Different Evolutionary Trajectories of European Avian-Like and Classical Swine H1N1 Influenza A Viruses
- 1 June 2009
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Virology
- Vol. 83 (11) , 5485-5494
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.02565-08
Abstract
In 1979, a lineage of avian-like H1N1 influenza A viruses emerged in European swine populations independently from the classical swine H1N1 virus lineage that had circulated in pigs since the Spanish influenza pandemic of 1918. To determine whether these two distinct lineages of swine-adapted A/H1N1 viruses evolved from avian-like A/H1N1 ancestors in similar ways, as might be expected given their common host species and origin, we compared patterns of nucleotide and amino acid change in whole genome sequences of both groups. An analysis of nucleotide compositional bias across all eight genomic segments for the two swine lineages showed a clear lineage-specific bias, although a segment-specific effect was also apparent. As such, there appears to be only a relatively weak host-specific selection pressure. Strikingly, despite each lineage evolving in the same species of host for decades, amino acid analysis revealed little evidence of either parallel or convergent changes. These findings suggest that although adaptation due to evolutionary lineages can be distinguished, there are functional and structural constraints on all gene segments and that the evolutionary trajectory of each lineage of swine A/H1N1 virus has a strong historical contingency. Thus, in the context of emergence of an influenza A virus strain via a host switch event, it is difficult to predict what specific polygenic changes are needed for mammalian adaptation.Keywords
This publication has 73 references indexed in Scilit:
- Patterns of Evolution and Host Gene Mimicry in Influenza and Other RNA VirusesPLoS Pathogens, 2008
- The Evolutionary Genetics and Emergence of Avian Influenza Viruses in Wild BirdsPLoS Pathogens, 2008
- Quantitative biochemical rationale for differences in transmissibility of 1918 pandemic influenza A virusesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2008
- Identification of H2N3 influenza A viruses from swine in the United StatesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- BEAST: Bayesian evolutionary analysis by sampling treesBMC Ecology and Evolution, 2007
- Persistent Host Markers in Pandemic and H5N1 Influenza VirusesJournal of Virology, 2007
- Comparison of Avian and Human Influenza A Viruses Reveals a Mutational Bias on the Viral GenomesJournal of Virology, 2006
- Relaxed Phylogenetics and Dating with ConfidencePLoS Biology, 2006
- Universal primer set for the full-length amplification of all influenza A virusesArchiv für die gesamte Virusforschung, 2001
- A population genetic model for the evolution of synonymous codon usage: patterns and predictionsGenetics Research, 1999