Willemsen Anouk, Zwart Mark P, Elena Santiago F
Instituto de Biología Molecular y Celular de Plantas (IBMCP), Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas-Universidad Politécnica de Valencia, Campus UPV CPI 8E, Ingeniero Fausto Elio s/n, 46022, València, Spain.
Present address: MIVEGEC (UMR CNRS 5290, IRD 224, UM), National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS), 911 Avenue Agropolis, BP 64501, 34394 Cedex 5, Montpellier, France.
BMC Evol Biol. 2017 Jan 19;17(1):25. doi: 10.1186/s12862-017-0881-7.
Theory suggests that high virulence could hinder between-host transmission of microparasites, and that virulence therefore will evolve to lower levels. Alternatively, highly virulent microparasites could also curtail host development, thereby limiting both the host resources available to them and their own within-host effective population size. In this case, high virulence might restrain the mutation supply rate and increase the strength with which genetic drift acts on microparasite populations. Thereby, this alternative explanation limits the microparasites' potential to adapt to the host and ultimately the ability to evolve lower virulence. As a first exploration of this hypothesis, we evolved Tobacco etch virus carrying an eGFP fluorescent marker in two semi-permissive host species, Nicotiana benthamiana and Datura stramonium, for which it has a large difference in virulence. We compared the results to those previously obtained in the natural host, Nicotiana tabacum, where we have shown that carriage of eGFP has a high fitness cost and its loss serves as a real-time indicator of adaptation.
After over half a year of evolution, we sequenced the genomes of the evolved lineages and measured their fitness. During the evolution experiment, marker loss leading to viable virus variants was only observed in one lineage of the host for which the virus has low virulence, D. stramonium. This result was consistent with the observation that there was a fitness cost of eGFP in this host, while surprisingly no fitness cost was observed in the host for which the virus has high virulence, N. benthamiana. Furthermore, in both hosts we observed increases in viral fitness in few lineages, and host-specific convergent evolution at the genomic level was only found in N. benthamiana.
The results of this study do not lend support to the hypothesis that high virulence impedes microparasites' evolution. Rather, they exemplify that jumps between host species can be game changers for evolutionary dynamics. When considering the evolution of genome architecture, host species jumps might play a very important role, by allowing evolutionary intermediates to be competitive.
理论表明,高毒力可能会阻碍微寄生物在宿主间的传播,因此毒力会进化到较低水平。或者,高毒力的微寄生物也可能会抑制宿主的发育,从而限制它们可利用的宿主资源以及它们自身在宿主体内的有效种群大小。在这种情况下,高毒力可能会限制突变供应率,并增加遗传漂变对微寄生物种群作用的强度。因此,这种另一种解释限制了微寄生物适应宿主的潜力,最终也限制了其进化出更低毒力的能力。作为对这一假设的首次探索,我们让携带增强绿色荧光蛋白(eGFP)荧光标记的烟草蚀纹病毒在两种半允许宿主物种本氏烟草和曼陀罗中进化,该病毒在这两种宿主中的毒力差异很大。我们将结果与之前在天然宿主烟草中获得的结果进行了比较,在烟草中我们已经表明携带eGFP具有很高的适合度代价,而其丢失是适应的实时指标。
经过半年多的进化后,我们对进化谱系的基因组进行了测序并测量了它们的适合度。在进化实验期间,仅在病毒毒力较低的宿主曼陀罗的一个谱系中观察到导致存活病毒变体的标记丢失。这一结果与在该宿主中存在eGFP适合度代价的观察结果一致,而令人惊讶的是,在病毒毒力较高的宿主本氏烟草中未观察到适合度代价。此外,在两种宿主中,我们在少数谱系中都观察到了病毒适合度的增加,并且仅在本氏烟草中发现了基因组水平上的宿主特异性趋同进化。
本研究结果不支持高毒力阻碍微寄生物进化这一假设。相反,它们例证了宿主物种间的转换可能是进化动态的游戏改变者。在考虑基因组结构的进化时,宿主物种转换可能通过允许进化中间体具有竞争力而发挥非常重要的作用。