Lytras Spyros, Arriagada Gloria, Gifford Robert J
MRC-University of Glasgow Centre for Virus Research, 464 Bearsden Rd, Bearsden, Glasgow G61 1QH, UK.
FONDAP Center for Genome Regulation.
Virus Evol. 2021 Mar 3;7(1):veab012. doi: 10.1093/ve/veab012. eCollection 2021 Jan.
Hepadnaviruses (family ) are reverse-transcribing animal viruses that infect vertebrates. DNA sequences derived from ancient hepadnaviruses have been identified in the germline genome of numerous vertebrate species, and these 'endogenous hepatitis B viruses' (eHBVs) reveal aspects of the long-term coevolutionary relationship between hepadnaviruses and their vertebrate hosts. Here, we use a novel, data-oriented approach to recover and analyse the complete repertoire of eHBV elements in published animal genomes. We show that germline incorporation of hepadnaviruses is exclusive to a single vertebrate group (Sauria) and that the eHBVs contained in saurian genomes represent a far greater diversity of hepadnaviruses than previously recognized. Through in-depth characterization of eHBV elements, we establish the existence of four distinct subgroups within the genus and trace their evolution through the Cenozoic Era. Furthermore, we provide a completely new perspective on hepadnavirus evolution by showing that the metahepadnaviruses (genus ) originated >300 million years ago in the Paleozoic Era and have historically infected a broad range of vertebrates. We also show that eHBVs have been intra-genomically amplified in some saurian lineages, and that eHBVs located at approximately equivalent genomic loci have been acquired in entirely distinct germline integration events. These findings indicate that selective forces have favoured the accumulation of hepadnaviral sequences at specific loci in the saurian germline. Our investigation provides a range of new insights into the long-term evolutionary history of reverse-transcribing DNA viruses and shows that germline incorporation of hepadnaviruses has played a role in shaping the evolution of saurian genomes.
嗜肝DNA病毒科是感染脊椎动物的逆转录动物病毒。在众多脊椎动物物种的种系基因组中已鉴定出源自古代嗜肝DNA病毒的DNA序列,这些“内源性乙型肝炎病毒”(eHBV)揭示了嗜肝DNA病毒与其脊椎动物宿主之间长期协同进化关系的一些方面。在这里,我们采用一种新颖的、以数据为导向的方法来检索和分析已发表动物基因组中eHBV元件的完整目录。我们表明,嗜肝DNA病毒的种系整合仅限于单个脊椎动物类群(蜥蜴亚目),并且蜥蜴基因组中包含的eHBV代表了比以前认识到的更为多样的嗜肝DNA病毒。通过对eHBV元件的深入表征,我们确定了该属内四个不同亚组的存在,并追溯了它们在新生代的进化。此外,我们通过表明元嗜肝DNA病毒(属)起源于3亿多年前的古生代,并且历史上感染了广泛的脊椎动物,为嗜肝DNA病毒的进化提供了全新的视角。我们还表明,eHBV在一些蜥蜴谱系中进行了基因组内扩增,并且位于大致等效基因组位点的eHBV是在完全不同的种系整合事件中获得的。这些发现表明,选择力有利于嗜肝病毒序列在蜥蜴种系中的特定位点积累。我们的研究为逆转录DNA病毒的长期进化历史提供了一系列新见解,并表明嗜肝DNA病毒的种系整合在塑造蜥蜴基因组的进化中发挥了作用。