Department of Pathobiological Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, United States of America.
Programa de Estudio y Control de Enfermedades Tropicales (PECET), Universidad de Antioquia, Medellin, Colombia.
PLoS One. 2019 Mar 7;14(3):e0212947. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0212947. eCollection 2019.
Dengue virus (DENV) is a flavivirus responsible for the most common and burdensome arthropod-borne viral disease of humans[1]. DENV evolution has been extensively studied on broad geographic and time scales, using sequences from a single gene[2,3]. It is believed that DENV evolution in humans is dominated primarily by purifying selection due to the constraint of maintaining fitness in both humans and mosquitoes[4,5]. Few studies have explored DENV evolutionary dynamics using whole genome sequences, nor have they explored changes in viral diversity that occur during intra-epidemic periods. We used deep sequencing of the viral coding region to characterize DENV-1 evolution in a Colombian population sampled during two high-prevalence dengue seasons in which serotype dominance shifted. Our data demonstrate patterns of strain extinction and replacement within DENV-1 as its prevalence waned and DENV-3 became established. A comparison of whole-genome versus single-gene-based phylogenetic analyses highlights an important difference in evolutionary patterns. We report a trend of higher nonsynonymous to synonymous diversity ratios among non-structural (NS) genes, and statistically significantly higher values among these ratios in the NS1 gene after DENV-1 strain replacement. These results suggest that positive selection could be driving DENV evolution within individual communities. Signals of positive selection coming from distinct samples may be drowned out when combining multiple regions with differing patterns of endemic transmission as commonly done by large-scale geo-temporal assessments. Here, we frame our findings within a small, local transmission history which aids significance. Moreover, these data suggest that the NS1 gene, rather than the E gene, may be a target of positive selection, although not mutually exclusive, and potentially useful sentinel of adaptive changes at the population level.
登革病毒(DENV)是一种黄病毒,是人类最常见且负担最重的虫媒病毒病的罪魁祸首[1]。从广泛的地理和时间尺度上,通过单一基因的序列,对 DENV 的进化进行了广泛的研究[2,3]。人们认为,由于在人类和蚊子中保持适应性的限制,DENV 在人类中的进化主要由纯化选择主导[4,5]。很少有研究使用全基因组序列来探索 DENV 的进化动态,也没有研究在流行期间发生的病毒多样性变化。我们使用病毒编码区的深度测序来描述在两个高登革热流行季节期间在哥伦比亚人群中采样的 DENV-1 进化情况,在此期间血清型优势发生了转变。我们的数据表明,在 DENV-1 流行减弱而 DENV-3 确立为主导病毒时,存在着株系灭绝和取代的模式。全基因组与基于单基因的系统发育分析的比较突出了进化模式的重要差异。我们报告了非结构(NS)基因中非同义与同义多样性比的趋势较高,并且在 DENV-1 株系取代后,NS1 基因中的这些比值具有统计学意义上更高的值。这些结果表明,正选择可能是驱动个体社区内 DENV 进化的原因。来自不同样本的正选择信号在组合具有不同地方性传播模式的多个区域时可能会被淹没,这种情况在大规模的地理和时间评估中很常见。在这里,我们将我们的发现置于一个小的、局部传播历史中,这有助于确定其意义。此外,这些数据表明,NS1 基因而不是 E 基因可能是正选择的靶标,尽管并非相互排斥,并且可能是群体水平适应性变化的有用指标。