Experimental Passage of St. Louis Encephalitis Virus In Vivo in Mosquitoes and Chickens Reveals Evolutionarily Significant Virus Characteristics
Open Access
- 17 November 2009
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Public Library of Science (PLoS) in PLOS ONE
- Vol. 4 (11) , e7876
- https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0007876
Abstract
St. Louis encephalitis virus (SLEV; Flaviviridae, flavivirus) was the major cause of epidemic flaviviral encephalitis in the U.S. prior to the introduction of West Nile virus (WNV) in 1999. However, outbreaks of SLEV have been significantly more limited then WNV in terms of levels of activity and geographic dispersal. One possible explanation for these variable levels of activity is that differences in the potential for each virus to adapt to its host cycle exist. The need for arboviruses to replicate in disparate hosts is thought to result in constraints on both evolution and host-specific adaptation. If cycling is the cause of genetic stability observed in nature and arboviruses lack host specialization, then sequential passage should result in both the accumulation of mutations and specialized viruses better suited for replication in that host. Previous studies suggest that WNV and SLEV differ in capacity for both genetic change and host specialization, and in the costs each accrues from specializing. In an attempt to clarify how selective pressures contribute to epidemiological patterns of WNV and SLEV, we evaluated mutant spectra size, consensus genetic change, and phenotypic changes for SLEV in vivo following 20 sequential passages via inoculation in either Culex pipiens mosquitoes or chickens. Results demonstrate that the capacity for genetic change is large for SLEV and that the size of the mutant spectrum is host-dependent using our passage methodology. Despite this, a general lack of consensus change resulted from passage in either host, a result that contrasts with the idea that constraints on evolution in nature result from host cycling alone. Results also suggest that a high level of adaptation to both hosts already exists, despite host cycling. A strain significantly more infectious in chickens did emerge from one lineage of chicken passage, yet other lineages and all mosquito passage strains did not display measurable host-specific fitness gains. In addition, increased infectivity in chickens did not decrease infectivity in mosquitoes, which further contrasts the concept of fitness trade-offs for arboviruses.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mosquitoes Put the Brake on Arbovirus Evolution: Experimental Evolution Reveals Slower Mutation Accumulation in Mosquito Than Vertebrate CellsPLoS Pathogens, 2009
- Genetic variation of St. Louis encephalitis virusJournal of General Virology, 2008
- Antagonistic Pleiotropy Involving Promoter Sequences in a VirusJournal of Molecular Biology, 2008
- Characterization of mosquito-adapted West Nile virusJournal of General Virology, 2008
- Arbovirus evolution in vivo is constrained by host alternationProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2008
- Genetic diversity and purifying selection in West Nile virus populations are maintained during host switchingVirology, 2008
- Adaptation of two flaviviruses results in differences in genetic heterogeneity and virus adaptabilityJournal of General Virology, 2007
- Role of the mutant spectrum in adaptation and replication of West Nile virusJournal of General Virology, 2007
- The West Nile virus mutant spectrum is host-dependant and a determinant of mortality in miceVirology, 2006
- Cell-specific adaptation of two flaviviruses following serial passage in mosquito cell cultureVirology, 2006