Knoll Marissa, Honce Rebekah, Meliopoulos Victoria, Schultz-Cherry Stacey, Ghedin Elodie, Gresham David
Center for Genomics and Systems Biology, Department of Biology, New York University.
Department of Infectious Diseases, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.
bioRxiv. 2023 Jul 12:2023.07.12.548715. doi: 10.1101/2023.07.12.548715.
Obesity is a chronic health condition characterized by excess adiposity leading to a systemic increase in inflammation and dysregulation of metabolic hormones and immune cell populations. Obesity is well established as a risk factor for many noncommunicable diseases; however, its consequences for infectious disease are poorly understood. Influenza A virus (IAV) is a highly infectious pathogen responsible for seasonal and pandemic influenza. Host risk factors, including compromised immunity and pre-existing health conditions, can contribute to increased infection susceptibility and disease severity. During viral replication in a host, the negative sense single stranded RNA genome of IAV accumulates genetic diversity that may have important consequences for viral evolution and transmission. Here, we investigated the impact of host obesity on IAV genetic variation using a diet induced obesity ferret model. We infected obese and lean male ferrets with the A/Hong Kong/1073/1999 (H9N2) IAV strain. Using a co-caging study design, we investigated the maintenance, generation, and transmission of intrahost IAV genetic variation by sequencing viral genomic RNA obtained from nasal wash samples over multiple days of infection. We found evidence for an enhanced role of positive selection acting on mutations in obese hosts that led to nonsynonymous changes that rose to high frequency. In addition, we identified numerous cases of recurrent low-frequency mutations throughout the genome that were specific to obese hosts. Despite these obese-specific variants, overall viral genetic diversity did not differ significantly between obese and lean hosts. This is likely due to the high supply rate of variation and common evolutionary adaptations to the ferret host regardless of obesity status, which we show are mediated by variation in the hemagglutinin (HA) and polymerase genes (PB2 and PB1). As with single nucleotide variants, we identified a class of defective viral genomes (DVGs) that were found uniquely in either obese or lean hosts, but overall DVG diversity and dynamics did not differ between the two groups. Our study provides the first insight into the consequences of host obesity on viral genetic diversity and adaptation, suggesting that host factors associated with obesity alter the selective environment experienced by a viral population, thereby impacting the spectrum of genetic variation.
肥胖是一种慢性健康状况,其特征是体内脂肪过多,导致炎症系统性增加以及代谢激素和免疫细胞群体失调。肥胖已被确认为许多非传染性疾病的危险因素;然而,其对传染病的影响却知之甚少。甲型流感病毒(IAV)是一种极具传染性的病原体,可引发季节性流感和大流行性流感。包括免疫力受损和既有健康状况在内的宿主风险因素,可能会导致感染易感性增加和疾病严重程度上升。在病毒在宿主体内复制期间,IAV的负义单链RNA基因组会积累遗传多样性,这可能对病毒的进化和传播产生重要影响。在此,我们使用饮食诱导肥胖雪貂模型研究了宿主肥胖对IAV遗传变异的影响。我们用A/香港/1073/1999(H9N2)IAV毒株感染肥胖和瘦的雄性雪貂。通过共笼研究设计,我们通过对感染多天后从鼻腔冲洗样本中获得的病毒基因组RNA进行测序,研究了宿主体内IAV遗传变异的维持、产生和传播。我们发现有证据表明,正选择对肥胖宿主中导致非同义变化并升至高频的突变发挥了增强作用。此外,我们在整个基因组中鉴定出许多肥胖宿主特有的低频复发性突变病例。尽管存在这些肥胖特异性变体,但肥胖和瘦的宿主之间总体病毒遗传多样性并无显著差异。这可能是由于变异的高供应率以及无论肥胖状态如何对雪貂宿主的常见进化适应,我们表明这是由血凝素(HA)和聚合酶基因(PB2和PB1)的变异介导的。与单核苷酸变体一样,我们鉴定出一类缺陷病毒基因组(DVG),它们仅在肥胖或瘦的宿主中发现,但两组之间总体DVG多样性和动态并无差异。我们的研究首次深入了解了宿主肥胖对病毒遗传多样性和适应性的影响,表明与肥胖相关的宿主因素改变了病毒群体所经历的选择环境,从而影响遗传变异谱。