Nelson Chase W, Sibley Samuel D, Kolokotronis Sergios-Orestis, Hamer Gabriel L, Newman Christina M, Anderson Tavis K, Walker Edward D, Kitron Uriel D, Brawn Jeffrey D, Ruiz Marilyn O, Goldberg Tony L
Sackler Institute for Comparative Genomics, American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY 10024, USA.
Department of Pathobiological Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
Virus Evol. 2018 Jun 12;4(1):vey013. doi: 10.1093/ve/vey013. eCollection 2018 Jan.
Arthropod-borne viruses are among the most genetically constrained RNA viruses, yet they have a remarkable propensity to adapt and emerge. We studied wild birds and mosquitoes naturally infected with West Nile virus (WNV) in a 'hot spot' of virus transmission in Chicago, IL, USA. We generated full coding WNV genome sequences from spatiotemporally matched bird and mosquito samples using high-throughput sequencing, allowing a molecular evolutionary assessment with deep coverage. Mean among samples was 0.66 (±0.02 SE) and was bimodal, with mean nucleotide diversity being higher between samples (interhost = 0.001; = 0.024) than within them (intrahost < 0.0001; < 0.001). Eight genomic sites with > 1.01 (in the , , , , and 5'-noncoding genomic regions) showed bird versus mosquito variant frequency differences of >30 per cent and/or polymorphisms fixed in ≥5 host or vector individuals, suggesting host tropism for these variants. However, phylogenetic analyses demonstrated a lack of grouping by bird or mosquito, most inter-sample differences were synonymous (mean interhost / = 0.04), and there was no significant difference between hosts and vectors in either their nucleotide diversities or levels of purifying selection (mean intrahost / = 0.28 in birds and / = 0.21 in mosquitoes). This finding contrasts with the 'trade-off' and 'selective sieve' hypotheses that have been proposed and tested in the laboratory, which predict strong host versus vector effects on WNV genetic variation, with heightened selective constraint in birds alternating with heightened viral diversity in mosquitoes. Overall, our data show WNV to be highly selectively constrained within and between both hosts and vectors but still able to vary at a limited number of sites across the genome. Such site-specific plasticity in the face of overall selective constraint may offer a mechanism whereby highly constrained viruses such as WNV and its relatives can still adapt and emerge.
节肢动物传播的病毒是遗传限制最严格的RNA病毒之一,但它们具有显著的适应和出现的倾向。我们在美国伊利诺伊州芝加哥市一个病毒传播“热点”地区研究了自然感染西尼罗河病毒(WNV)的野生鸟类和蚊子。我们使用高通量测序从时空匹配的鸟类和蚊子样本中生成了完整编码的WNV基因组序列,从而能够进行深度覆盖的分子进化评估。样本间的平均核苷酸多样性为0.66(±0.02标准误),呈双峰分布,样本间的平均核苷酸多样性(宿主间=0.001;=0.024)高于样本内(宿主体内<0.0001;<0.001)。在(在、、、和5'非编码基因组区域)中,八个基因组位点的>1.01,显示鸟类与蚊子的变异频率差异超过30%,和/或在≥5个宿主或媒介个体中固定的多态性,表明这些变异具有宿主嗜性。然而,系统发育分析表明,不存在按鸟类或蚊子分组的情况,大多数样本间差异是同义的(平均宿主间/=0.04),宿主和媒介在核苷酸多样性或纯化选择水平上均无显著差异(鸟类宿主体内平均/=0.28,蚊子体内/=0.21)。这一发现与在实验室中提出并测试的“权衡”和“选择性筛子”假说形成对比,这些假说预测宿主与媒介对WNV遗传变异有强烈影响,鸟类中增强的选择限制与蚊子中增加的病毒多样性交替出现。总体而言,我们的数据表明WNV在宿主和媒介内部及之间都受到高度的选择性限制,但仍能在基因组的有限数量位点上发生变异。面对整体选择性限制时这种位点特异性的可塑性可能提供了一种机制,使得像WNV及其亲属这样高度受限的病毒仍能适应并出现。