Biology Department, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA, USA.
Curr Top Microbiol Immunol. 2013;371:123-51. doi: 10.1007/978-3-642-37765-5_5.
Since the discovery of viruses over a century ago, virologists have recognized that host genetics plays a major role in viral tropism and the distribution of viruses in nature. Traditionally, studies of tropism have centered on identification of cellular factors required for viral replication, such as cell-surface entry receptors. However, over the past 20 years, there has been a steady increase in the identification and characterization of restriction factors (RFs), here defined as dominant cellular factors that have evolved specifically to interfere with viral replication. Genetic studies suggest that restriction factors impose significant barriers to interspecies movement of viruses and are therefore critical determinants of viral tropism. Furthermore, the scope of the ever-expanding list of restriction factors, and the variety of antiviral mechanisms they represent, testifies to the extraordinary impact viruses have had on organismal evolution-an impact hitherto underappreciated by evolutionary biologists and virologists alike. Recent studies of RF-encoding genes that combine molecular evolutionary analysis with functional assays illustrate the potential for asking questions about virus-host interactions as they play out in natural populations and across evolutionary timescales. Most notably, it has become common to apply tests of positive selection to RF genes and couple these analyses with virological assays, to reveal evidence for antagonistic virus-host co-evolution. Herein, I summarize recent work on the evolutionary genetics of mammalian RFs, particularly those of humans, non-human primates, and model organisms, and how RFs can reveal the influence of virus-host interactions on organismal evolution. Because intensive investigation of RF evolution is fairly new (and because there is still much to learn), the discussion is organized around five broad, outstanding questions that will need to be answered before we can fully appreciate the evolutionary biology of restriction.
自一个多世纪前发现病毒以来,病毒学家就已经认识到宿主遗传学在病毒嗜性和病毒在自然界中的分布中起着重要作用。传统上,对嗜性的研究主要集中在鉴定病毒复制所需的细胞因子上,例如细胞表面进入受体。但是,在过去的 20 年中,鉴定和表征限制因子(RF)的工作一直在稳步增加,在这里将其定义为专门进化以干扰病毒复制的优势细胞因子。遗传研究表明,限制因子对病毒的种间传播构成了重大障碍,因此是病毒嗜性的关键决定因素。此外,限制因子的范围不断扩大,以及它们所代表的各种抗病毒机制,证明了病毒对生物进化的巨大影响-进化生物学家和病毒学家都对此影响认识不足。最近对编码 RF 的基因进行的研究将分子进化分析与功能测定相结合,说明了在自然种群和进化时间范围内研究病毒-宿主相互作用的潜力。值得注意的是,对 RF 基因进行正选择检验并将这些分析与病毒学测定相结合以揭示抗病毒宿主共同进化的证据已变得很普遍。在此,我总结了哺乳动物 RF 的进化遗传学的最新工作,特别是人类,非人类灵长类动物和模式生物的 RF,以及 RF 如何揭示病毒-宿主相互作用对生物进化的影响。由于对 RF 进化的深入研究还很新(而且还有很多东西需要学习),因此,讨论围绕着五个广泛的,悬而未决的问题进行组织,在我们充分了解限制的进化生物学之前,需要回答这些问题。