Search results for "Viral evolution"

showing 2 items of 72 documents

Experimental evolution of an RNA virus in cells with innate immunity defects

2015

Experimental evolution studies have shown that RNA viruses respond rapidly to directional selection and thus can adapt efficiently to changes in host cell tropism, antiviral drugs, or other imposed selective pressures. However, the evolution of RNA viruses under relaxed selection has been less extensively explored. Here, we evolved vesicular stomatitis virus in mouse embryonic fibroblasts knocked-out for PKR, a protein with a central role in antiviral innate immunity. Vesicular stomatitis virus adapted to PKR-negative mouse embryonic fibroblasts in a gene-specific manner, since the evolved viruses exhibited little or no fitness improvement in PKR-positive cells. Full-length sequencing revea…

parallel evolutionepistasisvirusesMutagenesis (molecular biology technique)Microbiology03 medical and health sciencesVirologyexperimental evolutionTropismattenuation030304 developmental biologyGenetics0303 health sciencesExperimental evolutionInnate immune systembiology030306 microbiology030302 biochemistry & molecular biologyRNARNA virusPKRbiology.organism_classificationVesicular stomatitis virusViral evolutionvesicular stomatitis virusCorrigendumResearch ArticleVirus Evolution
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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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