Search results for "Viral Evolution"

showing 10 items of 72 documents

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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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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Impact of HBV genotypes A and D genetic variability on infection evolution

2015

HBV is characterized by a high genetic variability, which is the basis of its classification into eight genotypes (A-H). HBV infection is associated with different outcomes, from self-limiting acute hepatitis to active chronic hepatitis, asymptomatic carriage, and occult infection. The aim of this study was to analyze the genetic variability of HBV genotypes A and D isolates from 79 cases of self-limiting acute hepatitis and chronic hepatitis, in order to identify HBV variants associated with resolution or chronicity of acute HBV infection. The entire preS-S sequence and a fragment of 346 bp of the preC-C region, containing Enhancer II and Basal Core Promoter sequences, were analyzed. A phy…

AdultMaleMicrobiology (medical)Hepatitis B virusSettore MED/07 - Microbiologia E Microbiologia ClinicaGenotypeAcute hepatitis BBiologymedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyLiver diseaseViral ProteinspreC/C mutationGeneticImmune-escape mutationGenetic variationGenotypeGeneticsmedicineHumansViral ProteinGenetic variabilityMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyAgedHepatitis B virusPolymorphism GeneticpreS/S mutationGenetic VariationHepatitis B viruHepatitis BMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseHepatitis BVirologyBiological EvolutionEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicInfectious DiseasesAmino Acid SubstitutionViral evolutionImmunologyMutationFemaleViral hepatitisHuman
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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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Experimental evolution of an oncolytic vesicular stomatitis virus with increased selectivity for p53-deficient cells

2014

Experimental evolution has been used for various biotechnological applications including protein and microbial cell engineering, but less commonly in the field of oncolytic virotherapy. Here, we sought to adapt a rapidly evolving RNA virus to cells deficient for the tumor suppressor gene p53, a hallmark of cancer cells. To achieve this goal, we established four independent evolution lines of the vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) in p53-knockout mouse embryonic fibroblasts (p53-/- MEFs) under conditions favoring the action of natural selection. We found that some evolved viruses showed increased fitness and cytotoxicity in p53-/- cells but not in isogenic p53+/+ cells, indicating gene-specifi…

Cancer TreatmentVirus OncolíticosProtein EngineeringMiceMedicine and Health SciencesMacromolecular EngineeringMice KnockoutOncolytic VirotherapyMultidisciplinaryQProteína p53 Supresora de TumorRNeoplasias de la Mama3. Good healthOncolytic VirusesOncologyVesicular stomatitis virusColonic NeoplasmsMedicineFemaleVesicular StomatitisResearch ArticleBiotechnologyDirected EvolutionEvolutionary ProcessesTumor suppressor geneScienceBioengineeringBreast NeoplasmsBiologyMicrobiologyViral EvolutionVirusVesicular StomatitisVirologyCell Line TumorGeneticsAnimalsHumansEvolutionary BiologyNeoplasias del ColonBiology and Life SciencesRNA virusVesiculovirusbiology.organism_classificationVirologyOrganismal EvolutionOncolytic virusAnimal Models of InfectionArtificial SelectionSynthetic BioengineeringViruses and CancerCell cultureMicrobial EvolutionCancer cellCancer researchDirected Molecular EvolutionTumor Suppressor Protein p53
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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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Genome Instability in DNA Viruses

2016

Genome instability generally refers to the appearance of a high frequency of mutations in a single genome, including point mutations, insertions/deletions, or major rearrangements. DNA viruses usually show greater genome stability than RNA viruses. However, recent genome-wide molecular evolution and experimental studies have shown that DNA viruses can exhibit rapid sequence changes that are often found in loci involved in dynamic host–virus interactions. In fact, DNA viruses are capable of promoting genome instability specifically at certain genes, thus boosting diversity wherein needed. We review some of the molecular mechanisms underlying genomic instability in prokaryotic and eukaryotic …

Comparative genomicsGenome instabilityGeneticsGenome evolutionViral evolutionGenomicsHuman genomeBiologyGeneGenome
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Split decomposition A technique to analyze viral evolution

1993

A clustering technique allowing a restricted amount of overlapping and based on an abstract theory of coherent decompositions of finite metrics is used to analyze the evolution of foot-and-mouth disease viruses. The emerging picture is compatible with the existence of viral populations with a quasispecies structure and illustrates various forms of evolution of this virus family. In addition, it allows the correlation of these forms with geographic occurrence.

EVOLUTIONARY TREESViral quasispeciesBiologyAbstract theoryOVERLAPPING CLUSTERINGAphthovirusMolecular evolutionAnimalsQuantitative Biology::Populations and EvolutionSerotypingCluster analysisGeneticsMultidisciplinaryModels GeneticPhylogenetic treeQUASI-SPECIESHamming distanceBiological EvolutionInvestigation methodsViral evolutionVirusesCattleBiological systemMonte Carlo MethodMathematicsResearch Article
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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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From molecular genetics to phylodynamics: evolutionary relevance of mutation rates across viruses.

2012

Although evolution is a multifactorial process, theory posits that the speed of molecular evolution should be directly determined by the rate at which spontaneous mutations appear. To what extent these two biochemical and population-scale processes are related in nature, however, is largely unknown. Viruses are an ideal system for addressing this question because their evolution is fast enough to be observed in real time, and experimentally-determined mutation rates are abundant. This article provides statistically supported evidence that the mutation rate determines molecular evolution across all types of viruses. Properties of the viral genome such as its size and chemical composition are…

Evolutionary Geneticslcsh:Immunologic diseases. AllergyMutation rateGenome evolutionImmunologyGenome ViralBiologyGenomeMicrobiologyEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesMutation RateMolecular evolutionPhylogeneticsVirologyGeneticsMolecular BiologyBiologylcsh:QH301-705.5Phylogeny030304 developmental biologyGenetics0303 health sciencesEvolutionary BiologyModels Genetic030306 microbiologyMutagenesisMicrobial MutationBiological EvolutionViral phylodynamicslcsh:Biology (General)Viral evolutionVirusesParasitologylcsh:RC581-607Population GeneticsResearch ArticlePLoS Pathogens
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