Hatcher Eneida L, Hendrickson Robert Curtis, Lefkowitz Elliot J
Department of Microbiology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama, USA.
Department of Microbiology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama, USA
J Virol. 2014 Dec;88(23):13651-68. doi: 10.1128/JVI.02015-14. Epub 2014 Sep 17.
Poxviruses are composed of large double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) genomes coding for several hundred genes whose variation has supported virus adaptation to a wide variety of hosts over their long evolutionary history. Comparative genomics has suggested that the Orthopoxvirus genus in particular has undergone reductive evolution, with the most recent common ancestor likely possessing a gene complement consisting of all genes present in any existing modern-day orthopoxvirus species, similar to the current Cowpox virus species. As orthopoxviruses adapt to new environments, the selection pressure on individual genes may be altered, driving sequence divergence and possible loss of function. This is evidenced by accumulation of mutations and loss of protein-coding open reading frames (ORFs) that progress from individual missense mutations to gene truncation through the introduction of early stop mutations (ESMs), gene fragmentation, and in some cases, a total loss of the ORF. In this study, we have constructed a whole-genome alignment for representative isolates from each Orthopoxvirus species and used it to identify the nucleotide-level changes that have led to gene content variation. By identifying the changes that have led to ESMs, we were able to determine that short indels were the major cause of gene truncations and that the genome length is inversely proportional to the number of ESMs present. We also identified the number and types of protein functional motifs still present in truncated genes to assess their functional significance.
This work contributes to our understanding of reductive evolution in poxviruses by identifying genomic remnants such as single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and indels left behind by evolutionary processes. Our comprehensive analysis of the genomic changes leading to gene truncation and fragmentation was able to detect some of the remnants of these evolutionary processes still present in orthopoxvirus genomes and suggests that these viruses are under continual adaptation due to changes in their environment. These results further our understanding of the evolutionary mechanisms that drive virus variation, allowing orthopoxviruses to adapt to particular environmental niches. Understanding the evolutionary history of these virus pathogens may help predict their future evolutionary potential.
痘病毒由大型双链DNA(dsDNA)基因组组成,这些基因组编码数百个基因,其变异支持病毒在漫长的进化历史中适应多种宿主。比较基因组学表明,特别是正痘病毒属经历了简化进化,最近的共同祖先可能拥有一个基因库,其中包含任何现有现代正痘病毒物种中存在的所有基因,类似于当前的牛痘病毒物种。随着正痘病毒适应新环境,单个基因上的选择压力可能会改变,从而导致序列分歧和功能丧失。这表现为突变的积累和蛋白质编码开放阅读框(ORF)的丢失,从单个错义突变开始,通过引入早期终止突变(ESM)、基因片段化,在某些情况下,ORF完全丢失,逐渐发展为基因截断。在本研究中,我们为每个正痘病毒物种的代表性分离株构建了全基因组比对,并利用它来识别导致基因含量变异的核苷酸水平变化。通过识别导致ESM的变化,我们能够确定短插入缺失是基因截断的主要原因,并且基因组长度与存在的ESM数量成反比。我们还确定了截短基因中仍然存在的蛋白质功能基序的数量和类型,以评估它们的功能意义。
这项工作通过识别进化过程留下的基因组残余物,如单核苷酸多态性(SNP)和插入缺失,有助于我们理解痘病毒的简化进化。我们对导致基因截断和片段化的基因组变化的全面分析能够检测到正痘病毒基因组中仍然存在的这些进化过程的一些残余物,并表明这些病毒由于环境变化而不断适应。这些结果进一步加深了我们对驱动病毒变异的进化机制的理解,使正痘病毒能够适应特定的生态位。了解这些病毒病原体的进化历史可能有助于预测它们未来的进化潜力。