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首页|An adaptive compromise - Conflicting evolutionary pressures on arthropod-borne Zika virus dinucleotide composition in mammalian hosts and mosquito vectors

An adaptive compromise - Conflicting evolutionary pressures on arthropod-borne Zika virus dinucleotide composition in mammalian hosts and mosquito vectors

An adaptive compromise - Conflicting evolutionary pressures on arthropod-borne Zika virus dinucleotide composition in mammalian hosts and mosquito vectors

来源:bioRxiv_logobioRxiv
英文摘要

Abstract Most vertebrate RNA viruses show pervasive suppression of CpG and UpA dinucleotides, closely resembling the dinucleotide composition of host cell transcriptomes. In contrast, CpG suppression is absent in both invertebrate mRNA and RNA viruses that exclusively infect arthropods. Arthropod-borne (arbo) viruses are transmitted between vertebrate hosts by invertebrate vectors and thus encounter potentially conflicting evolutionary pressures in the different cytoplasmic environments. Using a newly developed Zika virus (ZIKV) model, we have investigated how demands for CpG suppression in vertebrate cells can be reconciled with potentially quite different compositional requirements in invertebrates, and how this affects ZIKV replication and transmission. Mutant viruses with synonymously elevated CpG or UpA dinucleotide frequencies showed attenuated replication in vertebrate cell lines, which was rescued by knockout of the zinc-finger antiviral protein (ZAP). Conversely, in mosquito cells, ZIKV mutants with elevated CpG dinucleotide frequencies showed substantially enhanced replication compared to wildtype. Host-driven effects on virus replication attenuation and enhancement were even more apparent in mouse and mosquito models. Infections with CpG-or UpA-high ZIKV mutants in mice did not cause typical ZIKV-induced tissue damage and completely protected mice during subsequent challenge with wildtype virus, which demonstrates their potential as live-attenuated vaccines. In contrast, the CpG-high mutants displayed enhanced replication in Aedes aegypti mosquitoes and a larger proportion of mosquitoes carried infectious virus in their saliva. These findings show that mosquito cells are also capable of discriminating RNA based on dinucleotide composition. However, the evolutionary pressure on the CpG dinucleotides of viral genomes in arthropod vectors directly opposes the pressure present in vertebrate host cells, which provides evidence that an adaptive compromise is required for arbovirus transmission. This suggests that the genome composition of arthropod-borne flaviviruses is crucial to maintain the balance between high-level replication in the vertebrate host and persistent replication in the mosquito vector.

Nakayama Eri、Simmonds Peter、Visser Tessa M.、Pijlman Gorben P.、Visser Imke、Fros Jelke J.、van Oers Monique M.、Tang Bing、Yan Kexin、Koenraadt Constantianus J.M.、Suhrbier Andreas

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute||Department of Virology I, National Institute of Infectious DiseasesNuffield Department of Medicine, Peter Medawar Building for Pathogen Research, University of OxfordLaboratory of Entomology, Wageningen University and ResearchLaboratory of Virology, Wageningen University and ResearchLaboratory of Virology, Wageningen University and Research||QIMR Berghofer Medical Research InstituteNuffield Department of Medicine, Peter Medawar Building for Pathogen Research, University of Oxford||Laboratory of Virology, Wageningen University and ResearchLaboratory of Virology, Wageningen University and ResearchQIMR Berghofer Medical Research InstituteQIMR Berghofer Medical Research InstituteLaboratory of Entomology, Wageningen University and ResearchQIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

10.1101/2021.02.09.430415

分子生物学遗传学昆虫学

Nakayama Eri,Simmonds Peter,Visser Tessa M.,Pijlman Gorben P.,Visser Imke,Fros Jelke J.,van Oers Monique M.,Tang Bing,Yan Kexin,Koenraadt Constantianus J.M.,Suhrbier Andreas.An adaptive compromise - Conflicting evolutionary pressures on arthropod-borne Zika virus dinucleotide composition in mammalian hosts and mosquito vectors[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-05-06].https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.02.09.430415.点此复制

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