Zanini Fabio, Brodin Johanna, Thebo Lina, Lanz Christa, Bratt Göran, Albert Jan, Neher Richard A
Evolutionary Dynamics and Biophysics, Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology, Tübingen, Germany.
Department of Microbiology, Tumor and Cell Biology, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden.
Elife. 2015 Dec 11;4:e11282. doi: 10.7554/eLife.11282.
Many microbial populations rapidly adapt to changing environments with multiple variants competing for survival. To quantify such complex evolutionary dynamics in vivo, time resolved and genome wide data including rare variants are essential. We performed whole-genome deep sequencing of HIV-1 populations in 9 untreated patients, with 6-12 longitudinal samples per patient spanning 5-8 years of infection. The data can be accessed and explored via an interactive web application. We show that patterns of minor diversity are reproducible between patients and mirror global HIV-1 diversity, suggesting a universal landscape of fitness costs that control diversity. Reversions towards the ancestral HIV-1 sequence are observed throughout infection and account for almost one third of all sequence changes. Reversion rates depend strongly on conservation. Frequent recombination limits linkage disequilibrium to about 100 bp in most of the genome, but strong hitch-hiking due to short range linkage limits diversity.
许多微生物群体能迅速适应不断变化的环境,多个变体为生存而竞争。为了在体内量化这种复杂的进化动态,包括罕见变体在内的时间分辨和全基因组数据至关重要。我们对9名未经治疗的患者的HIV-1群体进行了全基因组深度测序,每位患者有6 - 12个纵向样本,涵盖5 - 8年的感染期。这些数据可通过交互式网络应用程序进行访问和探索。我们发现,患者之间次要多样性的模式具有可重复性,并且反映了全球HIV-1的多样性,这表明存在控制多样性的适应性代价的普遍格局。在整个感染过程中都观察到向HIV-1祖先序列的回复突变,其占所有序列变化的近三分之一。回复突变率在很大程度上取决于保守性。频繁的重组将连锁不平衡限制在基因组大部分区域约100 bp,但由于短程连锁导致的强烈搭便车效应限制了多样性。