Lassalle Florent, Depledge Daniel P, Reeves Matthew B, Brown Amanda C, Christiansen Mette T, Tutill Helena J, Williams Rachel J, Einer-Jensen Katja, Holdstock Jolyon, Atkinson Claire, Brown Julianne R, van Loenen Freek B, Clark Duncan A, Griffiths Paul D, Verjans Georges M G M, Schutten Martin, Milne Richard S B, Balloux Francois, Breuer Judith
UCL Genetics Institute, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
Division of Infection and Immunity, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
Virus Evol. 2016 Jun 15;2(1):vew017. doi: 10.1093/ve/vew017. eCollection 2016 Jan.
Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infects most of the population worldwide, persisting throughout the host's life in a latent state with periodic episodes of reactivation. While typically asymptomatic, HCMV can cause fatal disease among congenitally infected infants and immunocompromised patients. These clinical issues are compounded by the emergence of antiviral resistance and the absence of an effective vaccine, the development of which is likely complicated by the numerous immune evasins encoded by HCMV to counter the host's adaptive immune responses, a feature that facilitates frequent super-infections. Understanding the evolutionary dynamics of HCMV is essential for the development of effective new drugs and vaccines. By comparing viral genomes from uncultivated or low-passaged clinical samples of diverse origins, we observe evidence of frequent homologous recombination events, both recent and ancient, and no structure of HCMV genetic diversity at the whole-genome scale. Analysis of individual gene-scale loci reveals a striking dichotomy: while most of the genome is highly conserved, recombines essentially freely and has evolved under purifying selection, 21 genes display extreme diversity, structured into distinct genotypes that do not recombine with each other. Most of these hyper-variable genes encode glycoproteins involved in cell entry or escape of host immunity. Evidence that half of them have diverged through episodes of intense positive selection suggests that rapid evolution of hyper-variable loci is likely driven by interactions with host immunity. It appears that this process is enabled by recombination unlinking hyper-variable loci from strongly constrained neighboring sites. It is conceivable that viral mechanisms facilitating super-infection have evolved to promote recombination between diverged genotypes, allowing the virus to continuously diversify at key loci to escape immune detection, while maintaining a genome optimally adapted to its asymptomatic infectious lifecycle.
人类巨细胞病毒(HCMV)感染了全球大部分人口,在宿主一生中以潜伏状态持续存在,并会周期性地重新激活。虽然通常无症状,但HCMV可在先天性感染的婴儿和免疫功能低下的患者中引发致命疾病。抗病毒耐药性的出现以及缺乏有效的疫苗使这些临床问题更加复杂,疫苗的研发可能因HCMV编码的众多免疫逃逸蛋白而变得复杂,这些蛋白可对抗宿主的适应性免疫反应,这一特性促进了频繁的重复感染。了解HCMV的进化动态对于开发有效的新药和疫苗至关重要。通过比较来自不同来源的未培养或低传代临床样本的病毒基因组,我们观察到了频繁的同源重组事件的证据,包括近期和古代的事件,并且在全基因组规模上没有HCMV遗传多样性的结构。对单个基因尺度位点的分析揭示了一个惊人的二分法:虽然基因组的大部分高度保守,基本上可以自由重组并在纯化选择下进化,但有21个基因表现出极端的多样性,形成了彼此不重组的不同基因型。这些高度可变的基因大多编码参与细胞进入或逃避宿主免疫的糖蛋白。其中一半基因通过强烈的正选择事件发生分化的证据表明,高度可变位点的快速进化可能是由与宿主免疫的相互作用驱动的。看来,这个过程是通过重组将高度可变位点与受到强烈限制的相邻位点解开而实现的。可以想象,促进重复感染的病毒机制已经进化,以促进不同基因型之间的重组,使病毒能够在关键位点不断多样化以逃避免疫检测,同时保持一个最适合其无症状感染生命周期的基因组。