0000000001303366

AUTHOR

Santiago F. Elena

showing 87 related works from this author

Modeling multipartite virus evolution: the genome formula facilitates rapid adaptation to heterogeneous environments

2020

Multipartite viruses have two or more genome segments, and package different segments into different particle types. Although multipartition is thought to have a cost for virus transmission, its benefits are not clear. Recent experimental work has shown that the equilibrium frequency of viral genome segments, the setpoint genome formula (SGF), can be unbalanced and host-species dependent. These observations have reinvigorated the hypothesis that changes in genome-segment frequencies can lead to changes in virus-gene expression that might be adaptive. Here we explore this hypothesis by developing models of bipartite virus infection, leading to a threefold contribution. First, we show that th…

 model0303 health sciencesviruses030302 biochemistry & molecular biologyPlan_S-Compliant_NOComputational biologyBiologyMicrobiologyGenomegenome formulaVirus03 medical and health sciencesMultipartiteMultiplicity of infectionmulticomponent virusinternationalVirologyViral evolutionmultipartite virusgenome organizationMultipartitionAdaptationResearch Article030304 developmental biologyGenomic organization
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The contribution of epistasis to the architecture of fitness in an RNA virus

2004

4 pages, 2 figures.-- PMID: 15492220 [PubMed].-- PMCID: PMC524436.-- Additional information (Suppl. table S1: Relevant information about each single- and double-nucleotide substitution mutant created) available at: http://www.pnas.org/content/101/43/15376/suppl/DC1

RNA virusesGeneticsDNA ComplementaryMultidisciplinarybiologyEpistasis and functional genomicsRNAEpistasis GeneticEvolutionary biologyRNA virusBiological Sciencesbiology.organism_classificationGenomeInteractions among genome componentsVesicular stomatitis virusFitnessFisher's geometric modelGenotypeMutagenesis Site-DirectedEpistasisRNA VirusesEpistasisCloning MolecularMutationsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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Molecular evolution of tomato black ring virus and de novo generation of a new type of defective RNAs during long‐term passaging in different hosts

2020

Tomato black ring virus (TBRV) is a worldwide-distributed RNA virus infecting a wide range of different host plants, including crop species, trees, shrubs, and weeds. Here, we investigated the molecular evolution of TBRV and its adaptability to different plant species. The TBRV-Pi isolate was used to generate five independent evolution lineages serially passaged in either quinoa, tobacco, or tomato plants. After 15 passages, the genetic variability present in all the lineages was characterized for the movement (MP) and coat (CP) coding cistrons. We addressed two main questions: to what extent does the amount of genetic variability in the TBRV genome depend on the host species, and are there…

biologyMolecular evolutionViral evolutionGeneticsfood and beveragesPlant ScienceHorticultureTomato black ring virusbiology.organism_classificationAgronomy and Crop ScienceVirologyPlant Pathology
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Viral fitness correlates with the magnitude and direction of the perturbation induced in the host’s transcriptome: the tobacco etch Potyvirus—tobacco…

2018

Determining the fitness of viral genotypes has become a standard practice in virology as it is essential to evaluate their evolutionary potential. Darwinian fitness, defined as the advantage of a given genotype with respect to a reference one, is a complex property that captures, in a single figure, differences in performance at every stage of viral infection. To what extent does viral fitness result from specific molecular interactions with host factors and regulatory networks during infection? Can we identify host genes in functional classes whose expression depends on viral fitness? Here, we compared the transcriptomes of tobacco plants infected with seven genotypes of tobacco etch potyv…

0301 basic medicinePotyvirusViral fitnessGene ExpressionBiologyReal-Time Polymerase Chain ReactionHost-virus interactionModels BiologicalTranscriptome03 medical and health sciencesDarwinian FitnessTobaccoGene expressionGeneticsTranscriptomicsGeneMolecular BiologyDiscoveriesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPlant DiseasesNicotiana tabacum PotyvirusGeneticsNicotiana tabacumPotyvirusresponse to infection Systems biologyPotyvirusRNAMicroarray Analysisbiology.organism_classificationResponse to infectionVirus evolutionRNA silencing030104 developmental biologyViral evolutionHost-Pathogen InteractionsTEVGenetic FitnessTranscriptomeSystems biologyHost–virus interaction
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Intraclonal variation in RNA viruses: generation, maintenance and consequences

2003

This paper explores the evolutionary implications of the enormous variability that characterizes populations of RNA viruses and retroviruses. It begins by examining the magnitude of genetic variation in both natural and experimental populations. In natural populations, differences arise even within individual infected patients, with the per-site nucleotide diversity at this level ranging from <1% to 6%. In laboratory populations, two viruses sampled from the same clone differed by ∼0.7% in their fitness. Three different mechanisms that may be important in maintaining viral genetic variability were tested: (1) Fisher's fundamental theorem, to compare the observed rate of fitness change with …

GeneticsMutation rateFixation (population genetics)Clonal interferenceMolecular evolutionEvolutionary biologyGenetic variationSmall population sizeGenetic variabilityBiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNucleotide diversityBiological Journal of the Linnean Society
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Parsimonious scenario for the emergence of viroid-like repliconsde novo

2019

AbstractViroids are small, non-coding, circular RNA molecules that infect plants. Different hypotheses for their evolutionary origin have been put forward, such as an early emergence in a precellular RNA World or severalde novoindependent evolutionary origins in plants. Here we discuss the plausibility ofde novoemergence of viroid-like replicons by giving theoretical support to the likelihood of different steps along a parsimonious evolutionary pathway. While Avsunviroidae-like structures are relatively easy to obtain through evolution of a population of random RNA sequences of fixed length, rod-like structures typical of Pospiviroidae are difficult to fix. Using different quantitative appr…

education.field_of_studybiologyViroidvirusesPospiviroidaePopulationRNAComputational biologybiology.organism_classificationCircular RNAbiology.proteinRepliconSequence motifeducationPolymerase
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Identifying Early Warning Signals for the Sudden Transition from Mild to Severe Tobacco Etch Disease by Dynamical Network Biomarkers

2019

This article belongs to the Special Issue The Complexity of the Potyviral Interaction Network.

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineComplex systemsSystems biologyPotyvirusDiseaseBiologytobacco etch virusSeverity of Illness Index01 natural sciencesArticlePlant VirusesTranscriptomeViral Proteins03 medical and health sciencesPlant-virus interactionpotyvirusGene Expression Regulation PlantVirologyProtein Interaction MappingTobaccoGene Regulatory NetworksProtein Interaction Mapscomplex systemsGenePlant DiseasesGeneticsTransition (genetics)Tobacco etch virusGene Expression Profilingsystems biologyDNBBiotic stressresponse to infectionbiology.organism_classificationplant-virus interactionTobacco etch virusphase transitionsprotein-protein interaction networks030104 developmental biologyInfectious DiseasesPhase transitionsHost-Pathogen InteractionsMutationBiomarker (medicine)BiomarkersSignal Transduction010606 plant biology & botanyViruses
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Multiple infection dynamics has pronounced effects on the fitness of RNA viruses

2001

Several factors play a role during the replication and transmission of RNA viruses. First, as a consequence of their enormous mutation rate, complex mixtures of genomes are generated immediately after infection of a new host. Secondly, differences in growth and competition rates drive the selection of certain genetic variants within an infected host. Thirdly, but not less important, a random sampling occurs at the moment of viral infectious passage from an infected to a healthy host. In addition, the availability of hosts also influences the fate of a given viral genotype. When new hosts are scarce, different viral genotypes might infect the same host, adding an extra complexity to the comp…

GeneticsMutation rateExperimental evolutionViral pathogenesisRNABiologymedicine.diseasemedicine.disease_causeVirologySuperinfectionViral evolutionMutation (genetic algorithm)CoinfectionmedicineEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Evolutionary Biology
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A genome-wide association study identifies Arabidopsis thaliana genes that contribute to differences in the outcome of infection with two Turnip mosa…

2021

Viruses lie in a continuum between generalism and specialism depending on their ability to infect more or less hosts. While generalists are able to successfully infect a wide variety of hosts, specialists are limited to one or a few. Even though generalists seem to gain an advantage due to their wide host range, they usually pay a pleiotropic fitness cost within each host. On the contrary, a specialist has maximal fitness within its own host. A relevant yet poorly explored question is whether viruses differ in the way they interact with their hosts’ gene expression depending on their degree of specialization. Using a genome-wide association study approach, we have identified host genes whos…

GeneticsSpecialism-generalism continuumbiologyHost (biology)Strain (biology)Host-rangePotyvirusPotyvirusLocus (genetics)Genome-wide association studybiology.organism_classificationVirus evolutionMicrobiologyPhenotypeVirologyViral evolutionGWASEmerging virusesGeneVirus Evolution
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The interplay between the host microbiome and pathogenic viral infections

2021

The microorganisms associated with an organism, the microbiome, have a strong and wide impact in their host biology. In particular, the microbiome modulates both the host defense responses and immunity, thus influencing the fate of infections by pathogens. Indeed, this immune modulation and/or interaction with pathogenic viruses can be essential to define the outcome of viral infections. Understanding the interplay between the microbiome and pathogenic viruses opens future venues to fight viral infections and enhance the efficacy of antiviral therapies. An increasing number of researchers are focusing on microbiome-virus interactions, studying diverse combinations of microbial communities, …

virusesBiologyBacterial Physiological PhenomenaMicrobiologyViral infectionhost-microbiome interactionsInterferonImmunityVirologymedicineAnimalsHumansMicrobiomeOrganismhost-virus interactionsimmune modulationBacteriaHost (biology)pathogenesisMicrobiotainterferonImmune modulationQR1-502antiviral treatmentsVirus DiseasesImmunologyVirusesMicrobial InteractionsMinireviewmedicine.drugVirus Physiological Phenomena
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Host–virus evolutionary dynamics with specialist and generalist infection strategies: Bifurcations, bistability, and chaos

2019

In this work, we have investigated the evolutionary dynamics of a generalist pathogen, e.g., a virus population, that evolves toward specialization in an environment with multiple host types. We have particularly explored under which conditions generalist viral strains may rise in frequency and coexist with specialist strains or even dominate the population. By means of a nonlinear mathematical model and bifurcation analysis, we have determined the theoretical conditions for stability of nine identified equilibria and provided biological interpretation in terms of the infection rates for the viral specialist and generalist strains. By means of a stability diagram, we identified stable fixed…

BistabilityPopulationGeneral Physics and AstronomyDynamical Systems (math.DS)Fixed pointParameter spaceBiologyGeneralist and specialist speciesModels Biological01 natural sciencesStability (probability)010305 fluids & plasmas0103 physical sciencesFOS: MathematicsHumansQuantitative Biology::Populations and EvolutionComputer SimulationMathematics - Dynamical SystemsQuantitative Biology - Populations and Evolution010306 general physicsEvolutionary dynamicseducationMathematical Physicseducation.field_of_studyApplied MathematicsDegenerate energy levelsPopulations and Evolution (q-bio.PE)Statistical and Nonlinear Physics3. Good healthNonlinear DynamicsEvolutionary biologyFOS: Biological sciencesHost-Pathogen InteractionsVirusesVirus Physiological Phenomena
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Transmission bottlenecks and the evolution of fitness in rapidly evolving RNA viruses

2003

We explored the evolutionary importance of two factors in the adaptation of RNA viruses to their cellular hosts, size of viral inoculum used to initiate a new infection, and mode of transmission (horizontal versus vertical). Transmission bottlenecks should occur in natural populations of viruses and their profound effects on viral adaptation have been previously documented. However, the role of transmission mode has not received the same attention. Here we used a factorial experimental design to test the combined effects of inoculum (bottleneck) size and mode of transmission in evolution of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) in tissue culture, and compared our results to the predictions of a …

Microbiology (medical)virusesKidneyMicrobiologyVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusBottlenecklaw.inventionEvolution MolecularGenetic driftlawCricetinaeRhabdoviridae InfectionsDisease Transmission InfectiousGeneticsAnimalsMolecular BiologyCells CulturedEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeneticsExperimental evolutionbiologyGenetic Variationbiology.organism_classificationInfectious Disease Transmission VerticalInfectious DiseasesTransmission (mechanics)Vesicular stomatitis virusMutation (genetic algorithm)AdaptationHorizontal transmissionInfection, Genetics and Evolution
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Exploring the miRNA-mediated response to combined stresses in melon plants

2021

AbstractClimate change has been associated with a higher incidence of combined adverse environmental conditions that can promote a significant decrease in crop productivity. However, knowledge on how a combination of stresses might affect plant development is still scarce. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) have been proposed as potential targets for improving crop-productivity. Here, we have combined deep-sequencing, computational characterization of responsive miRNAs and validation of their regulatory role in a comprehensive analysis of melon’s response to several combinations of four stresses (cold, salinity, short day, and infection with a fungus). Twenty-two miRNA families responding to double and/or …

Plant developmentMelonmicroRNADifferentially expressed mirnasComputational biologyBiologyGeneTranscription factorCrop productivity
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Robust dynamical pattern formation from a multifunctional minimal genetic circuit.

2010

Abstract Background A practical problem during the analysis of natural networks is their complexity, thus the use of synthetic circuits would allow to unveil the natural mechanisms of operation. Autocatalytic gene regulatory networks play an important role in shaping the development of multicellular organisms, whereas oscillatory circuits are used to control gene expression under variable environments such as the light-dark cycle. Results We propose a new mechanism to generate developmental patterns and oscillations using a minimal number of genes. For this, we design a synthetic gene circuit with an antagonistic self-regulation to study the spatio-temporal control of protein expression. He…

Time FactorsTranscription GeneticSystems biologyGene regulatory networkPattern formationBiologyModels BiologicalCatalysis03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineStructural BiologyModelling and SimulationOscillometryResearch articleEscherichia coliGene Regulatory Networkslcsh:QH301-705.5Molecular Biology030304 developmental biologyElectronic circuitGeneticsRegulation of gene expression0303 health sciencesModels StatisticalModels GeneticMechanism (biology)Applied MathematicsQuantitative Biology::Molecular NetworksGene Expression ProfilingSystems BiologyRobustness (evolution)DNAComputer Science ApplicationsQuorum sensinglcsh:Biology (General)Gene Expression RegulationModeling and SimulationBiological system030217 neurology & neurosurgeryBMC systems biology
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EFFECT OF DELETERIOUS MUTATION-ACCUMULATION ON THE FITNESS OF RNA BACTERIOPHAGE MS2

2000

RNA viruses show the highest mutation rate in nature. It has been extensively demonstrated that, in the absence of purifying selection, RNA viruses accumulate deleterious mutations at a high rate. However, the parameters describing this accumulation are, in general, poorly understood. The present study reports evidences for fitness declines by the accumulation of deleterious mutations in the bacteriophage MS2. We estimated the rate of fitness decline to be as high as 16% per bottleneck transfer. In addition, our results agree with an additive model of fitness effects.

GeneticsExperimental evolutionMutation rateBase SequenceGenotypeRNABiologybiology.organism_classificationNegative selectionMutationBacteriophage MS2GeneticsFitness effectsGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesDeleterious mutationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDNA PrimersLevivirusEvolution
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EVOLUTIONARY DYNAMICS OF FITNESS RECOVERY FROM THE DEBILITATING EFFECTS OF MULLER'S RATCHET.

1998

The great adaptability shown by RNA viruses is a consequence of their high mutation rates. The evolution of fitness in a severely debilitated, clonal population of the nonsegmented ribovirus vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) has been compared under five different demographic regimes, ranging from severe serial bottleneck passages (one virion) to large population passages (105 virions or more) under similar environmental conditions (cell culture type and temperature). No matter how small the bottleneck, the fitness of the evolved populations was always higher than the fitness of the starting population; this result is clearly different from that previously reported for viruses with higher fit…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineGeneticsExperimental evolutionMutation rateeducation.field_of_studybiologyvirusesPopulationMuller's ratchetbiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesVirus03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologyVesicular stomatitis virusGeneticsAdaptationGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesEvolutionary dynamicseducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEvolution; international journal of organic evolution
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Arabidopsis thalianagenes contributing to differences in the outcome of infection with generalist and specialist strains ofTurnip mosaic virusidentif…

2020

AbstractPathogens can be classified as generalists or specialists depending on their host breadth. While generalists are able to successfully infect a wide variety of host species, the host range of specialists is limited to a few related species. Even though generalists seem to gain an advantage due to their wide host range, they usually pay a cost in terms of fitness within each host species (i.e., the jack-of-all trades, master of none). On the contrary, specialists have high fitness within their own host. A highly relevant yet poorly explored question is whether generalist and specialist viruses differ in the way they interact with their host’s gene expression networks. To identify host…

GeneticsbiologyHost (biology)PotyvirusTurnip mosaic virusLocus (genetics)Genome-wide association studyPlant disease resistancebiology.organism_classificationGeneralist and specialist speciesGene
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Parsimonious Scenario for the Emergence of Viroid-Like Replicons De Novo

2019

This article belongs to the Special Issue Viroid-2018: International Conference on Viroids and Viroid-Like RNAs. Viroids are small, non-coding, circular RNA molecules that infect plants. Different hypotheses for their evolutionary origin have been put forward, such as an early emergence in a precellular RNA World or several de novo independent evolutionary origins in plants. Here, we discuss the plausibility of de novo emergence of viroid-like replicons by giving theoretical support to the likelihood of different steps along a parsimonious evolutionary pathway. While Avsunviroidae-like structures are relatively easy to obtain through evolution of a population of random RNA sequences of fixe…

0301 basic medicinePopulation dynamicsViroidMatemáticasvirusesPopulationPospiviroidaelcsh:QR1-502Computational biologycomputational simulationsVirus Replicationlcsh:MicrobiologyArticleNucleic acid secondary structureEvolution MolecularViral Proteins03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineCircular RNAVirologypopulation dynamicsModular evolutionRepliconeducationPolymeraseBiología y BiomedicinaSimple replicatorsComputational simulationseducation.field_of_studyViroidstructure enumerationbiologysimple replicatorsviroidStructure enumerationRNARNA Circularbiology.organism_classificationRNA secondary structureViroids030104 developmental biologyInfectious Diseasesbiology.proteinNucleic Acid ConformationRNA ViralRepliconmodular evolution030217 neurology & neurosurgeryViruses
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Transmission modes affect the population structure of potato virus Y in potato.

2020

Transmission is a crucial part of a viral life cycle and transmission mode can have an important impact on virus biology. It was demonstrated that transmission mode can influence the virulence and evolution of a virus; however, few empirical data are available to describe the direct underlying changes in virus population structure dynamics within the host. Potato virus Y (PVY) is an RNA virus and one of the most damaging pathogens of potato. It comprises several genetically variable strains that are transmitted between plants via different transmission modes. To investigate how transmission modes affect the within-plant viral population structure, we have used a deep sequencing approach to …

LeavesvirusesPotyvirusPlant Sciencelaw.inventionlawVegetablesBiology (General)Flowering PlantsGenetics0303 health sciencesEcologyPlant Anatomy030302 biochemistry & molecular biologyEukaryotafood and beveragesPlantsPlant TubersTransmission (mechanics)Potato virus YViral evolutionPotatoResearch ArticleNicotianaEcological MetricsQH301-705.5ImmunologyVirulenceBiologyViral StructureSolanumModels BiologicalMicrobiologyVirusViral Evolution03 medical and health sciencesViral life cycleVirologyGeneticsMolecular Biology030304 developmental biologyPlant DiseasesSolanum tuberosumEvolutionary BiologyTubersPopulation BiologyHost (biology)Ecology and Environmental SciencesfungiOrganismsBiology and Life SciencesRNA virusSpecies DiversityRC581-607biology.organism_classificationOrganismal EvolutionPlant LeavesMicrobial EvolutionParasitologyImmunologic diseases. AllergyPopulation GeneticsPLoS Pathogens
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The effect of genetic robustness on evolvability in digital organisms

2008

Abstract Background Recent work has revealed that many biological systems keep functioning in the face of mutations and therefore can be considered genetically robust. However, several issues related to robustness remain poorly understood, such as its implications for evolvability (the ability to produce adaptive evolutionary innovations). Results Here, we use the Avida digital evolution platform to explore the effects of genetic robustness on evolvability. First, we obtained digital organisms with varying levels of robustness by evolving them under combinations of mutation rates and population sizes previously shown to select for different levels of robustness. Then, we assessed the abilit…

Mutation rateGenetic robustnessDigital organismsGenotypeEvolutionUNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LA VIDA::Otras especialidades de la biologíaPopulationAdaptation BiologicalEvolutionary innovationsBiologyEvolution MolecularQH359-425Computer SimulationSelection GeneticeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicseducation.field_of_studyGenetic diversityAnalysis of VarianceModels GeneticRobustness (evolution)EvolvabilityGenetic robustness; Digital organisms; Evolutionary innovationsGenetics PopulationPhenotypeEvolutionary biologyMutationTraitRna foldingAvida:CIENCIAS DE LA VIDA::Otras especialidades de la biología [UNESCO]Research ArticleBMC Evolutionary Biology
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Heterogeneity in the response of different subtypes of Drosophila melanogaster enteroendocrine cells to viral infections

2020

SummarySingle cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) offers the possibility to monitor both host and pathogens transcriptomes at the cellular level. Here, public scRNA-seq data from Drosophila melanogaster have been used to compare the differences in replication strategy and cellular response between two viruses, Thika virus (TV) and D. melanogaster Nora virus (DMelNV) in enteroendocrine cells (EEs). TV and DMelNV exhibited different patterns of replication and for TV, accumulation varied according to cell subtype. Cells infected with TV underwent down-regulation of genes that represent bottlenecks in the fruit fly interactome, while cells infected with DMelNV went through a down-expression of tra…

TranscriptomeGeneticsMelanogasterRNAEnteroendocrine cellBiologyDrosophila melanogasterbiology.organism_classificationGeneInteractomeVirus
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Engineered Functional Redundancy Relaxes Selective Constraints upon Endogenous Genes in Viral RNA Genomes

2018

Functional redundancy, understood as the functional overlap of different genes, is a double-edge sword. At the one side, it is thought to serve as a robustness mechanism that buffers the deleterious effect of mutations hitting one of the redundant copies, thus resulting in pseudogenization. At the other side, it is considered as a source of genetic and functional innovation. In any case, genetically redundant genes are expected to show an acceleration in the rate of molecular evolution. Here, we tackle the role of functional redundancy in viral RNA genomes. To this end, we have evaluated the rates of compensatory evolution for deleterious mutations affecting an essential function, the suppr…

0301 basic medicinePotyvirusEndogenyComputational biologyGenome ViralGenomeExperimental virus evolutionViral suppressors of RNA silencingEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesGeneticsRNA VirusesViral rnaGeneEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCompensatory evolutionPlant DiseasesbiologyTobacco etch virusFunctional redundancyMultifunctional proteinsPlantsbiology.organism_classificationGenetic redundancyTobacco etch virus030104 developmental biologyMutationGenetic redundancyRNA ViralRNA InterferencePseudogenesResearch Article
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Virus-host interactome: Putting the accent on how it changes

2017

[EN] Viral infections are extremely complex processes that could only be well understood by precisely characterizing the interaction networks between the virus and the host components. In recent years, much effort has gone in this directionwith the aimof unveiling themolecular basis of viral pathology. These networks are mostly formed by viral and host proteins, and are expected to be dynamic bothwith time and space (i.e., with the progression of infection, as well as with the virus and host genotypes; what we call plastodynamic). This largely overlooked spatio-temporal evolution urgently calls for a change both in the conceptual paradigms and experimental techniques used so far to characte…

0301 basic medicineEvolutionSystems biologyBiophysicsComplex diseaseDiseaseComputational biologyBiologyBioinformaticsBiochemistryInteractomeVirusViral Proteins03 medical and health sciencesSpatio-Temporal AnalysisProtein networkVirologyStress (linguistics)AnimalsHumansProtein Interaction MapsVirus host030102 biochemistry & molecular biologyHost (biology)030104 developmental biologyVirus DiseasesHost-Pathogen InteractionsSystems biologyJournal of Proteomics
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Repeated transfer of small RNA virus populations leading to balanced fitness with infrequent stochastic drift

1996

The population dynamics of RNA viruses have an important influence on fitness variation and, in consequence, on the adaptative potential and virulence of this ubiquitous group of pathogens. Earlier work with vesicular stomatitis virus showed that large population transfers were reproducibly associated with fitness increases, whereas repeated transfers from plaque to plaque (genetic bottlenecks) lead to losses in fitness. We demonstrate here that repeated five-plaque to five-plaque passage series yield long-term fitness stability, except for occasional stochastic fitness jumps. Repeated five-plaque passages regularly alternating with two consecutive large population transmissions did not cau…

Geneticseducation.field_of_studyVirulencebiologyPopulation DynamicsPopulationVirulenceViral Plaque AssayViral quasispeciesVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusbiology.organism_classificationVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusVirusCell LinePopulation bottleneckVesicular stomatitis virusViral evolutionGeneticsAnimalseducationMolecular BiologyMolecular and General Genetics MGG
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RNAs That Behave Like Prions

2020

The term “prion” was originally coined to describe the proteinaceous infectious agents involved in mammalian neurological disorders. More recently, a prion has been defined as a nonchromosomal, protein-based genetic element that is capable of converting the copies of its own benign variant into the prion form, with the new phenotypic effects that can be transmitted through the cytoplasm. Some prions are toxic to the cell, are able to aggregate and/or form amyloid structures, and may be infectious in the wild, but none of those traits are seen as an integral property of all prions. We propose that the definition of prion should be expanded, to include the inducible transmissible entities und…

RiboswitchMolecular Biology and PhysiologyAmyloidProtein ConformationPrionsanimal diseaseslcsh:QR1-502viroidsPiwi-interacting RNApiRNABiologyribozymesMicrobiologylcsh:Microbiology03 medical and health sciencesMice0302 clinical medicineAnimalsHumansRibozymesprionsMolecular Biology030304 developmental biologyGenetics0303 health sciencesRibozymeRNAOpinion/HypothesisPhenotypeViroidsQR1-502nervous system diseasesCytoplasmbiology.proteinGenetic elementRNA030217 neurology & neurosurgerymSphere
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Combined Stress Conditions in Melon Induce Non-additive Effects in the Core miRNA Regulatory Network

2021

Climate change has been associated with a higher incidence of combined adverse environmental conditions that can promote a significant decrease in crop productivity. However, knowledge on how a combination of stresses might affect plant development is still scarce. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) have been proposed as potential targets for improving crop productivity. Here, we have combined deep-sequencing, computational characterization of responsive miRNAs and validation of their regulatory role in a comprehensive analysis of response of melon to several combinations of four stresses (cold, salinity, short day, and infection with a fungus). Twenty-two miRNA families responding to double and/or triple …

MelonBiotic and abiotic stressRNA regulatory networksPlant cultureDifferentially expressed mirnasComputational biologyPlant ScienceBiologyCrop productivitybiotic and abiotic stressSB1-1110crop production and climate changePlant developmentGENETICAMiRNAs and stress response in Cucumis melomiRNAs and stress response in Cucumis melomicroRNACrop production and climate changeRNA regulatory networks; RNA-seq and systems biology; biotic and abiotic stress; crop production and climate change; miRNAs and stress response in Cucumis meloStress conditionsTranscription factorGeneRNA-seq and systems biologyOriginal ResearchFrontiers in Plant Science
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Effect of Host Species on Topography of the Fitness Landscape for a Plant RNA Virus

2016

[EN] Adaptive fitness landscapes are a fundamental concept in evolutionary biology that relate the genotype of individuals with their fitness. At the end, the evolutionary fate of evolving populations depends on the topography of the landscape, that is, the number of accessible mutational pathways and of possible fitness peaks (i.e, adaptive solutions). For long time, fitness landscapes were only theoretical constructions due to a lack of precise information on the mapping between genotypes and phenotypes. In recent years, however, efforts have been devoted to characterize the properties of empirical fitness landscapes for individual proteins or for microbes adapting to artificial environme…

0301 basic medicine2. Zero hungerbiologyFitness landscapeEcologyHost (biology)ImmunologyRNA virusbiology.organism_classificationMicrobiology03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologyGenetic Diversity and EvolutionVirologyInsect ScienceRegional scienceEuropean commissionChristian ministryadaptive fitness landscapes ; experimental evolution ; virus evolutionJournal of Virology
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Modelling temperature-dependent dynamics of single and mixed infections in a plant virus

2022

Multiple viral infection is an important issue in health and agriculture with strong impacts on society and the economy. Several investigations have dealt with the population dynamics of viruses with different dynamic properties, focusing on strain competition during multiple infections and the effects on viruses’ hosts. Recent interest has been on how multiple infections respond to abiotic factors such as temperature (T). This is especially important in the case of plant pathogens, whose dynamics could be affected significantly by global warming. However, few mathematical models incorporate the effect of T on parasite fitness, especially in mixed infections. Here, we investigate simple mat…

Abiotic componenteducation.field_of_studybiologyMathematical modelCo-infection dynamicsApplied Mathematicsmedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationTranscritical bifurcationsRNA virusAbiotic stressbiology.organism_classificationCompetition (biology)BifurcationsCompetition modelTranscritical bifurcationThermal reaction normsEvolutionary biologyNonlinear dynamicsModeling and SimulationPlant virusDynamical systemseducationmedia_commonApplied Mathematical Modelling
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Role of host genetic diversity for susceptibility-to-infection in the evolution of virulence of a plant virus

2019

Predicting viral emergence is difficult due to the stochastic nature of the underlying processes and the many factors that govern pathogen evolution. Environmental factors affecting the host, the pathogen and the interaction between both are key in emergence. In particular, infectious disease dynamics are affected by spatiotemporal heterogeneity in their environments. A broad knowledge of these factors will allow better estimating where and when viral emergence is more likely to occur. Here, we investigate how the population structure for susceptibility-to-infection genes of the plant Arabidopsis thaliana shapes the evolution of Turnip mosaic virus (TuMV). For doing so we have evolved TuMV …

0106 biological sciencesinfection matrixPopulationPotyvirusVirulenceMetapopulation010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesVirologyPlant virusTurnip mosaic virusResistance to infectionexperimental evolutioneducationPathogenhost population structure030304 developmental biologyvirus evolution0303 health sciencesExperimental evolutioneducation.field_of_studyGenetic diversitybiologyEcotypeGenetic heterogeneityEvolution of virulenceHost population structureresistance to infectionbiology.organism_classificationInfection matrixVirus evolutionExperimental evolutionInfectious disease (medical specialty)Evolutionary biologyViral evolutionResearch Articleevolution of virulence
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Evolving by deleting: patterns of molecular evolution of Apple stem pitting virus isolates from Poland

2019

In this study, 267 coat protein gene (CP) sequences from 48 Polish isolates of Apple stem pitting virus (ASPV) were determined. The genetic structure of the virus population was analysed and possible mechanisms of molecular evolution explored. We found evidence of recombination within the ASPV population and the presence of 17 ASPV molecular variants that differ in the length, number and arrangement of deletions in the CP. Population genetic analyses showed significant variation among isolates from pear and apple trees, between isolates from the same host species and, more interestingly, within isolates, supporting the existence of significant levels of variability within individual hosts, …

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicinePopulation geneticsPopulationPopulation geneticsViral quasispecies01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciencesMolecular evolutionVirologyDeletionsCladeeducationGeneticseducation.field_of_studyPhylogenetic analysisbiologyPhylogenetic treebiology.organism_classificationVirologyRecombinationApple stem pitting virusASPV030104 developmental biologyCP geneGenetic structure010606 plant biology & botany
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Increasing growth temperature alters the within-host competition of viral strains and influences virus genetic variation

2020

AbstractThe emergence of viral diseases in plant crops hamper the sustainability of food production, and this may be boosted by global warming. Concurrently, mixed viral infections are becoming common in plants, of which epidemiology are unpredictable due to within-host virus-virus interactions. However, the extent in which the combined effect of variations in the abiotic components of the plant ecological niche (e.g., temperature) and the prevalence of mixed infections (i.e., within-host interactions among viruses) affect the evolutionary dynamics of viral populations is not well understood. Here, we explore the interplay between ecological and evolutionary factors during viral infections,…

Ecological nicheGeneticsGenetic diversityViral replicationHost (biology)virusesmedia_common.quotation_subjectGenetic variationBiologyEvolutionary dynamicsCompetition (biology)Virusmedia_common
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Genetic variability and evolutionary dynamics of tomato black ring virus population

2021

Tomato black ring virus (TBRV) is an important pathogen infecting a wide range of plant species worldwide. Phylogenetic studies of TBRV have already been conducted, although limited by the use of short genomic regions or a reduced amount of isolates. In the present study, we carried out an exhaustive phylogenetic and population genetic analysis based on the coat protein gene (CP) sequence of 57 TBRV isolates originating from different host plants and European geographic regions (47 isolates from Poland, 8 from Lithuania, one from the UK, and one from Hungary). Moreover, the selective pressure acting on particular codons and coevolution of amino acid residues in the CP were analysed. The res…

education.field_of_studybiologyEvolutionary biologyPopulationGeneticsPlant ScienceGenetic variabilityHorticultureEvolutionary dynamicseducationTomato black ring virusbiology.organism_classificationAgronomy and Crop Science
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Epistasis between new mutations and genetic background and a test of genetic canalization.

2001

The importance for fitness of epistatic interactions among mutations is poorly known, yet epistasis can exert important effects on the dynamics of evolving populations. We showed previously that epistatic interactions are common between pairs of random insertion mutations in the bacterium Escherichia coli. In this paper, we examine interactions between these mutations and other mutations by transducing each of twelve insertion mutations into two genetic backgrounds, one ancestral and the other having evolved in, and adapted to, a defined laboratory environment for 10,000 generations. To assess the effect of the mutation on fitness, we allowed each mutant to compete against its unmutated cou…

GeneticsMutationGenotypeMutantEpistasis and functional genomicsEpistasis GeneticBiologymedicine.disease_causePositive correlationEvolution MolecularMutagenesis InsertionalEvolutionary biologyTransduction GeneticMutationmedicineGeneticsEscherichia coliEpistasisGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesEscherichia coliEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEvolution; international journal of organic evolution
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From foes to friends: Viral infections expand the limits of host phenotypic plasticity

2020

Phenotypic plasticity enables organisms to survive in the face of unpredictable environmental stress. Intimately related to the notion of phenotypic plasticity is the concept of the reaction norm that places phenotypic plasticity in the context of a genotype-specific response to environmental gradients. Whether reaction norms themselves evolve and which factors might affect their shape has been the object of intense debates among evolutionary biologists along the years. Since their discovery, viruses have been considered as pathogens. However, new viromic techniques and a shift in conceptual paradigms are showing that viruses are mostly non-pathogenic ubiquitous entities. Recent studies hav…

Phenotypic plasticityHuman evolutionary geneticsBiologyEnvironmental stressAdaptation PhysiologicalBiological EvolutionEvolutionary biologyVirus DiseasesViral evolutionVirusesAnimalsHumansNorm (social)Evolutionary dynamicsPhysiological HomeostasisVirus Physiological Phenomena
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Nonlinear trade-offs allow the cooperation game to evolve from Prisoner's Dilemma to Snowdrift.

2017

[EN] The existence of cooperation, or the production of public goods, is an evolutionary problem. Cooperation is not favoured because the Prisoner s Dilemma (PD) game drives cooperators to extinction. We have re-analysed this problem by using RNA viruses to motivate a model for the evolution of cooperation. Gene products are the public goods and group size is the number of virions co-infecting the same host cell. Our results show that if the trade-off between replication and production of gene products is linear, PD is observed. However, if the trade-off is nonlinear, the viruses evolve into separate lineages of ultra-defectors and ultra-cooperators as group size is increased. The nonlinear…

0301 basic medicineRNA virusesgame theorySnowdriftgenetic structuresEvolutioncooperationVirus ReplicationMedical and Health SciencesGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyMicroeconomics03 medical and health sciencesdefective interfering particlesEconomicsProduction (economics)Defective interfering particlesPrisoner's DilemmaCooperative BehaviorGame theoryGeneral Environmental ScienceGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyAgricultural and Veterinary SciencesTrade offsGeneral MedicinePrisoner's dilemmaPrisoner DilemmaPublic goodBiological SciencesBiological EvolutionDilemmaPrisoner s DilemmaNonlinear systemCooperation030104 developmental biologyGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesGame theory
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Cost of host radiation in an RNA virus.

2000

Abstract Although host radiation allows a parasite to expand its ecological niche, traits governing the infection of multiple host types can decrease fitness in the original or alternate host environments. Reasons for this reduction in fitness include slower replication due to added genetic material or modifications, fitness trade-offs across host environments, and weaker selection resulting from simultaneous adaptation to multiple habitats. We examined the consequences of host radiation using vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) and mammalian host cells in tissue culture. Replicate populations of VSV were allowed to evolve for 100 generations on the original host (BHK cells), on either of two …

PopulationBiologyKidneyVirus ReplicationVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusCell LineDogsSpecies SpecificityCricetinaeGeneticsAnimalsHumansRNA ViruseseducationSelection (genetic algorithm)Ecological nicheGeneticseducation.field_of_studyMesocricetusHost (biology)RNA virusbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionViral replicationVesicular stomatitis virusAdaptationResearch ArticleHeLa Cells
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A putative antiviral role of plant cytidine deaminases

2014

[Background]: A mechanism of innate antiviral immunity operating against viruses infecting mammalian cells has been described during the last decade. Host cytidine deaminases (e.g., APOBEC3 proteins) edit viral genomes, giving rise to hypermutated nonfunctional viruses; consequently, viral fitness is reduced through lethal mutagenesis. By contrast, sub-lethal hypermutagenesis may contribute to virus evolvability by increasing population diversity. To prevent genome editing, some viruses have evolved proteins that mediate APOBEC3 degradation. The model plant Arabidopsis thaliana genome encodes nine cytidine deaminases ( AtCDAs), raising the question of whether deamination is an antiviral mec…

0301 basic medicinevirusesPopulation030106 microbiologyDeaminationAntiviral innate immunityGenomeGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyVirusError catastrophePararetrovirusGene product03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundPlant-virus interactionGenome editingPlant-Environment InteractionsVirologyHypermutagenesisArabidopsis thalianaGeneral Pharmacology Toxicology and PharmaceuticseducationGeneGeneticseducation.field_of_studyCauliflower mosaic virusGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologybiologyHost (biology)fungifood and beveragesCytidineGeneral MedicineArticlesbiology.organism_classificationVirologyVirus evolution030104 developmental biologychemistryMutational spectrumPlant Genetics & Gene ExpressionViral evolutionCauliflower mosaic virusResearch Article
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RNA viruses as complex adaptive systems

2004

RNA viruses have high mutation rates and so their populations exist as dynamic and complex mutant distributions. It has been consistently observed that when challenged with a new environment, viral populations adapt following hyperbolic-like kinetics: adaptation is initially very rapid, but then slows down as fitness reaches an asymptotic value. These adaptive dynamics have been explained in terms of populations moving towards the top of peaks on rugged fitness landscapes. Fitness fluctuations of varying magnitude are observed during adaptation. Often the presence of fluctuations in the evolution of physical systems indicates some form of self-organization, or where many components of the s…

Statistics and ProbabilityMutation rateTime FactorsFitness landscapePhysical systemSystems TheoryProbability density functionBiologyVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyEvolution MolecularRNA VirusesWeibull distributionGeneticsExperimental evolutionModels StatisticalModels GeneticComputersSystems BiologyApplied MathematicsGeneral MedicineBiological EvolutionSelf-organized criticalityEvolutionary biologyModeling and SimulationMutationAdaptationBiosystems
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Reverse-engineering the Arabidopsis thaliana transcriptional network under changing environmental conditions

2009

46 pages, 4 tables, 6 figures, 3 additinoal files.

0106 biological sciencesMESH: Genome PlantArabidopsis thalianaGene regulatory networkArabidopsis01 natural sciencesTranscriptomeGene Expression Regulation PlantArabidopsisMESH: Gene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalCluster AnalysisGene Regulatory NetworksMESH: ArabidopsisMESH: EcosystemMESH: Models GeneticOligonucleotide Array Sequence AnalysisMESH: Gene Regulatory NetworksGenetics0303 health sciencesMESH: Stress MechanicalbiologyMESH: Genomicsfood and beveragesGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalGenomicsPhenotypeAlgorithmsGenome PlantMESH: MutationSystems biologyGenomicsMESH: AlgorithmsComputational biologyMESH: Arabidopsis ProteinsMESH: Phenotype03 medical and health sciencesMESH: Gene Expression Profiling[SDV.BBM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular BiologyMESH: Gene Expression Regulation PlantEcosystem030304 developmental biologyModels GeneticMicroarray analysis techniquesArabidopsis ProteinsGene Expression ProfilingResearchfungiRobustness (evolution)biology.organism_classificationMESH: Cluster AnalysisGene expression profilingMutationMESH: Oligonucleotide Array Sequence AnalysisStress Mechanical010606 plant biology & botany
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Epistasis and the Adaptability of an RNA Virus

2005

Abstract We have explored the patterns of fitness recovery in the vesicular stomatitis RNA virus. We show that, in our experimental setting, reversions to the wild-type genotype were rare and fitness recovery was at least partially driven by compensatory mutations. We compared compensatory adaptation for genotypes carrying (1) mutations with varying deleterious fitness effects, (2) one or two deleterious mutations, and (3) pairs of mutations showing differences in the strength and sign of epistasis. In all cases, we found that the rate of fitness recovery and the proportion of reversions were positively affected by population size. Additionally, we observed that mutations with large fitness…

GeneticsPopulation DensityMutationAnalysis of VarianceGenotypeEpistasis and functional genomicsAdaptation BiologicalRNA virusEpistasis GeneticSequence Analysis DNAViral Plaque AssayBiologyInvestigationsbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.disease_causeVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusEvolution MolecularMutational meltdownGenotypeMutationGeneticsmedicineEpistasisMutation–selection balanceAdaptation
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Innate immune pathways act synergistically to constrain RNA virus evolution in Drosophila melanogaster

2021

AbstractHost-pathogen interactions impose recurrent selective pressures that lead to constant adaptation and counter-adaptation in both competing species. Here, we sought to study this evolutionary arms-race and assessed the impact of the innate immune system on viral population diversity and evolution, using D. melanogaster as model host and its natural pathogen Drosophila C virus (DCV). We first isogenized eight fly genotypes generating animals defective for RNAi, Imd and Toll innate immune pathways and also pathogen sensing and gut renewal pathways. Wild-type or mutant flies were then orally infected and DCV was serially passaged ten times. Viral population diversity was studied after ea…

GeneticsImmune systemInnate immune systembiologyRNA interferenceMelanogasterRNA virusDrosophila melanogasterbiology.organism_classificationPathogenDrosophila C virus
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Intra-specific variability and biological relevance of P3N-PIPO protein length in potyviruses

2013

Background:Pipo was recently described as a new ORF encoded within the genome of the Potyviridae family members (PNAS 105:5897-5902, 2008). It is embedded within the P3 cistron and is translated in the +2 reading frame relative to the potyviral long ORF as the P3N-PIPO fusion protein. In this work, we first collected pipo nucleotide sequences available for different isolates of 48 Potyvirus species. Second, to determine the biological implications of variation in pipo length, we measured infectivity, viral accumulation, cell-to-cell and systemic movements for two Turnip mosaic virus (TuMV) variants with pipo alleles of different length in three different susceptible host species, and tested…

PotyvirusArabidopsisBiologyEvolution MolecularViral ProteinsCistronMolecular evolutionTobaccoTurnip mosaic virusGeneEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeneticsPotyviridaeBayesian phylogenetic methodsHost-range determinantsBrassica rapaPotyvirusbiology.organism_classificationVirus evolutionVirus fitness componentsStop codonPotato virus YGenesHost-Pathogen InteractionsCodon TerminatorMolecular evolutionGenetic FitnessResearch Article
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A Sliding Window-Based Method to Detect Selective Constraints in Protein-Coding Genes and Its Application to RNA Viruses

2002

Here we present a new sliding window-based method specially designed to detect selective constraints in specific regions of a multiple protein-coding sequence alignment. In contrast to previous window-based procedures, our method is based on a nonarbitrary statistical approach to find the appropriate codon-window size to test deviations of synonymous (d(S)) and nonsynonymous (d(N)) nucleotide substitutions from the expectation. The probabilities of d(N) and d(S) are obtained from simulated data and used to detect significant deviations of d(N) and d(S) in a specific window region of the real sequence alignment. The nonsynonymous-to-synonymous rate ratio (w = d(N)/d(S)) was used to highlight…

Nonsynonymous substitutionGenes ViralSequence alignmentBiologyGenes envEvolution MolecularViral ProteinsSliding window protocolGeneticsRNA VirusesSelection GeneticMolecular BiologyGenePhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)GeneticsBase SequenceReproducibility of ResultsContrast (statistics)RNAWindow (computing)Genes gagFoot-and-Mouth Disease VirusDNA ViralHIV-1Capsid ProteinsSequence AlignmentAlgorithmJournal of Molecular Evolution
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Mode of selection and experimental evolution of antiviral drugs resistance in vesicular stomatitis virus

2004

Abstract The possession of an antiviral resistance mutation benefits a virus when the corresponding antiviral is present. But does the resistant virus pay a fitness cost when the antiviral is absent? Would an evolutionary history of association between a genotype and a resistance mutation overcome this cost by changes compensating the harmful side-effect of resistance mutations? Are combined therapies more effective against the rise of resistant viruses or against evolutionary compensations? To explore all these questions, we took an experimental evolution approach. After selecting vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) populations able to replicate under increasing concentrations of ribavirin an…

Microbiology (medical)GenotypeBiologyVirus ReplicationAntiviral AgentsMicrobiologyVirusVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusEvolution Molecularchemistry.chemical_compoundGenotypeDrug Resistance ViralRibavirinGeneticsMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeneticsExperimental evolutionDose-Response Relationship DrugRibavirinAntiviral therapyInterferon-alphaDrug SynergismResistance mutationbiology.organism_classificationVirologyInfectious DiseaseschemistryVesicular stomatitis virusMutationFitness costInfection, Genetics and Evolution
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NATURAL SELECTION AND THE ORGAN-SPECIFIC DIFFERENTIATION OF HIV-1 V3 HYPERVARIABLE REGION

2004

The existence of organ-specific HIV-1 populations within infected hosts has been studied for many years; nonetheless results reported by different authors are somewhat discrepant. To tackle this problem, we used a population genetics approach to analyze previously published data from the V3 hypervariable region of the envelope env gene. Our results are compatible with a population subdivision by organs in 95% of individuals analyzed at autopsy. In addition, populations infecting the nervous system and testicles clearly appear as differentiated subsets of the so-called macrophage-tropic variants. Liver and kidney may harbor differentiated populations as well. Although it is widely accepted t…

Nonsynonymous substitutionPopulationPopulation geneticsHIV Envelope Protein gp120BiologyEvolution MolecularGeneticsCluster AnalysisHumansSelection GeneticeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeneticsAnalysis of VarianceLikelihood Functionseducation.field_of_studyNatural selectionBase SequenceModels GeneticMechanism (biology)HIVPeptide FragmentsHypervariable regionGenetics PopulationOrgan SpecificityViral evolutionAdaptationDatabases Nucleic AcidGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesSequence AlignmentEvolution
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Diminishing returns of inoculum size on the rate of a plant RNA virus evolution

2017

[EN] Understanding how genetic drift, mutation and selection interplay in determining the evolutionary fate of populations is one of the central themes of Evolutionary Biology. Theory predicts that by increasing the number of coexisting beneficial alleles in a population beyond some point does not necessarily translates into an acceleration in the rate of evolution. This diminishing-returns effect of beneficial genetic variability in microbial asexual populations is known as clonal interference. Clonal interference has been shown to operate in experimental populations of animal RNA viruses replicating in cell cultures. Here we carried out experiments to test whether a similar diminishing-re…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineeducation.field_of_studyClonal interferencePopulation sizePopulationGeneral Physics and AstronomyBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologyGenetic driftEvolutionary biologyMutation (genetic algorithm)Rate of evolutionGenetic variabilityAdaptationeducation
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Why are viral genomes so fragile? The bottleneck hypothesis

2021

If they undergo new mutations at each replication cycle, why are RNA viral genomes so fragile, with most mutations being either strongly deleterious or lethal? Here we provide theoretical and numerical evidence for the hypothesis that genetic fragility is partly an evolutionary response to the multiple population bottlenecks experienced by viral populations at various stages of their life cycles. Modelling within-host viral populations as multi-type branching processes, we show that mutational fragility lowers the rate at which Muller’s ratchet clicks and increases the survival probability through multiple bottlenecks. In the context of a susceptible-exposed-infectious-recovered epidemiolog…

Evolutionary GeneticsRNA virusesMutation rateEpidemiologyExtinct GenomesMedicine and Health SciencesBiology (General)Genetics0303 health sciencesEvolutionary epidemiologyEcologyMicrobial MutationGenomicsDeletion MutationComputational Theory and MathematicsViral genomesGenetic EpidemiologyModeling and SimulationViral evolutionPopulation bottlenecksVirusesRNA ViralResearch ArticleQH301-705.5Genomics[SDV.CAN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/CancerContext (language use)Genome ViralBiologyMicrobiologyGenomic InstabilityViral EvolutionBottleneckEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceSurvival probabilityVirologyGeneticsFragilityMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologyEvolutionary BiologyModels Genetic030306 microbiologyOrganismsComputational BiologyBiology and Life SciencesRNAVirus evolutionOrganismal EvolutionGenetic architecture[MATH.MATH-PR]Mathematics [math]/Probability [math.PR]Population bottleneckViral replicationMutationMicrobial Evolution
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Evolution of RNA virus in spatially structured heterogeneous environments

2003

A hallmark of the infectious cycle for many RNA viruses parasitizing multicellular hosts is the need to invade and successfully replicate in tissues that comprise a variety of cell types. Thus, multicellular hosts represent a heterogeneous environment to evolving viral populations. To understand viral adaptation to multicellular hosts, we took a double approach. First, we developed a mathematical model that served to make predictions concerning the dynamics of viral populations evolving in heterogeneous environments. Second, the predictions were tested by evolving vesicular stomatitis virus in vitro on a spatially structured environment formed by three different cell types. In the absence o…

Cell typeeducation.field_of_studyPopulation DynamicsPopulationAdaptation BiologicalRNARNA virusEnvironmentIn Vitro TechniquesModels TheoreticalBiologybiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionVirologyMulticellular organismEvolutionary biologyVesicular stomatitis virusViral evolutionRNA VirusesAdaptationeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Evolutionary Biology
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Is group selection a factor modulating the virulence of RNA viruses?

1997

RNA viruses consist of populations of extremely high genetic heterogeneity called quasispecies. Based on theoretical considerations, it has been suggested that the unit of selection in such complex genetic populations is not the single viral particle but a set of genetically related particles which form the quasispecies. In the present study we carried out a set of experiments with the vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) dealing with the evolution of life-history characters under selection acting at two factors either in the same or in opposite directions. The two factors at which selective pressure is applied are the individual and the group. We show evidence that group selection modulates th…

GeneticsModels GeneticVirulenceGenetic heterogeneityRNAVirulenceUnit of selectionGeneral MedicineViral quasispeciesBiologybiology.organism_classificationVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusGroup selectionGenetics PopulationVesicular stomatitis virusMultivariate AnalysisGeneticsRNA VirusesSelection GeneticSelection (genetic algorithm)Genetical research
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Effect of population patchiness and migration rates on the adaptation and divergence of vesicular stomatitis virus quasispecies populations

1999

The effect of migration among different isolated virus quasispecies populations on their adaptation and diversity was analysed through experimental evolution. Anin vitrocell system was employed to simulate migration of vesicular stomatitis virus between isolated homogeneous host cell populations. The results clearly demonstrated a positive correlation between the migration rate and the magnitude of the mean fitness reached by the virus quasispecies populations. The results also showed, although less clearly, that fitness differences among quasispecies decreased with the magnitude of migration. These results are in close agreement with predictions of standard population genetics theory. Thes…

PopulationAdaptation BiologicalViral quasispeciesBiologyVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusVirusCell LineDivergenceViral Envelope ProteinsCricetinaeVirologyTumor Cells CulturedAnimalsHumanseducationGeneticseducation.field_of_studyExperimental evolutionMembrane GlycoproteinsModels GeneticGenetic Variationbiology.organism_classificationVirologyHomogeneousVesicular stomatitis virusDirected Molecular EvolutionAdaptationJournal of General Virology
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Defects in plant immunity modulate the rates and patterns of RNA virus evolution

2020

AbstractIt is assumed that host genetic variability for susceptibility to infection necessarily conditions virus evolution. Differences in host susceptibility can either drive the virus to diversify into strains that track different defense alleles (e.g., antigenic diversity) or to infect only the most susceptible genotypes. To clarify these processes and their effect on virulence, we have studied how variability in host defense responses determine the evolutionary fate of viruses. To accomplish this, we performed evolution experiments with Turnip mosaic potyvirus in Arabidopsis thaliana mutants. Mutant plants had disruptions in infection-response signaling pathways or in genes whose produc…

GeneticsAntigenic DiversityHost (biology)Viral evolutionPotyvirusRNA virusGenetic variabilityAdaptationBiologybiology.organism_classificationVirus
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Does the VP1 gene of foot-and-mouth disease virus behave as a molecular clock?

1992

We have carried out a phylogenetic study of the evolution of the VP1 gene sequence from different serological types and subtypes of foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV). The maximum-likelihood method developed by Hasegawa and co-workers (Hasegawa et al. 1985) for the estimation of evolutionary parameters and branching dates has been used to decide between alternative models of evolution: constant versus variable rates. The results obtained indicate that a constant rate model, i.e., a molecular clock, seems to be the most plausible one. However, additional information suggests the possibility that the appearance of serotype CS has been accompanied by an episode of rapid evolution (Villaverde …

GeneticsNatural selectionBase SequenceGenes ViralMolecular Sequence DataStatistics as TopicNucleic acid sequenceBiologybiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionHomology (biology)VirusAphthovirusCapsidPhylogeneticsMolecular evolutionGeneticsCapsid ProteinsFoot-and-mouth disease virusMolecular clockMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyJournal of molecular evolution
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Local adaptation of plant viruses: lessons from experimental evolution.

2016

[EN] For multihost pathogens, adaptation to multiple hosts has important implications for both applied and basic research. At the applied level, it is one of the main factors determining the probability and severity of emerging disease outbreaks. At the basic level, it is thought to be a key mechanism for the maintenance of genetic diversity both in host and pathogen species. In recent years, a number of evolution experiments have assessed the fate of plant virus populations replicating within and adapting to one single or to multiple hosts species. A first group of these experiments tackled the existence of trade-offs in fitness and virulence for viruses evolving either within a single hos…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineGeneralistsGenotypeLocal adaptationAcclimatizationGenetic FitnessBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesHost SpecificityPlant VirusesEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesPathosystemGeneticsGenetic PleiotropyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsLocal adaptationGenetic diversityExperimental evolutionVirulenceGenetic VariationGenetic PleiotropyVirus evolutionSpecialists030104 developmental biologyExperimental evolutionEvolutionary biologyViral evolutionHost rangeAntagonistic pleiotropyGenetic FitnessAdaptationMolecular ecology
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GroEL buffers against deleterious mutations

2002

GroEL, a heat-shock protein that acts as a molecular chaperone1, is overproduced in endosymbiotic but not in free-living bacteria2,3,4, presumably to assist in the folding of conformationally damaged proteins. Here we show that the overproduction of GroEL in Escherichia coli masks the effects of harmful mutations that have accumulated during a simulated process of vertical transmission. This molecular mechanism, which may be an adaptation to the bacterium's intracellular lifestyle, is able to rescue lineages from a progressive fitness decline resulting from the fixation of deleterious mutations under strong genetic drift5,6.

GeneticsMutationMultidisciplinarybiologybiology.organism_classificationmedicine.disease_causeEnterobacteriaceaeGroELHeat shock proteinmedicineOverproductionEscherichia coliBacteriaIntracellularNature
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Little Evidence for Synergism Among Deleterious Mutations in a Nonsegmented RNA Virus

1999

Several models have been proposed to account for the segmentation of RNA viruses. One of the best known models suggests that segmentation, and mixing of segments during coinfections, is a way to eliminate deleterious mutations from the genome. However, for validity, this model requires that deleterious mutations interact in a synergistic way. That is, two mutations together should have a more deleterious effect than the result of adding their individual effects. Here I present evidence that deleterious mutations in foot-and-mouth disease virus produce a decline in fitness but that the relationship between the number of mutations fixed and the magnitude of fitness decline is compatible mainl…

GeneticsGeneticsEpistasisRNARNA virusBiologybiology.organism_classificationMolecular BiologyGenomeEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsVirusJournal of Molecular Evolution
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Heterogeneity in the Response of Different Subtypes of Drosophila melanogaster Midgut Cells to Viral Infections

2021

This article belongs to the Section Viral Immunology, Vaccines, and Antivirals.

Drosophila virusesSingle-cell genomicsvirusesVirus-host interactionMicrobiologyViruscell-type-specific gene expressionTranscriptomeVirologyMelanogasterHeat shockGeneSingle-cell RNA-seqsingle-cell RNA-seqvirus-host interactionbiologydual RNA-seqsingle-cell genomicsRNAbiology.organism_classificationVirologyQR1-502Infectious DiseasesViral replicationantiviral heat shock responseCell-type-specific gene expression<i>Drosophila</i> virusesDrosophila melanogasterDual RNA-seqViruses
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Phylogeny of viroids, viroidlike satellite RNAs, and the viroidlike domain of hepatitis delta virus RNA.

1991

We report a phylogenetic study of viroids, some plant satellite RNAs, and the viroidlike domain of human hepatitis delta virus RNA. Our results support a monophyletic origin of these RNAs and are consistent with the hypothesis that they may be "living fossils" of a precellular RNA world. Moreover, the viroidlike domain of human hepatitis delta virus RNA appears closely related to the viroidlike satellite RNAs of plants, with which it shares some structural and functional properties. On the basis of our phylogenetic analysis, we propose a taxonomic classification of these RNAs.

GeneticsMultidisciplinaryPhylogenetic treeRNABiologyVirusoidVirologyModels BiologicalVirusViroidsDomain (software engineering)MonophylyPhylogeneticsRNARNA SatelliteRNA ViralHepatitis Delta VirusLiving fossilPhylogenyResearch Article
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Molecular basis of adaptive convergence in experimental populations of RNA viruses

2002

Abstract Characterizing the molecular basis of adaptation is one of the most important goals in modern evolutionary genetics. Here, we report a full-genome sequence analysis of 21 independent populations of vesicular stomatitis ribovirus evolved on the same cell type but under different demographic regimes. Each demographic regime differed in the effective viral population size. Evolutionary convergences are widespread both at synonymous and nonsynonymous replacements as well as in an intergenic region. We also found evidence for epistasis among sites of the same and different loci. We explain convergences as the consequence of four factors: (1) environmental homogeneity that supposes an id…

GeneticsNonsynonymous substitutionLikelihood Functionseducation.field_of_studyClonal interferenceHuman evolutionary geneticsPopulation sizePoint mutationPopulationEpistasis GeneticBiologyEvolution MolecularPhylogeneticsEvolutionary biologyGeneticsPoint MutationRNA VirusesEpistasiseducationPhylogenyResearch Article
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EXPERIMENTAL EVOLUTION OF AN EMERGING PLANT VIRUS IN HOST GENOTYPES THAT DIFFER IN THEIR SUSCEPTIBILITY TO INFECTION

2014

This study evaluates the extent to which genetic differences among host individuals from the same species condition the evolution of a plant RNA virus. We performed a threefold replicated evolution experiment in which Tobacco etch potyvirus isolate At17b (TEV-At17b), adapted to Arabidopsis thaliana ecotype Ler-0, was serially passaged in five genetically heterogeneous ecotypes of A. thaliana. After 15 passages we found that evolved viruses improved their fitness, showed higher infectivity and stronger virulence in their local host ecotypes. The genome of evolved lineages was sequenced and putative adaptive mutations identified. Host-driven convergent mutations have been identified. Evidence…

GeneticsExperimental evolutionbiologyEcotypeHost (biology)PotyvirusRNA virusbiology.organism_classificationVirologyVirusViral evolutionPlant virusGeneticsGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEvolution
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Viral replication modes in single-peak fitness landscapes: A dynamical systems analysis

2017

Positive-sense, single-stranded RNA viruses are important pathogens infecting almost all types of organisms. Experimental evidence from distributions of mutations and from viral RNA amplification suggest that these pathogens may follow different RNA replication modes, ranging from the stamping machine replication (SMR) to the geometric replication (GR) mode. Although previous theoretical work has focused on the evolutionary dynamics of RNA viruses amplifying their genomes with different strategies, little is known in terms of the bifurcations and transitions involving the so-called error threshold (mutation-induced dominance of mutants) and lethal mutagenesis (extinction of all sequences du…

0301 basic medicineStatistics and ProbabilityRNA virusesMutation rateDynamical systems theoryFitness landscapeMutantBiologyVirus ReplicationGenomeModels BiologicalGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology03 medical and health sciencesBifurcations0302 clinical medicineMutation RateSingle-peak fitness landscapeError thresholdDynamical systemsReplication modesDifferentiable dynamical systemsEvolutionary dynamics51 - MatemàtiquesGenetics51General Immunology and MicrobiologyModels GeneticApplied MathematicsRNA:Matemàtiques i estadística [Àrees temàtiques de la UPC]General MedicineMutation AccumulationSistemes dinàmics diferenciables030104 developmental biologyViral replicationMutagenesisModeling and SimulationMatemàtiquesGeneral Agricultural and Biological Sciences030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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STABILITY OF A STOCHASTICALLY PERTURBED MODEL OF INTRACELLULAR SINGLE-STRANDED RNA VIRUS REPLICATION

2019

Compared to the replication of double-stranded RNA and DNA viruses, the replication of single-stranded viruses requires the production of a number of intermediate strands that serve as templates for the synthesis of genomic-sense strands. Two theoretical extreme mechanisms for replication for such single-stranded viruses have been proposed; one extreme being represented by the so-called linear stamping machine and the opposite extreme by the exponential growth. Of course, real systems are more complex and examples have been described in which a combination of such extreme mechanisms can also occur: a fraction of the produced progeny resulting from a stamping-machine type of replication that…

92D30 (primary) 34D20 60H10 (secondary)0209 industrial biotechnologyVirus dynamicsDynamical Systems (math.DS)02 engineering and technology03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundMathematical model020901 industrial engineering & automationReplication (statistics)Viral replicationFOS: MathematicsMathematics - Dynamical SystemsViral evolution030304 developmental biologySingle-Stranded RNA51ssRNA virusLyapunov function0303 health sciencesViral mutationsLyapunov methodEcologyApplied MathematicsRNAGeneral MedicineAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)Cell biologyStochastic modelViral replicationchemistryViral evolutionStabilityIntracellularDNAJournal of Biological Systems
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Increasing temperature alters the within-host competition of viral strains and influences virus genetic variability

2021

Environmental conditions can affect viral accumulation, virulence and adaptation, which have implications in the disease outcomes and efficiency of control measures. Concurrently, mixed viral infections are relevant in plants, being their epidemiology shaped by within-host virus–virus interactions. However, the extent in which the combined effect of variations in abiotic components of the plant ecological niche and the prevalence of mixed infections affect the evolutionary dynamics of viral populations is not well understood. Here, we explore the interplay between ecological and evolutionary factors during viral infections and show that isolates of two strains of Pepino mosaic potexvirus co…

0106 biological sciencesMixed infectionsvirusesPlant virusVirulenceBiologyEvolutionary ecology01 natural sciencesMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesplant virusenvironmental factorsVirologyPlant virusgenetic variabilityEnvironmental factorsAcademicSubjects/MED00860Genetic variabilityEvolutionary dynamics030304 developmental biologyGenetics0303 health sciencesGenetic diversityHost (biology)mixed infectionsAcademicSubjects/SCI01130AcademicSubjects/SCI02285evolutionary ecologyGenetic variabilityEvolutionary ecologyAdaptationResearch Article010606 plant biology & botany
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Phylogeography and Molecular Evolution of Potato virus Y

2012

Potato virus Y (PVY) is an important plant pathogen, whose host range includes economically important crops such as potato, tobacco, tomato, and pepper. PVY presents three main strains (PVYO, PVYN and PVYC) and several recombinant forms. PVY has a worldwide distribution, yet the mechanisms that promote and maintain its population structure and genetic diversity are still unclear. In this study, we used a pool of 77 complete PVY genomes from isolates collected worldwide. After removing the effect of recombination in our data set, we used Bayesian techniques to study the influence of geography and host species in both PVY population structure and dynamics. We have also performed selection and…

0106 biological sciencesEvolutionary GeneticsAmino-acid sitesSelective constraintsPotyviruslcsh:Medicine01 natural sciencesAmino-Acid SitesRecombinant strainPlant RNA virusesNegative selectionMaximum-Likelihoodlcsh:Sciencepathologie végétaleSelective ConstraintsPhylogenyGenetics0303 health sciencesCoat proteinMultidisciplinaryNatural selectionVegetal BiologybiologyEcologyGenetic-structurePotyvirusfood and beveragesEuropePhylogeneticsVenous necrosisPhylogeographyPotato virus YBiogeographyVenous NecrosisSequence AnalysisResearch ArticlePlant RNA VirusesGenome ViralMicrobiologyEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesGenetic-StructureMolecular evolutionVirologyMosaic-virus[SDV.BV]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal BiologyEvolutionary SystematicsBiology030304 developmental biologySolanum tuberosumGenetic diversityEvolutionary BiologyMosaic virusHost (biology)Maximum-likelihoodlcsh:RComputational Biologyvirus à de la pomme de terreBayes Theoremlégumebiology.organism_classificationMutational analysisMosaic-VirusMutational AnalysisEvolutionary EcologyRecombinant StrainNorth Americalcsh:QBiologie végétalePopulation Genetics010606 plant biology & botany
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The transcriptomics of an experimentally evolved plant-virus interaction

2015

[EN] Models of plant-virus interaction assume that the ability of a virus to infect a host genotype depends on the matching between virulence and resistance genes. Recently, we evolved tobacco etch potyvirus (TEV) lineages on different ecotypes of Arabidopsis thaliana, and found that some ecotypes selected for specialist viruses whereas others selected for generalists. Here we sought to evaluate the transcriptomic basis of such relationships. We have characterized the transcriptomic responses of five ecotypes infected with the ancestral and evolved viruses. Genes and functional categories differentially expressed by plants infected with local TEV isolates were identified, showing heterogene…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineArabidopsis thalianaPotyvirusArabidopsisFalse discovery rateLong-distance movementGeneralist and specialist species01 natural sciencesArticle03 medical and health sciencesPlant virusViral emergencePlant defense against herbivoryArabidopsis thalianaGeneticsEcotypeMultidisciplinarybiologyEcotypePlum pox virusTobacco etch virusGene Expression ProfilingfungiPotyvirusfood and beveragesTobacco-ETCH-virusbiology.organism_classification030104 developmental biologyExperimental evolutionABC transportersHost-Pathogen InteractionsGene expressionAdaptationChloroplast proteome010606 plant biology & botany
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Mutagenesis scanning uncovers evolutionary constraints on tobacco etch Potyvirus membrane-associated 6K2 protein

2019

RNA virus high mutation rate is a double-edged sword. At the one side, most mutations jeopardize proteins functions; at the other side, mutations are needed to fuel adaptation. The relevant question then is the ratio between beneficial and deleterious mutations. To evaluate this ratio, we created a mutant library of the 6K2 gene of tobacco etch potyvirus that contains every possible single-nucleotide substitution. 6K2 protein anchors the virus replication complex to the network of endoplasmic reticulum membranes. The library was inoculated into the natural host Nicotiana tabacum, allowing competition among all these mutants and selection of those that are potentially viable. We identified 1…

Potyvirus -- Aspectes genètics0106 biological sciencesNonsynonymous substitutionMutation rateEvolució molecularMutantPopulationPotyvirusProteïnes virals -- Aspectes genèticsMutagenesis (molecular biology technique)BiologyVirus Replication010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesReplicació viralEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesNegative selectionViral ProteinsVirus fitnessGeneticseducationGeneEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biology2. Zero hungerGenetics0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyVirulenceMutació (Biologia)Transmembrane proteinPhenotypeMutagenesisMutationBulk selectionTEVResearch Article
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Extremely high mutation rate of a hammerhead viroid

2009

Supporting information (Materials and methods, figs. S1-S3, suppl. references) available at: http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/data/323/5919/1308/DC1/1

Mutation rateViroidvirusesMolecular Sequence DataPopulationChrysanthemum chlorotic mottle viroidGenome ViralVirus ReplicationMutation ratesRNA CatalyticRepliconSelection GeneticeducationGeneticseducation.field_of_studyMultidisciplinarybiologyReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionRibozymeRNAbiology.organism_classificationVirologyViroidsReplication fidelityAvsunviroidaeHammerhead ribozymesMutationMutation (genetic algorithm)biology.proteinNucleic Acid ConformationRNA ViralRepliconRNA replication
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Emergence and Phylodynamics of Citrus tristeza virus in Sicily, Italy

2013

Citrus tristeza virus (CTV) outbreaks were detected in Sicily island, Italy for the first time in 2002. To gain insight into the evolutionary forces driving the emergence and phylogeography of these CTV populations, we determined and analyzed the nucleotide sequences of the p20 gene from 108 CTV isolates collected from 2002 to 2009. Bayesian phylogenetic analysis revealed that mild and severe CTV isolates belonging to five different clades (lineages) were introduced in Sicily in 2002. Phylogeographic analysis showed that four lineages co-circulated in the main citrus growing area located in Eastern Sicily. However, only one lineage (composed of mild isolates) spread to distant areas of Sici…

Nonsynonymous substitutionCitrusGenetic-variationLineage (evolution)Population Dynamicslcsh:MedicinePopulation geneticsPlant Sciencelcsh:SciencePhylogenetic analysesPhylogenyGeneticsMultidisciplinarybiologyPhylogenetic treeGeographyCitrus tristeza virusAgriculturePhylogeneticsItalyRNA ViralEvolutionary dynamicsCross-protectionSequence AnalysisResearch ArticleClosterovirusDNA ComplementaryMolecular Sequence DataPlant PathogensCropsMicrobiologyViral EvolutionFruitsGenetic driftSpecies SpecificityVirologyMosaic-virusGenetic variationCTV Phylodynamics SicilyEvolutionary SystematicsPopulation-structureHost passageBiologyPlant DiseasesEvolutionary BiologyMaximum-likelihoodlcsh:RSettore AGR/12 - Patologia VegetaleComputational BiologyGenetic VariationBayes TheoremSequence Analysis DNAPlant Pathologybiology.organism_classificationAgronomyViral phylodynamicsDNA polymorphismEvolutionary biologyMolecular evolutionlcsh:Q
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Theoretical conditions for the coexistence of viral strains with differences in phenotypic traits : A bifurcation analysis

2019

We investigate the dynamics of a wild-type viral strain which generates mutant strains differing in phenotypic properties for infectivity, virulence and mutation rates. We study, by means of a mathematical model and bifurcation analysis, conditions under which the wild-type and mutant viruses, which compete for the same host cells, can coexist. The coexistence conditions are formulated in terms of the basic reproductive numbers of the strains, a maximum value of the mutation rate and the virulence of the pathogens. The analysis reveals that parameter space can be divided into five regions, each with distinct dynamics, that are organized around degenerate Bogdanov–Takens and zero-Hopf bifurc…

1001infection dynamicsMutation rate6EpidemiologyMutantVirulenceBiology01 natural sciences87010305 fluids & plasmas03 medical and health sciencesBifurcations1190103 physical sciences1008mathematical biologylcsh:Science51 - Matemàtiques030304 developmental biologyGeneticsInfectivityvirus evolution0303 health sciencesMathematical and theoretical biologyMultidisciplinaryStrain (chemistry)Infection dynamicsPhenotypic traitVirus evolutionViral evolutionMathematical biologyepidemiologylcsh:QMatemàtiquesbifurcationsMathematicsResearch Article
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Spatially-induced nestedness in a neutral model of phage-bacteria networks

2017

[EN] Ecological networks, both displaying mutualistic or antagonistic interactions, seem to share common structural traits: the presence of nestedness and modularity. A variety of model approaches and hypothesis have been formulated concerning the significance and implications of these properties. In phage-bacteria bipartite infection networks, nestedness seems to be the rule in many different contexts. Modeling the coevolution of a diverse virus¿host ensemble is a difficult task, given the dimensionality and multi parametric nature of a standard continuous approximation. Here, we take a different approach, by using a neutral, toy model of host¿phage interactions on a spatial lattice. Each …

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineComputer sciencevirus–host interactionsVirus host interactionsBiologyBit array010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesVirologyCoevolutionContinuous approximationMulti parametricToy modelEcologyNested networksEcological network030104 developmental biologyBipartite graphNestednessMatching allele dynamicsBiological systemNeutral modelResearch ArticleCurse of dimensionalityCoevolution
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Adaptation of turnip mosaic potyvirus to a specific niche reduces its genetic and environmental robustness

2020

Robustness is the preservation of the phenotype in the face of genetic and environmental perturbations. It has been argued that robustness must be an essential fitness component of RNA viruses owed to their small and compacted genomes, high mutation rates and living in ever-changing environmental conditions. Given that genetic robustness might hamper possible beneficial mutations, it has been suggested that genetic robustness can only evolve as a side-effect of the evolution of robustness mechanisms specific to cope with environmental perturbations, a theory known as plastogenetic congruence. However, empirical evidences from different viral systems are contradictory. To test how adaptation…

0106 biological sciencesMutation rateNicherobustness010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesMicrobiologyGenome03 medical and health sciencesplant virusVirologythermal fluctuationsAcademicSubjects/MED00860experimental evolutionplastogenetic congruence030304 developmental biologyvirus evolution0303 health sciencesExperimental evolutionbiologyAcademicSubjects/SCI01130AcademicSubjects/SCI02285PotyvirusRobustness (evolution)biology.organism_classificationPhenotypeEvolutionary biologyViral evolutionmutagenesisResearch Article
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Viral fitness determines the magnitude of transcriptomic and epigenomic reprograming of defense responses in plants

2020

Although epigenetic factors may influence the expression of defense genes in plants, their role in antiviral responses and the impact of viral adaptation and evolution in shaping these interactions are still poorly explored. We used two isolates of turnip mosaic potyvirus with varying degrees of adaptation to Arabidopsis thaliana to address these issues. One of the isolates was experimentally evolved in the plant and presented increased load and virulence relative to the ancestral isolate. The magnitude of the transcriptomic responses was larger for the evolved isolate and indicated a role of innate immunity systems triggered by molecular patterns and effectors in the infection process. Sev…

0106 biological sciencesPotyvirusAdaptation BiologicalArabidopsisTurnip mosaic virus01 natural sciencesEpigenesis Genetic03 medical and health sciencesEpigenomeBiotic stressGeneticsPlant–virus interactionTurnip mosaic virusEpigeneticsMolecular BiologyGeneRNA-Directed DNA MethylationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologyEpigenomicsGenetics0303 health sciencesbiologyRNA-directed DNA methylationsystems biologyEpigenomevirus adaptationDNA Methylationbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionRNA silencingExperimental evolutionHost-Pathogen InteractionsDNA methylationMethylomeGenetic FitnessTranscriptome010606 plant biology & botany
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Viral fitness determines the magnitude of transcriptomic and epigenomic reprogramming of defense responses in plants

2019

SUMMARYAlthough epigenetic factors may influence the expression of defense genes in plants, their role in antiviral responses and the impact of viral adaptation and evolution in shaping these interactions are still poorly explored. We used two isolates of turnip mosaic potyvirus (TuMV) with varying degrees of adaptation to Arabidopsis thaliana to address these issues. One of the isolates was experimentally evolved in the plant and presented increased load and virulence relative to the ancestral isolate. The magnitude of the transcriptomic responses were larger for the evolved isolate and indicated a role of innate immunity systems triggered by molecular patterns and effectors in the infecti…

GeneticsRNA silencingInnate immune systemDNA methylationfood and beveragesArabidopsis thalianaEpigeneticsBiologybiology.organism_classificationGeneChromatinEpigenomics
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Ultradeep Sequencing Analysis of Population Dynamics of Virus Escape Mutants in RNAi-Mediated Resistant Plants

2012

Plant artificial micro-RNAs (amiRs) have been engineered to target viral genomes and induce their degradation. However, the exceptional evolutionary plasticity of RNA viruses threatens the durability of the resistance conferred by these amiRs. It has recently been shown that viral populations not experiencing strong selective pressure from an antiviral amiR may already contain enough genetic variability in the target sequence to escape plant resistance in an almost deterministic manner. Furthermore, it has also been shown that viral populations exposed to subinhibitory concentrations of the antiviral amiR speed up this process. In this article, we have characterized the molecular evolutiona…

Artificial micro-RNAsPopulation genetics[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Population DynamicsPotyvirusStatistics as TopicPopulationMutantArabidopsisReplicationMirnasBiologyType-1VirusEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesRNA interferenceInterfering rnasGeneticsSirnaseducationMolecular BiologyPhylogenyResearch ArticlesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPlant Diseases030304 developmental biologyInfluenza-VirusInhibitionGenetics0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyArtificial micrornasResistant plantsNucleotides030302 biochemistry & molecular biologyGenetic VariationHigh-Throughput Nucleotide SequencingSequence Analysis DNAVirologyVirus evolution3. Good healthMicroRNAsExperimental evolutionMutationNext-generation sequencingRNA InterferenceTranscription
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Plant virus evolution under strong drought conditions results in a transition from parasitism to mutualism

2021

Environmental conditions are an important factor driving pathogens’ evolution. Here, we explore the effects of drought stress in plant virus evolution. We evolved turnip mosaic potyvirus in well-watered and drought conditions in Arabidopsis thaliana accessions that differ in their response to virus infection. Virus adaptation occurred in all accessions independently of watering status. Drought-evolved viruses conferred a significantly higher drought tolerance to infected plants. By contrast, nonsignificant increases in tolerance were observed in plants infected with viruses evolved under standard watering. The magnitude of this effect was dependent on the plant accessions. Differences in to…

Arabidopsis thalianamutualismvirusesDrought tolerancePotyvirusdrought tolerancehormone signalingBiologyVirusMutualismHormone signalingPlant virusexperimental evolutionSymbiosisGeneticsMutualism (biology)virus evolutionExperimental evolutionMultidisciplinaryAbiotic stressSystems BiologyfungiPotyvirusfood and beveragesBiological Sciencesbiology.organism_classificationVirus evolutionExperimental evolutionViral evolutiongene expressionGene expression
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Evolution of fitness in experimental populations of vesicular stomatitis virus

1996

Abstract The evolution of fitness in experimental clonal populations of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) has been compared under different genetic (fitness of initial clone) and demographic (population dynamics) regimes. In spite of the high genetic heterogeneity among replicates within experiments, there is a clear effect of population dynamics on the evolution of fitness. Those populations that went through strong periodic bottlenecks showed a decreased fitness in competition experiments with wild type. Conversely, mutant populations that were transferred under the dynamics of continuous population expansions increased their fitness when compared with the same wild type. The magnitude of …

Population fragmentationmedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationClone (cell biology)BiologyInvestigationsGenetic analysisCompetition (biology)Vesicular stomatitis Indiana virusCell LineGenetic driftCricetinaeGenetic variationGeneticsAnimalsHumanseducationMathematical Computingmedia_commonGeneticseducation.field_of_studyModels GeneticGenetic heterogeneityAdaptation PhysiologicalBiological EvolutionHeLa Cells
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Natural Selection Fails to Optimize Mutation Rates for Long-Term Adaptation on Rugged Fitness Landscapes

2008

The rate of mutation is central to evolution. Mutations are required for adaptation, yet most mutations with phenotypic effects are deleterious. As a consequence, the mutation rate that maximizes adaptation will be some intermediate value. Here, we used digital organisms to investigate the ability of natural selection to adjust and optimize mutation rates. We assessed the optimal mutation rate by empirically determining what mutation rate produced the highest rate of adaptation. Then, we allowed mutation rates to evolve, and we evaluated the proximity to the optimum. Although we chose conditions favorable for mutation rate optimization, the evolved rates were invariably far below the optimu…

0106 biological sciencesMutation rateTime FactorsDigital organismsFitness landscapeQH301-705.5Biology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesCellular and Molecular Neuroscience03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineGeneticsComputer SimulationBiology (General)Selection GeneticMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesEvolutionary BiologyNatural selectionEcologyModels GeneticComputational Biology15. Life on landAdaptation PhysiologicalBiological EvolutionComputational Biology/Evolutionary ModelingReplication fidelityAsexual populationsEvolvabilityComputational Theory and MathematicsEvolutionary biologyModeling and SimulationViral evolutionMutation (genetic algorithm)MutationDNA Mismatch repairAdaptationAvida030217 neurology & neurosurgeryResearch Article
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Evolutionary history conditions the timing of transmission in vesicular stomatitis virus.

2001

It has been postulated that early transmitted viruses would evolve to be more virulent than late transmitted ones. The reason for this prediction is that early transmission selects for rapid viral replication and, consequently, rapid host death, whereas late transmission would select for slow-replicating viruses that permit longer survival to the host. To test this prediction, experimental lineages of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) had been adapted to three different transmission dynamics during more than 100 generations. Transmission dynamic differed in the stage of infection at which transmission took place: early, intermediate or late. Regardless the timing of transmission imposed duri…

Microbiology (medical)Time FactorsVirulenceVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusBiologyVirus ReplicationMicrobiologyModels BiologicalVirusVesicular stomatitis Indiana viruslaw.inventionlawRhabdoviridae InfectionsGeneticsHumansMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeneticsExperimental evolutionVirulenceHost (biology)biology.organism_classificationVirologyBiological EvolutionInfectious DiseasesTransmission (mechanics)Viral replicationVesicular stomatitis virusInfection, genetics and evolution : journal of molecular epidemiology and evolutionary genetics in infectious diseases
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Climb Every Mountain?

2003

2 pages, 1 figure.-- PMID: 14684807 [PubMed].

Ecological nicheEnvironmental nichesMultidisciplinaryEcologyNicheClimbEvolutionary biologyBacterial populationAdaptationAdaptationBiologyScience
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The distribution of fitness effects caused by single-nucleotide substitutions in an RNA virus.

2004

6 pages, 3 figures.-- PMID: 15159545 [PubMed].-- PMCID: PMC420405.-- Supporting information (Table 3: Relevant information about each single-nucleotide substation mutant created) available at: http://www.pnas.org/content/101/22/8396/suppl/DC1

PopulationMutantMutagenesis (molecular biology technique)Evolutionary biologyVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusSingle-nucleotide substitutionsGenetic variationAnimalsPoint MutationMutational fitness effectseducationGeneticseducation.field_of_studyMultidisciplinarybiologyPoint mutationRNAGenetic VariationRNA virusRNA viral genomesBiological Sciencesbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionGenetics PopulationVesicular stomatitis virusMutagenesis Site-DirectedProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
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Clonal Interference and the Evolution of RNA Viruses

1999

In asexual populations, beneficial mutations that occur in different lineages compete with one another. This phenomenon, known as clonal interference, ensures that those beneficial mutations that do achieve fixation are of large effect. Clonal interference also increases the time between fixations, thereby slowing the adaptation of asexual populations. The effects of clonal interference were measured in the asexual RNA virus vesicular stomatitis virus; rates and average effects of beneficial mutations were quantified.

GeneticsLikelihood FunctionsModels StatisticalMultidisciplinaryGenes ViralbiologyClonal interferenceRNARNA virusVirus Replicationbiology.organism_classificationAdaptation PhysiologicalBiological EvolutionModels BiologicalVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusCell LineGene FrequencyVesicular stomatitis virusCricetinaeMutationConfidence IntervalsAnimalsScience
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r- and K-selection in experimental populations of vesicular stomatitis virus.

2002

Here we explore the adaptation of vesicular stomatitis RNA virus to different population densities and the existence of a trade-off between r- and K-selection. Increasing population density represents a challenging special situation for viruses, since different selective pressures arise depending upon the number of available host cells per virus. Adaptation to low density represents a prototypical case of r-selection, where the optimal evolutionary solution should be a high replication rate. Adaptation to high density represents a case of K-selection. In this case, genotypes optimally exploiting the resources, instead of faster replicating ones, should be selected. Five independent populati…

Microbiology (medical)GeneticsExperimental evolutionbiologyr/K selection theoryRNA virusbiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyPopulation densityBiological EvolutionVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusVesicular StomatitisInfectious DiseasesEffective population sizeVesicular stomatitis virusGeneticsAdaptationSelection GeneticMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsInfection, genetics and evolution : journal of molecular epidemiology and evolutionary genetics in infectious diseases
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The evolution of RNA viruses: A population genetics view.

2000

RNA viruses are excellent experimental models for studying evolution under the theoretical framework of population genetics. For a proper justification of this thesis we have introduced some properties of RNA viruses that are relevant for studying evolution. On the other hand, population genetics is a reductionistic theory of evolution. It does not consider or make simplistic assumptions on the transformation laws within and between genotypic and phenotypic spaces. However, such laws are minimized in the case of RNA viruses because the phenotypic space maps onto the genotypic space in a much more linear way than on higher DNA-based organisms. Under experimental conditions, we have tested th…

GeneticsMultidisciplinarybiologyvirusesRNAPopulation geneticsGenetic Variationbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionVirusEffective population sizeVesicular stomatitis virusMolecular evolutionViral evolutionColloquium PaperGenetic variationRNA VirusesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
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Diminishing Returns of Population Size in the Rate of RNA Virus Adaptation

2000

ABSTRACT Whenever an asexual viral population evolves by adapting to new environmental conditions, beneficial mutations, the ultimate cause of adaptation, are randomly produced and then fixed in the population. The larger the population size and the higher the mutation rate, the more beneficial mutations can be produced per unit time. With the usually high mutation rate of RNA viruses and in a large enough population, several beneficial mutations could arise at the same time but in different genetic backgrounds, and if the virus is asexual, they will never be brought together through recombination. Thus, the best of these genotypes must outcompete each other on their way to fixation. This c…

Mutation rateAdolescentImmunologyPopulationBiologyVirus ReplicationModels BiologicalMicrobiologyVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusCell LineCricetinaeVirologyAnimalsHumanseducationGeneticseducation.field_of_studyModels StatisticalClonal interferencePopulation sizeRNARNA virusbiology.organism_classificationAdaptation PhysiologicalBiological EvolutionFixation (population genetics)Vesicular stomatitis virusInsect ScienceMutationRecombination and EvolutionJournal of Virology
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Frequency-Dependent Selection in a Mammalian RNA Virus

1997

RNA viruses have been used as experimental systems to test evolutionary hypotheses such as Muller's ratchet (Chao 1990; Duarte et al. 1992, 1993; Clarke et al. 1993), the Red Queen hypothesis (Clarke et al. 1994), the nature of the adaptive topography (Elena, 1995; Elena et al. 1996), and the dynamics of adaptive evolution (Elena 1995; Novella et al. 1995). Two hypotheses which have received attention in virus studies are the competitive exclusion principle and frequency-dependent selection. The competitive exclusion principle (Hardin 1960) states that two populations or species competing for the same limiting resource cannot stably coexist because one competitor will displace the other. An…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineeducation.field_of_studyExperimental evolutionmedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationFrequency-dependent selectionViral quasispeciesBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesCompetition (biology)03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologyCompetitive exclusion principleEvolutionary biologyRed Queen hypothesisGeneticseducationGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesSelection (genetic algorithm)Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonEvolution
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Differential effects of vertical and horizontal transmission in the fitness of an RNA virus: A reanalysis

2002

Microbiology (medical)Horizontal and verticalbiologyRNA virusbiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyVirologyDifferential effectslaw.inventionInfectious DiseasesTransmission (mechanics)lawGeneticsMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsInfection, Genetics and Evolution
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Figure S1 from Nonlinear trade-offs allow the cooperation game to evolve from prisoner's dilemma to snow drift

2017

Comparing Monte Carlo and numerical solutions for evolved values of i. Solutions obtained as described in Materials and Methods. Individual points represent i values obtained by the Monte Carlo (MC) and numerical solutions. MC simulations were run for 10,000 generations with population size of N = 500m, where m is group size, and a mutation rate of u = 0.2 and a Gaussian distribution of mutational effects with mean zero and standard deviation = 0.005. Populations generally reach equilibrium values after 1000 generations (figure 2A). Reported values of i are the mean value at the last generation. The parameter space represented in figures 4A-D was explored by letting m range from 2, 3, 4, …,…

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Data from: Experimental evolution of an emerging plant virus in host genotypes that differ in their susceptibility to infection

2014

This study evaluates the extent to which genetic differences among host individuals from the same species conditions the evolution of a plant RNA virus. We performed a three-fold replicated evolution experiment in which Tobacco etch potyvirus isolate At17b (TEV-At17b), adapted to Arabidopsis thaliana ecotype Ler-0, was serially passaged in five genetically heterogeneous ecotypes of A. thaliana. After 15 passages we found that evolved viruses improved their fitness, showed higher infectivity and stronger virulence in their local host ecotypes. The genome of evolved lineages was sequenced and putative adaptive mutations identified. Host-driven convergent mutations have been identified. Eviden…

medicine and health caretrade-offsArabidopsis thalianaMedicinelife-history evolutionLife sciencesTobacco etch virus
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