationships. Key research questions for the future will also be established.
病毒,尤其是那些具有RNA基因组的病毒,是研究微观进化变化动态的理想生物体。特别是,它们快速的核苷酸替换率意味着塑造其多样性的流行病学过程与病毒群体中突变固定的时间尺度相同。因此,病毒系统发育树的分支结构为空间和时间动态提供了独特的见解。在此,我描述了病毒系统地理学中的关键过程。这些过程通常与种群间传播的相对速率、病毒-宿主共分化(隔离分化)以及急性(短期)和持续性(长期)感染之间的区分有关。这些过程将通过重要的人类病毒——艾滋病毒、登革热病毒、狂犬病病毒、多瘤病毒JC和人乳头瘤病毒——来说明,它们呈现出不同的空间和时间结构以及病毒-宿主关系。还将确立未来的关键研究问题。