Garcia Victor, Feldman Marcus W, Regoes Roland R
Institute of Integrative Biology, ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, California, United States of America.
PLoS Comput Biol. 2016 Feb 1;12(2):e1004721. doi: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004721. eCollection 2016 Feb.
During early human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection multiple CD8+ T cell responses are elicited almost simultaneously. These responses exert strong selective pressures on different parts of HIV's genome, and select for mutations that escape recognition and are thus beneficial to the virus. Some studies reveal that the later these escape mutations emerge, the more slowly they go to fixation. This pattern of escape rate decrease(ERD) can arise by distinct mechanisms. In particular, in large populations with high beneficial mutation rates interference among different escape strains--an effect that can emerge in evolution with asexual reproduction and results in delayed fixation times of beneficial mutations compared to sexual reproduction--could significantly impact the escape rates of mutations. In this paper, we investigated how interference between these concurrent escape mutations affects their escape rates in systems with multiple epitopes, and whether it could be a source of the ERD pattern. To address these issues, we developed a multilocus Wright-Fisher model of HIV dynamics with selection, mutation and recombination, serving as a null-model for interference. We also derived an interference-free null model assuming initial neutral evolution before immune response elicitation. We found that interference between several equally selectively advantageous mutations can generate the observed ERD pattern. We also found that the number of loci, as well as recombination rates substantially affect ERD. These effects can be explained by the underexponential decline of escape rates over time. Lastly, we found that the observed ERD pattern in HIV infected individuals is consistent with both independent, interference-free mutations as well as interference effects. Our results confirm that interference effects should be considered when analyzing HIV escape mutations. The challenge in estimating escape rates and mutation-associated selective coefficients posed by interference effects cannot simply be overcome by improved sampling frequencies or sizes. This problem is a consequence of the fundamental shortcomings of current estimation techniques under interference regimes. Hence, accounting for the stochastic nature of competition between mutations demands novel estimation methodologies based on the analysis of HIV strains, rather than mutation frequencies.
在人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)早期感染期间,会几乎同时引发多种CD8 + T细胞反应。这些反应对HIV基因组的不同部分施加强大的选择压力,并选择那些能逃避识别的突变,这些突变因此对病毒有益。一些研究表明,这些逃逸突变出现得越晚,它们固定下来的速度就越慢。这种逃逸率下降(ERD)模式可能由不同机制引起。特别是,在具有高有益突变率的大群体中,不同逃逸菌株之间的干扰——这种效应在无性繁殖的进化中可能出现,与有性繁殖相比会导致有益突变的固定时间延迟——可能会显著影响突变的逃逸率。在本文中,我们研究了这些同时发生的逃逸突变之间的干扰如何影响它们在具有多个表位的系统中的逃逸率,以及它是否可能是ERD模式的一个来源。为了解决这些问题,我们开发了一个具有选择、突变和重组的HIV动态多位点Wright-Fisher模型,作为干扰的零模型。我们还推导了一个无干扰零模型,假设在免疫反应引发之前是初始中性进化。我们发现几个具有同等选择优势的突变之间的干扰可以产生观察到的ERD模式。我们还发现位点数量以及重组率会对ERD产生实质性影响。这些效应可以通过逃逸率随时间的指数下降不足来解释。最后,我们发现HIV感染个体中观察到的ERD模式与独立的、无干扰的突变以及干扰效应都一致。我们的结果证实,在分析HIV逃逸突变时应考虑干扰效应。由干扰效应带来的估计逃逸率和与突变相关的选择系数的挑战不能仅仅通过提高采样频率或大小来简单克服。这个问题是当前估计技术在干扰情况下基本缺陷的结果。因此,考虑突变之间竞争的随机性质需要基于对HIV菌株而非突变频率分析的新估计方法。