Martin Michael A, Berg Nick, Koelle Katia
Department of Pathology, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, 600 N. Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21287, USA.
Graduate Program in Population Biology, Ecology, and Evolution, Emory University, 1462 Clifton Road NE, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA.
Virus Evol. 2024 Jun 1;10(1):veae042. doi: 10.1093/ve/veae042. eCollection 2024.
Influenza infections result in considerable public health and economic impacts each year. One of the contributing factors to the high annual incidence of human influenza is the virus's ability to evade acquired immunity through continual antigenic evolution. Understanding the evolutionary forces that act within and between hosts is therefore critical to interpreting past trends in influenza virus evolution and in predicting future ones. Several studies have analyzed longitudinal patterns of influenza A virus genetic diversity in natural human infections to assess the relative contributions of selection and genetic drift on within-host evolution. However, in these natural infections, within-host viral populations harbor very few single-nucleotide variants, limiting our resolution in understanding the forces acting on these populations . Furthermore, low levels of within-host viral genetic diversity limit the ability to infer the extent of drift across transmission events. Here, we propose to use influenza virus genomic diversity as an alternative signal to better understand within- and between-host patterns of viral evolution. Specifically, we focus on the dynamics of defective viral genomes (DVGs), which harbor large internal deletions in one or more of influenza virus's eight gene segments. Our longitudinal analyses of DVGs show that influenza A virus populations are highly dynamic within hosts, corroborating previous findings based on viral genetic diversity that point toward the importance of genetic drift in driving within-host viral evolution. Furthermore, our analysis of DVG populations across transmission pairs indicates that DVGs rarely appeared to be shared, indicating the presence of tight transmission bottlenecks. Our analyses demonstrate that viral genomic diversity can be used to complement analyses based on viral genetic diversity to reveal processes that drive viral evolution within and between hosts.
每年,流感感染都会对公众健康和经济造成相当大的影响。人类流感每年高发的一个促成因素是该病毒能够通过持续的抗原进化来逃避获得性免疫。因此,了解在宿主内部和宿主之间起作用的进化力量对于解读流感病毒进化的过去趋势以及预测未来趋势至关重要。多项研究分析了自然人类感染中甲型流感病毒基因多样性的纵向模式,以评估选择和基因漂变对宿主内进化的相对贡献。然而,在这些自然感染中,宿主内的病毒群体中几乎没有单核苷酸变异,这限制了我们理解作用于这些群体的力量的分辨率。此外,宿主内病毒基因多样性水平较低限制了推断跨传播事件的漂变程度的能力。在此,我们提议利用流感病毒基因组多样性作为一种替代信号,以更好地理解病毒在宿主内和宿主间的进化模式。具体而言,我们关注缺陷病毒基因组(DVG)的动态变化,这些基因组在流感病毒的八个基因片段中的一个或多个中存在大的内部缺失。我们对DVG的纵向分析表明,甲型流感病毒群体在宿主内具有高度动态性,这证实了先前基于病毒基因多样性得出的指向基因漂变在驱动宿主内病毒进化中重要性的研究结果。此外,我们对跨传播配对的DVG群体的分析表明,DVG很少出现共享情况,这表明存在严格的传播瓶颈。我们的分析表明,病毒基因组多样性可用于补充基于病毒基因多样性的分析,以揭示驱动病毒在宿主内和宿主间进化的过程。