Duarte E A, Novella I S, Ledesma S, Clarke D K, Moya A, Elena S F, Domingo E, Holland J J
Department of Biology, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla 92093-0116.
J Virol. 1994 Jul;68(7):4295-301. doi: 10.1128/JVI.68.7.4295-4301.1994.
Most RNA virus populations exhibit extremely high mutation frequencies which generate complex, genetically heterogeneous populations referred to as quasi-species. Previous work has shown that when a large spectrum of the quasi-species is transferred, natural selection operates, leading to elimination of noncompetitive (inferior) genomes and rapid gains in fitness. However, whenever the population is repeatedly reduced to a single virion, variable declines in fitness occur as predicted by the Muller's ratchet hypothesis. Here, we quantitated the fitness of 98 subclones isolated from an RNA virus clonal population. We found a normal distribution around a lower fitness, with the average subclone being less fit than the parental clonal population. This finding demonstrates the phenotypic diversity in RNA virus populations and shows that, as expected, a large fraction of mutations generated during virus replication is deleterious. This clarifies the operation of Muller's ratchet and illustrates why a large number of virions must be transferred for rapid fitness gains to occur. We also found that repeated genetic bottleneck passages can cause irregular stochastic declines in fitness, emphasizing again the phenotypic heterogeneity present in RNA virus populations. Finally, we found that following only 60 h of selection (15 passages in which virus yields were harvested after 4 h), RNA virus populations can undergo a 250% average increase in fitness, even on a host cell type to which they were already well adapted. This is a remarkable ability; in population biology, even a much lower fitness gain (e.g., 1 to 2%) can represent a highly significant reproductive advantage. We discuss the biological implications of these findings for the natural transmission and pathogenesis of RNA viruses.
大多数RNA病毒群体呈现出极高的突变频率,从而产生复杂的、基因异质性的群体,即所谓的准种。先前的研究表明,当转移大量的准种时,自然选择起作用,导致非竞争性(劣质)基因组被淘汰,适应性迅速提高。然而,每当群体反复减少到单个病毒粒子时,就会如缪勒棘轮假说所预测的那样出现适应性的可变下降。在这里,我们对从一个RNA病毒克隆群体中分离出的98个亚克隆的适应性进行了定量分析。我们发现,在较低适应性周围呈正态分布,平均亚克隆的适应性低于亲本克隆群体。这一发现证明了RNA病毒群体中的表型多样性,并表明,正如预期的那样,病毒复制过程中产生的大部分突变是有害的。这阐明了缪勒棘轮的作用,并说明了为什么必须转移大量病毒粒子才能实现适应性的快速提高。我们还发现,反复的遗传瓶颈传代可导致适应性的不规则随机下降,再次强调了RNA病毒群体中存在的表型异质性。最后,我们发现,仅经过60小时的选择(15代,每4小时收获病毒产量),RNA病毒群体的适应性平均可提高250%,即使是在它们已经很好适应的宿主细胞类型上。这是一种非凡的能力;在群体生物学中,即使是低得多的适应性提高(例如1%至2%)也可能代表着高度显著的繁殖优势。我们讨论了这些发现对RNA病毒自然传播和发病机制的生物学意义。