Shackelton Laura A, Rambaut Andrew, Pybus Oliver G, Holmes Edward C
Center for Infectious Disease Dynamics, Department of Biology, The Pennsylvania State University, Mueller Laboratory, University Park, PA 16802, USA.
J Virol. 2006 Oct;80(20):9928-33. doi: 10.1128/JVI.00441-06.
The ubiquitous human polyomavirus JC (JCV) is a small double-stranded DNA virus that establishes a persistent infection, and it is often transmitted from parents to children. There are at least 14 subtypes of the virus associated with different human populations. Because of its presumed codivergence with humans, JCV has been used as a genetic marker for human evolution and migration. Codivergence has also been used as a basis for estimating the rate of nucleotide substitution in JCV. We tested the hypothesis of host-virus codivergence by (i) performing a reconciliation analysis of phylogenetic trees of human and JCV populations and (ii) providing the first estimate of the evolutionary rate of JCV that is independent from the assumption of codivergence. Strikingly, our comparisons of JCV and human phylogenies provided no evidence for codivergence, suggesting that this virus should not be used as a marker for human population history. Further, while the estimated nucleotide substitution rate of JCV has large confidence intervals due to limited sampling, our analysis suggests that this virus may evolve nearly two orders of magnitude faster than predicted under the codivergence hypothesis.
普遍存在的人类多瘤病毒JC(JCV)是一种小型双链DNA病毒,可引发持续感染,且常由父母传播给子女。该病毒至少有14种亚型,与不同人群相关。由于推测JCV与人类共同进化,它已被用作人类进化和迁徙的遗传标记。共同进化也被用作估算JCV核苷酸替代率的基础。我们通过(i)对人类和JCV群体的系统发育树进行溯源分析,以及(ii)首次在不依赖共同进化假设的情况下估算JCV的进化速率,来检验宿主 - 病毒共同进化的假设。令人惊讶的是,我们对JCV和人类系统发育的比较没有提供共同进化的证据,这表明该病毒不应被用作人类群体历史的标记。此外,虽然由于采样有限,JCV的核苷酸替代率估计值的置信区间较大,但我们的分析表明,该病毒的进化速度可能比共同进化假设预测的快近两个数量级。