The Genomic Rate of Molecular Adaptation of the Human Influenza A Virus

被引:117
作者
Bhatt, Samir [1 ,2 ]
Holmes, Edward C. [3 ,4 ]
Pybus, Oliver G. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Oxford, Dept Zool, Oxford OX1 3PS, England
[2] Wellcome Trust Sanger Inst, Cambridge, England
[3] Penn State Univ, Mueller Lab, Ctr Infect Dis Dynam, University Pk, PA 16802 USA
[4] NIH, Fogarty Int Ctr, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA
基金
英国自然环境研究理事会; 英国生物技术与生命科学研究理事会;
关键词
influenza; McDonald-Kreitman test; neutrality tests; rate of adaptation; ADAPTIVE PROTEIN EVOLUTION; MCDONALD-KREITMAN TEST; RNA VIRUSES; SELECTION; HEMAGGLUTININ; DYNAMICS; IMMUNITY; GENE; NUCLEOPROTEIN; REPLICATION;
D O I
10.1093/molbev/msr044
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Quantifying adaptive evolution at the genomic scale is an essential yet challenging aspect of evolutionary biology. Here, we develop a method that extends and generalizes previous approaches to estimate the rate of genomic adaptation in rapidly evolving populations and apply it to a large data set of complete human influenza A virus genome sequences. In accord with previous studies, we observe particularly high rates of adaptive evolution in domain 1 of the viral hemagglutinin (HA1). However, our novel approach also reveals previously unseen adaptation in other viral genes. Notably, we find that the rate of adaptation (per codon per year) is higher in surface residues of the viral neuraminidase than in HA1, indicating strong antibody-mediated selection on the former. We also observed high rates of adaptive evolution in several nonstructural proteins, which may relate to viral evasion of T-cell and innate immune responses. Furthermore, our analysis provides strong quantitative support for the hypothesis that human H1N1 influenza experiences weaker antigenic selection than H3N2. As well as shedding new light on the dynamics and determinants of positive Darwinian selection in influenza viruses, the approach introduced here is applicable to other pathogens for which densely sampled genome sequences are available, and hence is ideally suited to the interpretation of next-generation genome sequencing data.
引用
收藏
页码:2443 / 2451
页数:9
相关论文
共 52 条
[1]   Protective immunity and susceptibility to infectious diseases: lessons from the 1918 influenza pandemic [J].
Ahmed, Rafi ;
Oldstone, Michael B. A. ;
Palese, Peter .
NATURE IMMUNOLOGY, 2007, 8 (11) :1188-1193
[2]   Controlling Type-I Error of the McDonald-Kreitman Test in Genomewide Scans for Selection on Noncoding DNA [J].
Andolfatto, Peter .
GENETICS, 2008, 180 (03) :1767-1771
[3]   Influenza type A in humans, mammals and birds: determinants of virus virulence, host-range and interspecies transmission [J].
Baigent, SJ ;
McCauley, JW .
BIOESSAYS, 2003, 25 (07) :657-671
[4]   Functional constraints of influenza A virus epitopes limit escape from cytotoxic T lymphocytes [J].
Berkhoff, EGM ;
de Wit, E ;
Geelhoed-Mieras, MM ;
Boon, ACM ;
Symons, J ;
Fouchier, RAM ;
Osterhaus, ADME ;
Rimmelzwaan, GF .
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 2005, 79 (17) :11239-11246
[5]   Detecting natural selection in RNA virus populations using sequence summary statistics [J].
Bhatt, Samir ;
Katzourakis, Aris ;
Pybus, Oliver G. .
INFECTION GENETICS AND EVOLUTION, 2010, 10 (03) :421-430
[6]   Homologous recombination is very rare or absent in human influenza A virus [J].
Boni, Maciei F. ;
Zhou, Yang ;
Taubenberger, Jeffery K. ;
Holmes, Edward C. .
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 2008, 82 (10) :4807-4811
[7]   Adamantane resistance among influenza A viruses isolated early during the 2005-2006 influenza season in the United States [J].
Bright, RA ;
Shay, DK ;
Shu, B ;
Cox, NJ ;
Klimov, AI .
JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 2006, 295 (08) :891-894
[8]   The cost of inbreeding in Arabidopsis [J].
Bustamante, CD ;
Nielsen, R ;
Sawyer, SA ;
Olsen, KM ;
Purugganan, MD ;
Hartl, DL .
NATURE, 2002, 416 (6880) :531-534
[9]   The McDonald-Kreitman test and slightly deleterious mutations [J].
Charlesworth, Jane ;
Eyre-Walker, Adam .
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2008, 25 (06) :1007-1015
[10]   Protection against multiple influenza A subtypes by vaccination with highly conserved nucleoprotein [J].
Epstein, SL ;
Kong, WP ;
Misplon, JA ;
Lo, CY ;
Tumpey, TM ;
Xu, L ;
Nabel, GJ .
VACCINE, 2005, 23 (46-47) :5404-5410