Institute for Integrative Systems Biology, Universitat de València-Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Paterna, Spain.
Nat Microbiol. 2019 Jun;4(6):1006-1013. doi: 10.1038/s41564-019-0379-8. Epub 2019 Mar 4.
Antiviral immunity has been studied extensively from the perspective of virus-cell interactions, yet the role of virus-virus interactions remains poorly addressed. Here, we demonstrate that viral escape from interferon (IFN)-based innate immunity is a social process in which IFN-stimulating viruses determine the fitness of neighbouring viruses. We propose a general and simple social evolution framework to analyse how natural selection acts on IFN shutdown and validate it in cell cultures and mice infected with vesicular stomatitis virus. Furthermore, we find that IFN shutdown is costly because it reduces short-term viral progeny production, thus fulfilling the definition of an altruistic trait. Hence, in well-mixed populations, the IFN-blocking wild-type virus is susceptible to invasion by IFN-stimulating variants and spatial structure consequently determines whether IFN shutdown can evolve. Our findings reveal that fundamental social evolution rules govern viral innate immunity evasion and virulence and suggest possible antiviral interventions.
抗病毒免疫已从病毒-细胞相互作用的角度进行了广泛研究,但病毒-病毒相互作用的作用仍未得到充分解决。在这里,我们证明了病毒逃避干扰素(IFN)为基础的先天免疫是一个社会过程,其中 IFN 刺激病毒决定了邻近病毒的适应性。我们提出了一个通用而简单的社会进化框架来分析自然选择如何作用于 IFN 关闭,并在细胞培养物和感染水疱性口炎病毒的小鼠中验证它。此外,我们发现 IFN 关闭是有代价的,因为它减少了短期病毒后代的产生,从而满足了利他特征的定义。因此,在充分混合的群体中,IFN 阻断的野生型病毒容易受到 IFN 刺激变体的入侵,因此空间结构决定了 IFN 关闭是否能够进化。我们的研究结果表明,基本的社会进化规则控制着病毒的先天免疫逃避和毒力,并提出了可能的抗病毒干预措施。