• Title of article

    Dynamics of Mutation and Recombination in a Replicating Population of Complementing, Defective Viral Genomes

  • Author/Authors

    Juan Garc?a-Arriaza، نويسنده , , Samuel Ojosnegros، نويسنده , , Mercedes D?vila، نويسنده , , Esteban Domingo، نويسنده , , Cristina Escarm?s، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
  • Pages
    15
  • From page
    558
  • To page
    572
  • Abstract
    In a previous study, we documented that serial passage of a biological clone of foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) at high multiplicity of infection (moi) in cell culture resulted in viral populations dominated by defective genomes that included internal in-frame deletions, affecting the L and capsid-coding regions, and were infectious by complementation. In the present study, analyses of the defective genomes present in individual viral plaques, and of consensus nucleotide sequences determined for the entire genomes of sequential samples, have revealed a continuous dynamics of mutation and recombination. At some points of high genetic instability, multiple minority genomes with different internal deletions co-existed in the population. At later passages, a new defective RNA arose and displaced a related, previously dominant RNA. Nucleotide sequences of the different genomic forms found in sequential isolates have revealed an accumulation of mutations at an average rate of 0.12 substitutions per genome per passage. At the regions around the deletion sites, substantial, minor or no nucleotide sequence identity is found, suggesting relaxed sequence requirements for the occurrence of internal deletions. Competition experiments indicate a selective advantage of late phase defective genomes over their precursor forms. The defective genome-based FMDV retained an expansion of host cell tropism, undergone by the standard virus at a previous stage of the same evolutionary lineage. Thus, despite a complex dynamics of mutation and recombination, and phases of high genetic instability, a biologically relevant phenotypic trait was stably maintained after the evolutionary transition towards a primitive genome segmentation. The results extend the concept of a complex spectrum of mutant genomes to a complex spectrum of defective genomes in some evolutionary transitions of RNA viruses.
  • Keywords
    genome segmentation , defective genomes , Virus evolution , recombination cross-over sites , foot-and-mouth disease virus
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Serial Year
    2006
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Record number

    1248239