Institut für Klinische und Molekulare Virologie, Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen and Nuremberg, Germany ; Department of Biology, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS Pathog. 2013;9(10):e1003641. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1003641. Epub 2013 Oct 3.
Cellular restriction factors, which render cells intrinsically resistant to viruses, potentially impose genetic barriers to cross-species transmission and emergence of viral pathogens in nature. One such factor is APOBEC3G. To overcome APOBEC3G-mediated restriction, many lentiviruses encode Vif, a protein that targets APOBEC3G for degradation. As with many restriction factor genes, primate APOBEC3G displays strong signatures of positive selection. This is interpreted as evidence that the primate APOBEC3G locus reflects a long-term evolutionary "arms-race" between retroviruses and their primate hosts. Here, we provide direct evidence that APOBEC3G has functioned as a barrier to cross-species transmission, selecting for viral resistance during emergence of the AIDS-causing pathogen SIVmac in captive colonies of Asian macaques in the 1970s. Specifically, we found that rhesus macaques have multiple, functionally distinct APOBEC3G alleles, and that emergence of SIVmac and simian AIDS required adaptation of the virus to evade APOBEC3G-mediated restriction. Our evidence includes the first comparative analysis of APOBEC3G polymorphism and function in both a reservoir and recipient host species (sooty mangabeys and rhesus macaques, respectively), and identification of adaptations unique to Vif proteins of the SIVmac lineage that specifically antagonize rhesus APOBEC3G alleles. By demonstrating that interspecies variation in a known restriction factor selected for viral counter-adaptations in the context of a documented case of cross-species transmission, our results lend strong support to the evolutionary "arms-race" hypothesis. Importantly, our study confirms that APOBEC3G divergence can be a critical determinant of interspecies transmission and emergence of primate lentiviruses, including viruses with the potential to infect and spread in human populations.
细胞限制因子使细胞对病毒具有内在抗性,可能会对病毒在自然界中的跨物种传播和出现形成遗传障碍。APOBEC3G 就是这样一种因子。为了克服 APOBEC3G 介导的限制,许多慢病毒编码了 Vif,这是一种靶向 APOBEC3G 进行降解的蛋白。与许多限制因子基因一样,灵长类 APOBEC3G 显示出强烈的正选择特征。这被解释为灵长类 APOBEC3G 基因座反映了逆转录病毒与其灵长类宿主之间长期进化的“军备竞赛”的证据。在这里,我们提供了直接的证据,证明 APOBEC3G 一直是跨物种传播的障碍,在 20 世纪 70 年代亚洲猕猴的圈养群体中 SIVmac 的出现过程中,选择了病毒抗性。具体来说,我们发现恒河猴具有多种功能不同的 APOBEC3G 等位基因,而 SIVmac 和猿猴艾滋病的出现需要病毒适应来逃避 APOBEC3G 介导的限制。我们的证据包括对储主和受体宿主物种(分别为黑眉长尾猴和恒河猴)中 APOBEC3G 多态性和功能的首次比较分析,以及鉴定出仅针对 SIVmac 谱系的 Vif 蛋白的独特适应性,这些适应性专门拮抗恒河猴 APOBEC3G 等位基因。通过证明在记录的跨物种传播案例中,已知限制因子的种间变异选择了病毒的反适应,我们的结果为进化“军备竞赛”假说提供了强有力的支持。重要的是,我们的研究证实 APOBEC3G 分化可以成为灵长类慢病毒跨物种传播和出现的关键决定因素,包括有可能感染和在人类中传播的病毒。