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García-Arenal F, McDonald BA. An analysis of the durability of resistance to plant viruses. PHYTOPATHOLOGY 2003; 93:941-52. [PMID: 18943860 DOI: 10.1094/phyto.2003.93.8.941] [Citation(s) in RCA: 115] [Impact Index Per Article: 5.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 05/05/2023]
Abstract
ABSTRACT Genetic resistance often fails because a resistance-breaking (RB) pathogen genotype increases in frequency. On the basis of an analysis of cellular plant pathogens, it was recently proposed that the evolutionary potential of a pathogen is a major determinant of the durability of resistance. We test this hypothesis for plant viruses, which differ substantially from cellular pathogens in the nature, size, and expression of their genomes. Our analysis was based on 29 plant virus species that provide a good representation of the genetic and biological diversity of plant viruses. These 29 viruses were involved in 35 pathosystems, and 50 resistance factors deployed against them were analyzed. Resistance was found to be durable more often than not, in contrast with resistance to cellular plant pathogens. In a third of the analyzed pathosystems RB strains have not been reported, and in another third RB strains have been reported but have not become prevalent in the virus population. The evolutionary potential of the viruses in the 35 pathosystems was evaluated with a compound risk index based on three evolutionary factors: the population of the pathogen, the degree of recombination, and the amount of gene and genotype flow. Our analysis indicates that evolutionary potential may be an important determinant of the durability of resistance against plant viruses.
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52
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Wilke CO, Novella IS. Phenotypic mixing and hiding may contribute to memory in viral quasispecies. BMC Microbiol 2003; 3:11. [PMID: 12795816 PMCID: PMC165440 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2180-3-11] [Citation(s) in RCA: 50] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 04/28/2003] [Accepted: 06/09/2003] [Indexed: 12/31/2022] Open
Abstract
BACKGROUND In a number of recent experiments with food-and-mouth disease virus, a deleterious mutant, RED, was found to avoid extinction and remain in the population for long periods of time. Since RED characterizes the past evolutionary history of the population, this observation was called quasispecies memory. While the quasispecies theory predicts the existence of these memory genomes, there is a disagreement between the expected and observed mutant frequency values. Therefore, the origin of quasispecies memory is not fully understood. RESULTS We propose and analyze a simple model of complementation between the wild type virus and a mutant that has an impaired ability of cell entry, the likely cause of fitness differences between wild type and RED mutants. The mutant will go extinct unless it is recreated from the wild type through mutations. However, under phenotypic mixing-and-hiding as a mechanism of complementation, the time to extinction in the absence of mutations increases with increasing multiplicity of infection (m.o.i.). If the RED mutant is constantly recreated by mutations, then its frequency at equilibrium under selection-mutation balance also increases with increasing m.o.i. At high m.o.i., a large fraction of mutant genomes are encapsidated with wild-type protein, which enables them to infect cells as efficiently as the wild type virions, and thus increases their fitness to the wild-type level. Moreover, even at low m.o.i. the equilibrium frequency of the mutant is higher than predicted by the standard quasispecies model, because a fraction of mutant virions generated from wild-type parents will also be encapsidated by wild-type protein. CONCLUSIONS Our model predicts that phenotypic hiding will strongly influence the population dynamics of viruses, particularly at high m.o.i., and will also have important effects on the mutation-selection balance at low m.o.i. The delay in mutant extinction and increase in mutant frequencies at equilibrium may, at least in part, explain memory in quasispecies populations.
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Affiliation(s)
- Claus O Wilke
- Digital Life Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Mail Code 136-93, Pasadena, California 91125, USA
| | - Isabel S Novella
- Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Medical College of Ohio, Toledo, Ohio 43614, USA
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53
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Elena SF, Lenski RE. Evolution experiments with microorganisms: the dynamics and genetic bases of adaptation. Nat Rev Genet 2003; 4:457-69. [PMID: 12776215 DOI: 10.1038/nrg1088] [Citation(s) in RCA: 867] [Impact Index Per Article: 41.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/08/2022]
Abstract
Microorganisms have been mutating and evolving on Earth for billions of years. Now, a field of research has developed around the idea of using microorganisms to study evolution in action. Controlled and replicated experiments are using viruses, bacteria and yeast to investigate how their genomes and phenotypic properties evolve over hundreds and even thousands of generations. Here, we examine the dynamics of evolutionary adaptation, the genetic bases of adaptation, tradeoffs and the environmental specificity of adaptation, the origin and evolutionary consequences of mutators, and the process of drift decay in very small populations.
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Affiliation(s)
- Santiago F Elena
- Instituto de Biología Molecular y Celular de Plantas, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, 46022 Valencia, Spain.
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54
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Wilke CO, Lenski RE, Adami C. Compensatory mutations cause excess of antagonistic epistasis in RNA secondary structure folding. BMC Evol Biol 2003; 3:3. [PMID: 12590655 PMCID: PMC149451 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2148-3-3] [Citation(s) in RCA: 56] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 12/18/2002] [Accepted: 02/05/2003] [Indexed: 11/16/2022] Open
Abstract
BACKGROUND The rate at which fitness declines as an organism's genome accumulates random mutations is an important variable in several evolutionary theories. At an intuitive level, it might seem natural that random mutations should tend to interact synergistically, such that the rate of mean fitness decline accelerates as the number of random mutations is increased. However, in a number of recent studies, a prevalence of antagonistic epistasis (the tendency of multiple mutations to have a mitigating rather than reinforcing effect) has been observed. RESULTS We studied in silico the net amount and form of epistatic interactions in RNA secondary structure folding by measuring the fraction of neutral mutants as a function of mutational distance d. We found a clear prevalence of antagonistic epistasis in RNA secondary structure folding. By relating the fraction of neutral mutants at distance d to the average neutrality at distance d, we showed that this prevalence derives from the existence of many compensatory mutations at larger mutational distances. CONCLUSIONS Our findings imply that the average direction of epistasis in simple fitness landscapes is directly related to the density with which fitness peaks are distributed in these landscapes.
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Affiliation(s)
- Claus O Wilke
- Digital Life Laboratory 136–93, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena CA, 91125, USA
| | - Richard E Lenski
- Center for Biological Modeling, and Center for Microbial Ecology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824, USA
| | - Christoph Adami
- Digital Life Laboratory 136–93, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena CA, 91125, USA
- Jet Propulsion Laboratory 126–347, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena CA 91109, USA
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55
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Abstract
Sex (genetic exchange) is a nearly universal phenomenon in biological populations. But this is surprising given the costs associated with sex. For example, sex tends to break apart co-adapted genes, and sex causes a female to inefficiently contribute only half the genes to her offspring. Why then did sex evolve? One famous model poses that sex evolved to combat Muller's ratchet, the mutational load that accrues when harmful mutations drift to high frequencies in populations of small size. In contrast, the Fisher-Muller Hypothesis predicts that sex evolved to promote genetic variation that speeds adaptation in novel environments. Sexual mechanisms occur in viruses, which feature high rates of deleterious mutation and frequent exposure to novel or changing environments. Thus, confirmation of one or both hypotheses would shed light on the selective advantages of virus sex. Experimental evolution has been used to test these classic models in the RNA bacteriophage phi6, a virus that experiences sex via reassortment of its chromosomal segments. Empirical data suggest that sex might have originated in phi6 to assist in purging deleterious mutations from the genome. However, results do not support the idea that sex evolved because it provides beneficial variation in novel environments. Rather, experiments show that too much sex can be bad for phi6; promiscuity allows selfish viruses to evolve and spread their inferior genes to subsequent generations. Here I discuss various explanations for the evolution of segmentation in RNA viruses, and the added cost of sex when large numbers of viruses co-infect the same cell.
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Affiliation(s)
- Paul E Turner
- Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA.
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56
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Abstract
The evolutionary dynamics of specialization, in the context of the division of labour, are investigated. Individuals associate in groups in which benefits are shared and costs borne individually; each individual is either a generalist who can perform all the necessary tasks, a specialist who performs a sub-set of the necessary tasks, or a parasite who contributes nothing to the group. The implications of the model are explored analytically and through both numerical and Monte Carlo methods. These methods demonstrate the evolution of populations towards stable arrangements of specialists and generalists. The fittest populations are those that divide tasks fairly and associate in large, highly specialized groups. Generalists have a distinct advantage in small groups, but the presence of generalists, ironically, lowers group fitness. Parasites are able to invade both specialized and non-specialized populations. A basic model for the continuous division of labour is also presented, demonstrating a tendency for populations to evolve increasingly unfair divisions of labour. This last result implies that an evolutionary ratchet favours disparity between the workload of specialist populations.
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Affiliation(s)
- L M Wahl
- Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, NJ, USA.
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57
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Cuevas JM, Elena SF, Moya A. Molecular basis of adaptive convergence in experimental populations of RNA viruses. Genetics 2002; 162:533-42. [PMID: 12399369 PMCID: PMC1462289 DOI: 10.1093/genetics/162.2.533] [Citation(s) in RCA: 69] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/07/2023] Open
Abstract
Characterizing the molecular basis of adaptation is one of the most important goals in modern evolutionary genetics. Here, we report a full-genome sequence analysis of 21 independent populations of vesicular stomatitis ribovirus evolved on the same cell type but under different demographic regimes. Each demographic regime differed in the effective viral population size. Evolutionary convergences are widespread both at synonymous and nonsynonymous replacements as well as in an intergenic region. We also found evidence for epistasis among sites of the same and different loci. We explain convergences as the consequence of four factors: (1) environmental homogeneity that supposes an identical challenge for each population, (2) structural constraints within the genome, (3) epistatic interactions among sites that create the observed pattern of covariation, and (4) the phenomenon of clonal interference among competing genotypes carrying different beneficial mutations. Using these convergences, we have been able to estimate the fitness contribution of the identified mutations and epistatic groups. Keeping in mind statistical uncertainties, these estimates suggest that along with several beneficial mutations of major effect, many other mutations got fixed as part of a group of epistatic mutations.
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Affiliation(s)
- José M Cuevas
- Institut Cavanilles de Biodiversitat i Biologia Evolutiva and Departament de Genètica, Universitat de València, Spain
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58
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Abstract
Genetic mutations that lead to undetectable or minimal changes in phenotypes are said to reveal redundant functions. Redundancy is common among phenotypes of higher organisms that experience low mutation rates and small population sizes. Redundancy is less common among organisms with high mutation rates and large populations, or among the rapidly dividing cells of multicellular organisms. In these cases, one even observes the opposite tendency: a hypersensitivity to mutation, which we refer to as antiredundancy. In this paper we analyze the evolutionary dynamics of redundancy and antiredundancy. Assuming a cost of redundancy, we find that large populations will evolve antiredundant mechanisms for removing mutants and thereby bolster the robustness of wild-type genomes; whereas small populations will evolve redundancy to ensure that all individuals have a high chance of survival. We propose that antiredundancy is as important for developmental robustness as redundancy, and is an essential mechanism for ensuring tissue-level stability in complex multicellular organisms. We suggest that antiredundancy deserves greater attention in relation to cancer, mitochondrial disease, and virus infection.
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Affiliation(s)
- David C Krakauer
- Santa Fe Institute, 1399 Hyde Park Road, Santa Fe, NM 87501, USA.
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59
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García-Arenal F, Fraile A, Malpica JM. Variability and genetic structure of plant virus populations. ANNUAL REVIEW OF PHYTOPATHOLOGY 2001; 39:157-86. [PMID: 11701863 DOI: 10.1146/annurev.phyto.39.1.157] [Citation(s) in RCA: 374] [Impact Index Per Article: 16.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 05/23/2023]
Abstract
Populations of plant viruses, like all other living beings, are genetically heterogeneous, a property long recognized in plant virology. Only recently have the processes resulting in genetic variation and diversity in virus populations and genetic structure been analyzed quantitatively. The subject of this review is the analysis of genetic variation, its quantification in plant virus populations, and what factors and processes determine the genetic structure of these populations and its temporal change. The high potential for genetic variation in plant viruses, through either mutation or genetic exchange by recombination or reassortment of genomic segments, need not necessarily result in high diversity of virus populations. Selection by factors such as the interaction of the virus with host plants and vectors and random genetic drift may in fact reduce genetic diversity in populations. There is evidence that negative selection results in virus-encoded proteins being not more variable than those of their hosts and vectors. Evidence suggests that small population diversity, and genetic stability, is the rule. Populations of plant viruses often consist of a few genetic variants and many infrequent variants. Their distribution may provide evidence of a population that is undifferentiated, differentiated by factors such as location, host plant, or time, or that fluctuates randomly in composition, depending on the virus.
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Affiliation(s)
- F García-Arenal
- Departamento de Biotecnología, E.T.S.I. Agrónomos, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, 28040 Madrid, Spain.
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60
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Elena, Moya. Rate of deleterious mutation and the distribution of its effects on fitness in vesicular stomatitis virus. J Evol Biol 1999. [DOI: 10.1046/j.1420-9101.1999.00110.x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 69] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/07/2023]
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61
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Abstract
Sex allows beneficial mutations that occur in separate lineages to be fixed in the same genome. For this reason, the Fisher-Muller model predicts that adaptation to the environment is more rapid in a large sexual population than in an equally large asexual population. Sexual reproduction occurs in populations of the RNA virus phi6 when multiple bacteriophages coinfect the same host cell. Here, we tested the model's predictions by determining whether sex favors more rapid adaptation of phi6 to a bacterial host, Pseudomonas phaseolicola. Replicate populations of phi6 were allowed to evolve in either the presence or absence of sex for 250 generations. All experimental populations showed a significant increase in fitness relative to the ancestor, but sex did not increase the rate of adaptation. Rather, we found that the sexual and asexual treatments also differ because intense intrahost competition between viruses occurs during coinfection. Results showed that the derived sexual viruses were selectively favored only when coinfection is common, indicating that within-host competition detracts from the ability of viruses to exploit the host. Thus, sex was not advantageous because the cost created by intrahost competition was too strong. Our findings indicate that high levels of coinfection exceed an optimum where sex may be beneficial to populations of phi6, and suggest that genetic conflicts can evolve in RNA viruses.
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Affiliation(s)
- P E Turner
- Department of Biology, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742, USA.
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62
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Elena SF, Lenski RE. Test of synergistic interactions among deleterious mutations in bacteria. Nature 1997; 390:395-8. [PMID: 9389477 DOI: 10.1038/37108] [Citation(s) in RCA: 304] [Impact Index Per Article: 11.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/05/2023]
Abstract
Identifying the forces responsible for the origin and maintenance of sexuality remains one of the greatest unsolved problems in biology. The mutational deterministic hypothesis postulates that sex is an adaptation that allows deleterious mutations to be purged from the genome; it requires synergistic interactions, which means that two mutations would be more harmful together than expected from their separate effects. We generated 225 genotypes of Escherichia coli carrying one, two or three successive mutations and measured their fitness relative to an unmutated competitor. The relationship between mutation number and average fitness is nearly log-linear. We also constructed 27 recombinant genotypes having pairs of mutations whose separate and combined effects on fitness were determined. Several pairs exhibit significant interactions for fitness, but they are antagonistic as often as they are synergistic. These results do not support the mutational deterministic hypothesis for the evolution of sex.
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Affiliation(s)
- S F Elena
- Center for Microbial Ecology, Michigan State University, East Lansing 48824, USA.
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63
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Fraile A, Alonso-Prados JL, Aranda MA, Bernal JJ, Malpica JM, García-Arenal F. Genetic exchange by recombination or reassortment is infrequent in natural populations of a tripartite RNA plant virus. J Virol 1997; 71:934-40. [PMID: 8995610 PMCID: PMC191141 DOI: 10.1128/jvi.71.2.934-940.1997] [Citation(s) in RCA: 124] [Impact Index Per Article: 4.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/03/2023] Open
Abstract
Two hundred seventeen field isolates of cucumber mosaic cucumovirus (CMV), sampled from 11 natural populations, were typed by RNase protection assay (RPA) using probes from the genomic RNAs of strains in subgroup I and in subgroup II of CMV strains. Most (85%) of the analyzed isolates belonged to subgroup I. For these subgroup I isolates, only two clearly different RPA patterns, A and B, were found for each of four probes representing RNA1, RNA2, and each of the two open reading frames in RNA3. On the basis of these RPA patterns for each probe, different haplotypes were defined. The frequency composition for these haplotypes differed for the various analyzed populations, with no correlation with place or year of sampling. This genetic structure corresponds to a metapopulation with local extinctions and recolonizations. Most subgroup I isolates (73%) belonged to haplotypes with RPA pattern A (type 1) or B (type 2) for all four probes. A significant fraction of subgroup I isolates (16%) gave evidence of mixed infections with these two main types, from which genetic exchange could occur. Genetic exchange by segment reassortment was seen to occur: the fraction of reassortant isolates was 4%, reassortment did not occur at random, and reassortants did not become established in the population. Thus, there is evidence of selection against reassortment between types 1 and 2 of subgroup I isolates. Aphid transmission experiments with plants doubly infected with type 1 and type 2 isolates gave further evidence that reassortment is selected against in CMV. Genetic exchange by recombination was detected for RNA3, for which two RPA probes were used. Recombinant isolates amounted to 7% and also did not become established in CMV populations. Sequence analyses of regions of RNA1, RNA2, and RNA3 showed that there are strong constraints to maintain the encoded sequence and also gave evidence that these constraints may have been different during divergence of types 1 and 2 and, later on, during diversification of these two types. Constraints to the evolution of encoded proteins may be related to selection against genetic exchange. Our data, thus, do not favor current hypotheses that explain the evolution of multipartite viral genomes to promote genetic exchange.
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Affiliation(s)
- A Fraile
- Departamento de Biotecnología, Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingenieros Agrónomos, Madrid, Spain
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64
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Abstract
Several issues in Chao's related paper J. theor. Biol. (1991, 153, 229-246) are revisited. It is argued that mixes of segments from different viral coinfection groups cannot be regarded as sex, unless one is willing to accept that these groups are replicators and individuals. But, because selection in coinfection groups is dynamically analogous to that in trait groups in structured demes, one should also regard these latter groups as replicators. This approach is unacceptable since the groups in question have irregular ploidies, an unfixed number of parents, and no rules analogous to those of meiosis. It is emphasized, however, that the effective presence of neighbour-modulated fitness can ensure dynamical coexistence of covirus segments, even if the equal net reproduction rate within groups is not warranted. It seems that during the origin of coviruses from complete viruses, a higher-level evolutionary unit has become disintegrated, whereas during the origin of life a higher-level unit, the protocell, has emerged from lower-level ones, i.e. unlinked, replicating genes. These two gene-level systems are not homologous, but analogous. Although it is true that the resistance to parasites and the need to avoid a mutational collapse of the genome are likely to have called for some compartmentation in precellular stages of evolution, no clear demonstration, that the proposed mechanisms (the compartmentalized hypercycle and the stochastic corrector model) do in fact solve the error threshold problem, exists. Neither has a plausible mode of protocellular sex been suggested.
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Affiliation(s)
- E Szathmáry
- Laboratory of Mathematical Biology, MRC National Institute for Medical Research, Mill Hill, London, U.K
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65
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Szathmáry E. Natural selection and dynamical coexistence of defective and complementing virus segments. J Theor Biol 1992; 157:383-406. [PMID: 1465021 DOI: 10.1016/s0022-5193(05)80617-4] [Citation(s) in RCA: 63] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/27/2022]
Abstract
Defective interfering (DI) particles are known to coexist with wildtype viruses under high multiplicity of infection. The complementing segments of coviruses (multiparticle, segmented viruses) coexist under similar conditions. In all cases, within-cell reproductive advantage to one of the segments is rather common. This fact, and the observation that DI particles are parasites, whereas covirus segments are mutualists, call for a non-trivial model of stable dynamical coexistence. The methodical novelty is the application of the structured deme model to virus dynamics. It assumes that biochemical ("ecological") interactions occur among segments within a coinfection group, established through random infection of the cells, and there is complete mixing of the various types emerging from all the coinfection groups (cells) in the virus pool between two infections. Through the application of the model, analytic results on the coexistence of virus segments are obtained for the following cases: virus-DI particle, virus-DI particle-resistant virus, covirus pair, virus-covirus.
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Affiliation(s)
- E Szathmáry
- Laboratory of Mathematical Biology, MRC National Institute for Medical Research, Mill Hill, London, U.K
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66
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67
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Abstract
Multi-component RNA viruses have genomes that are segmented into two or more RNA molecules. A viral particle carries only one RNA molecule. Reproduction of a particle requires complementation by particles carrying other segments of the genome. Complementation is achieved when a group of particles co-infects the same host cell and forms a co-infection group. I have previously proposed the hypothesis that multi-component reproduction evolved in RNA viruses as a form of sex. Multi-component viruses may need sex because, like all RNA viruses, they have very high mutation rates. On the other hand, Nee (1987, J. molec. Biol. 25, 277-281.) has proposed the hypothesis that multi-component genomes evolved because smaller RNA molecules are favored by selection on RNAs within a host cell. Nee (1989, J. theor. Biol. 138, 407-412.) also claimed that selection on RNAs alone can account for the evolution of multi-component viruses. He criticized the viral sex hypothesis because, in his view, co-infection groups are not units of selection and are too transient to be engaged in sex. These two hypotheses were further examined through population genetic models. Three evolutionary agents are assumed to operate in the models. Selection on co-infection groups favors retention of the genome on one large RNA molecule because larger RNAs require less complementation. Selection on RNAs favor segmentation of the viral genome into smaller RNAs, which are replicated and encapsidated more rapidly. Mutation pressure also favors smaller molecules because those molecules are smaller targets for deleterious mutations. Analysis of the models shows that (when parameter values argued to be biologically realistic are used) selection on co-infection groups is necessary for the evolutionary persistence of multi-component viruses. Without selection on co-infections groups to oppose mutation pressure and selection on RNAs, a population of multi-component viruses is displaced by a population of parasitic viral RNAs that are replication and encapsidation specialists. These results support arguments that co-infection groups are units of selection in multi-component viruses. Both mutation pressure and selection on RNAs may be responsible for the evolution of genome segmentation in multi-component viruses because there is good evidence documenting the action of both in RNA viruses.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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Affiliation(s)
- L Chao
- Department of Zoology, University of Maryland, College Park 20742
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68
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Abstract
Why sex exists remains an unsolved problem in biology. If mutations are on the average deleterious, a high mutation rate can account for the evolution of sex. One form of this mutational hypothesis is Muller's ratchet. If the mutation rate is high, mutation-free individuals become rare and they can be lost by genetic drift in small populations. In asexual populations, as Muller noted, the loss is irreversible and the load of deleterious mutations increases in a ratchet-like manner with the successive loss of the least-mutated individuals. Sex can be advantageous because it increases the fitness of sexual populations by re-creating mutation-free individuals from mutated individuals and stops (or slows) Muller's ratchet. Although Muller's ratchet is an appealing hypothesis, it has been investigated and documented experimentally in only one group of organisms--ciliated protozoa. I initiated a study to examine the role of Muller's ratchet on the evolution of sex in RNA viruses and report here a significant decrease in fitness due to Muller's ratchet in 20 lineages of the RNA bacteriophage phi 6. These results show that deleterious mutations are generated at a sufficiently high rate to advance Muller's ratchet in an RNA virus and that beneficial, backward and compensatory mutations cannot stop the ratchet in the observed range of fitness decrease.
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Affiliation(s)
- L Chao
- Department of Zoology, University of Maryland, College Park 20742
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69
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Complex hybridity in Isotoma petraea. VII. Assembly of the genetic system in the O6 Pigeon Rock population. Heredity (Edinb) 1990. [DOI: 10.1038/hdy.1990.36] [Citation(s) in RCA: 10] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/09/2022] Open
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70
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Mutation-selection balance and the evolutionary advantage of sex and recombination. Genet Res (Camb) 1990; 55:199-221. [PMID: 2394378 DOI: 10.1017/s0016672300025532] [Citation(s) in RCA: 273] [Impact Index Per Article: 8.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/31/2022] Open
Abstract
Mutation-selection balance in a multi-locus system is investigated theoretically, using a modification of Bulmer's infinitesimal model of selection on a normally-distributed quantitative character, taking the number of mutations per individual (n) to represent the character value. The logarithm of the fitness of an individual with n mutations is assumed to be a quadratic, decreasing function of n. The equilibrium properties of infinitely large asexual populations, random-mating populations lacking genetic recombination, and random-mating populations with arbitrary recombination frequencies are investigated. With 'synergistic' epistasis on the scale of log fitness, such that log fitness declines more steeply as n increases, it is shown that equilibrium mean fitness is least for asexual populations. In sexual populations, mean fitness increases with the number of chromosomes and with the map length per chromosome. With 'diminishing returns' epistasis, such that log fitness declines less steeply as n increases, mean fitness behaves in the opposite way. Selection on asexual variants and genes affecting the rate of genetic recombination in random-mating populations was also studied. With synergistic epistasis, zero recombination always appears to be disfavoured, but free recombination is disfavoured when the mutation rate per genome is sufficiently small, leading to evolutionary stability of maps of intermediate length. With synergistic epistasis, an asexual mutant is unlikely to invade a sexual population if the mutation rate per diploid genome greatly exceeds unity. Recombination is selectively disadvantageous when there is diminishing returns epistasis. These results are compared with the results of previous theoretical studies of this problem, and with experimental data.
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71
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Affiliation(s)
- S Nee
- Department of Zoology, Oxford, U.K
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72
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Abstract
The origin and maintenance of sexual reproduction continues to be an important problem in evolutionary biology. If the deleterious mutation rate per genome per generation is greater than 1, then the greater efficiency of selection against these mutations in sexual populations may be responsible for the evolution of sex and related phenomena. In modern human populations detrimental mutations with small individual effects are probably accumulating faster than they are being eliminated by selection.
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Affiliation(s)
- A S Kondrashov
- Research Computer Center, Pushchino, Moscow Region, USSR
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