Suh Alexander, Weber Claudia C, Kehlmaier Christian, Braun Edward L, Green Richard E, Fritz Uwe, Ray David A, Ellegren Hans
Department of Evolutionary Biology (EBC), Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.
Museum of Zoology, Senckenberg Research Institute and Natural History Museum, Dresden, Germany.
PLoS Genet. 2014 Dec 11;10(12):e1004559. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1004559. eCollection 2014 Dec.
Hepadnaviridae are double-stranded DNA viruses that infect some species of birds and mammals. This includes humans, where hepatitis B viruses (HBVs) are prevalent pathogens in considerable parts of the global population. Recently, endogenized sequences of HBVs (eHBVs) have been discovered in bird genomes where they constitute direct evidence for the coexistence of these viruses and their hosts from the late Mesozoic until present. Nevertheless, virtually nothing is known about the ancient host range of this virus family in other animals. Here we report the first eHBVs from crocodilian, snake, and turtle genomes, including a turtle eHBV that endogenized >207 million years ago. This genomic "fossil" is >125 million years older than the oldest avian eHBV and provides the first direct evidence that Hepadnaviridae already existed during the Early Mesozoic. This implies that the Mesozoic fossil record of HBV infection spans three of the five major groups of land vertebrates, namely birds, crocodilians, and turtles. We show that the deep phylogenetic relationships of HBVs are largely congruent with the deep phylogeny of their amniote hosts, which suggests an ancient amniote-HBV coexistence and codivergence, at least since the Early Mesozoic. Notably, the organization of overlapping genes as well as the structure of elements involved in viral replication has remained highly conserved among HBVs along that time span, except for the presence of the X gene. We provide multiple lines of evidence that the tumor-promoting X protein of mammalian HBVs lacks a homolog in all other hepadnaviruses and propose a novel scenario for the emergence of X via segmental duplication and overprinting of pre-existing reading frames in the ancestor of mammalian HBVs. Our study reveals an unforeseen host range of prehistoric HBVs and provides novel insights into the genome evolution of hepadnaviruses throughout their long-lasting association with amniote hosts.
嗜肝DNA病毒科是双链DNA病毒,可感染某些鸟类和哺乳动物物种。这其中包括人类,乙肝病毒(HBV)在全球相当一部分人口中是普遍存在的病原体。最近,在鸟类基因组中发现了HBV的内源性序列(eHBV),这些序列构成了这些病毒与其宿主从晚中生代至今共存的直接证据。然而,对于这个病毒科在其他动物中的古代宿主范围几乎一无所知。在此,我们报告了来自鳄鱼、蛇和龟基因组的首个eHBV,其中包括一个在2.07亿多年前内源性化的龟eHBV。这个基因组“化石”比最古老的鸟类eHBV早1.25亿多年,为嗜肝DNA病毒科在中生代早期就已存在提供了首个直接证据。这意味着HBV感染的中生代化石记录跨越了陆地脊椎动物的五个主要类群中的三个,即鸟类、鳄鱼和龟。我们表明,HBV的深层系统发育关系在很大程度上与其羊膜动物宿主的深层系统发育一致,这表明至少自中生代早期以来,羊膜动物与HBV就已共存并共同分化。值得注意的是,在那段时间跨度内,除了X基因的存在外,重叠基因的组织以及参与病毒复制的元件结构在HBV中一直高度保守。我们提供了多条证据表明,哺乳动物HBV的促肿瘤X蛋白在所有其他嗜肝DNA病毒中都没有同源物,并提出了一种通过在哺乳动物HBV祖先中对预先存在的阅读框进行片段重复和套印而产生X的新情况。我们的研究揭示了史前HBV出人意料的宿主范围,并为嗜肝DNA病毒在与羊膜动物宿主的长期关联中的基因组进化提供了新的见解。