The evolutionary dynamics of influenza A virus adaptation to mammalian hosts
- 19 March 2013
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Royal Society in Philosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 368 (1614) , 20120382
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2012.0382
Abstract
Few questions on infectious disease are more important than understanding how and why avian influenza A viruses successfully emerge in mammalian populations, yet little is known about the rate and nature of the virus’ genetic adaptation in new hosts. Here, we measure, for the first time, the genomic rate of adaptive evolution of swine influenza viruses (SwIV) that originated in birds. By using a curated dataset of more than 24 000 human and swine influenza gene sequences, including 41 newly characterized genomes, we reconstructed the adaptive dynamics of three major SwIV lineages (Eurasian, EA; classical swine, CS; triple reassortant, TR). We found that, following the transfer of the EA lineage from birds to swine in the late 1970s, EA virus genes have undergone substantially faster adaptive evolution than those of the CS lineage, which had circulated among swine for decades. Further, the adaptation rates of the EA lineage antigenic haemagglutinin and neuraminidase genes were unexpectedly high and similar to those observed in human influenza A. We show that the successful establishment of avian influenza viruses in swine is associated with raised adaptive evolution across the entire genome for many years after zoonosis, reflecting the contribution of multiple mutations to the coordinated optimization of viral fitness in a new environment. This dynamics is replicated independently in the polymerase genes of the TR lineage, which established in swine following separate transmission from non-swine hosts.Keywords
This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- Airborne Transmission of Influenza A/H5N1 Virus Between FerretsScience, 2012
- Experimental adaptation of an influenza H5 HA confers respiratory droplet transmission to a reassortant H5 HA/H1N1 virus in ferretsNature, 2012
- The Genomic Rate of Molecular Adaptation of the Human Influenza A VirusMolecular Biology and Evolution, 2011
- Influenza A Virus Hemagglutinin Antibody Escape Promotes Neuraminidase Antigenic Variation and Drug ResistancePLOS ONE, 2011
- Hemagglutinin Receptor Binding Avidity Drives Influenza A Virus Antigenic DriftScience, 2009
- Unusual Molecular Architecture of the Machupo Virus Attachment GlycoproteinJournal of Virology, 2009
- Different Evolutionary Trajectories of European Avian-Like and Classical Swine H1N1 Influenza A VirusesJournal of Virology, 2009
- Persistent Host Markers in Pandemic and H5N1 Influenza VirusesJournal of Virology, 2007
- ESPript: analysis of multiple sequence alignments in PostScript.Bioinformatics, 1999
- Origin and evolutionary pathways of the H1 hemagglutinin gene of avian, swine and human influenza viruses: cocirculation of two distinct lineages of swine virusArchiv für die gesamte Virusforschung, 1994