Lin You-Yu, Liu Chieh, Chien Wei-Hung, Wu Li-Ling, Tao Yong, Wu Dafei, Lu Xuemei, Hsieh Chia-Hung, Chen Pei-Jer, Wang Hurng-Yi, Kao Jia-Horng, Chen Ding-Shinn
Department of Life Science, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan.
Department of Microbiology, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan.
J Virol. 2015 Apr;89(7):3512-22. doi: 10.1128/JVI.03131-14. Epub 2015 Jan 14.
The evolutionary rates of hepatitis B virus (HBV) estimated using contemporary sequences are 10(2) to 10(4) times higher than those derived from archaeological and genetic evidence. This discrepancy makes the origin of HBV and the time scale of its spread, both of which are critical for studying the burden of HBV pathogenicity, largely unresolved. To evaluate whether the dual demands (i.e., adaptation within hosts and colonization between hosts) of the viral life cycle affect this conundrum, the HBV quasispecies dynamics within and among hosts from a family consisting of a grandmother, her 5 children, and her 2 granddaughters, all of whom presumably acquired chronic HBV through mother-to-infant transmission, were examined by PCR cloning and next-generation sequencing methods. We found that the evolutionary rate of HBV between hosts was considerably lower than that within hosts. Moreover, the between-host substitution rates of HBV decreased as transmission numbers between individuals increased. Both observations were due primarily to changes at nonsynonymous rather than synonymous sites. There were significantly more multiple substitutions than expected for random mutation processes, and 97% of substitutions were changed from common to rare amino acid residues in the database. Continual switching between colonization and adaptation resulted in a rapid accumulation of mutations at a limited number of positions, which quickly became saturated, whereas substitutions at the remaining regions occurred at a much lower rate. Our study may help to explain the time-dependent HBV substitution rates reported in the literature and provide new insights into the origin of the virus.
It is known that the estimated hepatitis B virus (HBV) substitution rate is time dependent, but the reason behind this observation is still elusive. We hypothesize that owing to the small genome size of HBV, transmission between hosts and adaptation within hosts must exhibit high levels of fitness trade-offs for the virus. By studying the HBV quasispecies dynamics for a chain of sequentially infected transmissions within a family, we found the HBV substitution rate between patients to be negatively correlated with the number of transmissions. Continual switching between hosts resulted in a rapid accumulation of mutations at a limited number of genomic sites, which quickly became saturated in the short term. Nevertheless, substitutions at the remaining regions occurred at a much lower rate. Therefore, the HBV substitution rate decreased as the divergence time increased.
使用当代序列估计的乙型肝炎病毒(HBV)进化速率比从考古学和遗传学证据得出的速率高10²至10⁴倍。这种差异使得HBV的起源及其传播的时间尺度(这两者对于研究HBV致病性负担都至关重要)在很大程度上仍未得到解决。为了评估病毒生命周期的双重需求(即在宿主内适应和在宿主间定植)是否影响这一难题,通过PCR克隆和下一代测序方法研究了一个由祖母、她的5个孩子和2个孙女组成的家庭中宿主内和宿主间的HBV准种动态,他们大概都是通过母婴传播感染慢性HBV的。我们发现宿主间HBV的进化速率明显低于宿主内的进化速率。此外,随着个体间传播次数的增加,HBV的宿主间替换率降低。这两个观察结果主要是由于非同义位点而非同义位点的变化。多重替换明显多于随机突变过程预期的数量,并且97%的替换是从数据库中常见氨基酸残基变为罕见氨基酸残基。在定植和适应之间的持续切换导致在有限数量的位置快速积累突变,这些位置很快饱和,而其余区域的替换发生速率要低得多。我们的研究可能有助于解释文献中报道的随时间变化的HBV替换率,并为病毒的起源提供新的见解。
已知估计的乙型肝炎病毒(HBV)替换率与时间有关,但这一观察背后的原因仍然难以捉摸。我们假设由于HBV基因组较小,宿主间传播和宿主内适应对于病毒而言必然表现出高水平的适应性权衡。通过研究一个家庭中一系列连续感染传播的HBV准种动态,我们发现患者之间的HBV替换率与传播次数呈负相关。在宿主间的持续切换导致在有限数量的基因组位点快速积累突变,这些位点在短期内很快饱和。然而,其余区域的替换发生速率要低得多。因此,HBV替换率随着分歧时间的增加而降低。