scholarly journals The evolution of collective infectious units in viruses

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Asher Leeks ◽  
Rafael Sanjuán ◽  
Stuart A. West

Viruses frequently spread among cells or hosts in groups, with multiple viral genomes inside the same infectious unit. These collective infectious units can consist of multiple viral genomes inside the same virion, or multiple virions inside a larger structure such as a vesicle. Collective infectious units deliver multiple viral genomes to the same cell simultaneously, which can have important implications for viral pathogenesis, antiviral resistance, and social evolution. However, little is known about why some viruses transmit in collective infectious units, whereas others do not. We used a simple evolutionary approach to model the potential costs and benefits of transmitting in a collective infectious unit. We found that collective infectious units could be favoured if cells infected by multiple viral genomes were significantly more productive than cells infected by just one viral genome, and especially if there were also efficiency benefits to packaging multiple viral genomes inside the same infectious unit. We also found that if some viral sequences are defective, then collective infectious units could evolve to become very large, but that if these defective sequences interfered with wild-type virus replication, then collective infectious units were disfavoured.

2003 ◽  
Vol 77 (5) ◽  
pp. 2873-2881 ◽  
Author(s):  
Uta Klöcker ◽  
Heike Oberwinkler ◽  
Timo Kürschner ◽  
Ulrike Protzer

ABSTRACT Mutant hepatitis B viruses are useful tools to study the viral life cycle and viral pathogenesis. Furthermore, recombinant hepatitis B viruses are candidate vectors for liver-directed gene therapy. Because wild-type viruses present in recombinant or mutant virus stocks may falsify experimental results and are detrimental for a viral vector, we investigated whether and to what extent wild-type virus is present in recombinant virus stocks and where it originates from. We took advantage of the duck model of hepatitis B virus infection which allows very sensitive detection of replication-competent viruses by infection of primary duck hepatocytes or of ducklings in vivo. Recombinant hepatitis B virus stocks contained significant amounts of wild-type viruses, which were most probably generated by homologous recombination between plasmids containing homologous viral sequences. In addition, replication-competent viral genomes were reconstituted from plasmids which contained replication-deficient but redundant viral sequences. Using a stable cell line for packaging of deficient viral genomes, no wild-type virus was detected, neither by infection of primary hepatocytes nor in vivo.


2008 ◽  
Vol 82 (17) ◽  
pp. 8500-8508 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haiyan Li ◽  
Kazufumi Ikuta ◽  
John W. Sixbey ◽  
Scott A. Tibbetts

ABSTRACT Murine gammaherpesvirus 68 (γHV68 or MHV68) is genetically related to the human gammaherpesviruses Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV), providing a useful system for in vivo studies of the virus-host relationship. To begin to address fundamental questions about the mechanisms of the establishment of gammaherpesvirus latency, we previously generated a replication-defective γHV68 lacking the expression of the single-stranded DNA binding protein encoded by orf6. In work presented here, we demonstrate that this mutant virus established a long-term infection in vivo that was molecularly identical to wild-type virus latency. Thus, despite the absence of an acute phase of lytic replication, the mutant virus established a chronic infection in which the viral genome (i) was maintained as an episome and (ii) expressed latency-associated, but not lytic replication-associated, genes. Macrophages purified from mice infected with the replication-defective virus harbored viral genome at a frequency that was nearly identical to that of wild-type γHV68; however, the frequency of B cells harboring viral genome was greatly reduced in the absence of lytic replication. Thus, this replication-defective gammaherpesvirus efficiently established in vivo infection in macrophages that was molecularly indistinguishable from wild-type virus latency. These data point to a critical role for lytic replication or reactivation in the establishment or maintenance of latent infection in B cells.


2000 ◽  
Vol 74 (15) ◽  
pp. 6975-6983 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julie J. Wirth ◽  
Li Chen ◽  
Michele M. Fluck

ABSTRACT BALB/c mice that developed tumors 7 to 8 months following neonatal infection by polyomavirus (PYV) wild-type strain A2 were characterized with respect to the abundance and integrity of the viral genome in the tumors and in 12 nontumorous organs. These patterns were compared to those found in tumor-free mice infected in parallel. Six mice were analyzed in detail including four sibling females with mammary gland tumors. In four of five mammary gland tumors, the viral genome had undergone a unique deletion and/or rearrangement. Three tumor-resident genomes with an apparently intact large T coding region were present in abundant levels in an unintegrated state. Two of these had undergone deletions and rearrangements involving the capsid genes and therefore lacked the capacity to produce live virus. In the comparative organ survey, the tumors harboring replication-competent genomes contained by far the highest levels of genomes of any tissue. However, the levels of PYV genomes in other organs were elevated by up to 1 to 2 orders of magnitude compared to those detected in the same organs of tumor-free mice. The genomes found in the nontumorous organs had the same rearrangements as the genomes residing in the tumors. The original wild-type genome was detected at low levels in a few organs, particularly in the kidneys. The data indicate that a systemic increase in the level of viral genomes occurred in conjunction with the induction of tumors by PYV. The results suggest two novel hypotheses: (i) that genomes may spread from the tumors to the usual PYV target tissues and (ii) that this dissemination may take place in the absence of capsids, providing an important path for a virus to escape from the immune response. This situation may offer a useful model for the spread of HPV accompanying HPV-induced oncogenesis.


2005 ◽  
Vol 79 (14) ◽  
pp. 9244-9253 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacqueline Lehmann-Che ◽  
Marie-Lou Giron ◽  
Olivier Delelis ◽  
Martin Löchelt ◽  
Patricia Bittoun ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Although retrovirus egress and budding have been partly unraveled, little is known about early stages of the replication cycle. In particular, retroviral uncoating, a process during which incoming retroviral cores are altered to allow the integration of the viral genome into host chromosomes, is poorly understood. To get insights into these early events of the retroviral cycle, we have used foamy complex retroviruses as a model. In this report, we show that a protease-defective foamy retrovirus is noninfectious, although it is still able to bud and enter target cells efficiently. Similarly, a retrovirus mutated in an essential viral protease-dependent cleavage site in the central part of Gag is noninfectious. Following entry, wild-type and mutant retroviruses are able to traffic along microtubules towards the microtubule-organizing center (MTOC). However, whereas nuclear import of Gag and of the viral genome was observed for the wild-type virus as early as 8 hours postinfection, incoming capsids and genome from mutant viruses remained at the MTOC. Interestingly, a specific viral protease-dependent Gag cleavage product was detected only for the wild-type retrovirus early after infection, demonstrating that cleavage of Gag by the viral protease at this stage of the virus life cycle is absolutely required for productive infection, an unprecedented observation among retroviruses.


1980 ◽  
Vol 210 (1180) ◽  
pp. 423-435 ◽  

We have cloned and propagated in prokaryotic vectors the viral DNA sequences that are integrated in a variety of cells transformed by adenovirus 2 or SV40. Analysis of the clones reveals that the viral DNA sequences sometimes are arranged in a simple fashion, collinear with the viral genome; in other cell lines there are complex arrangements of viral sequences in which tracts of the viral genome are inverted with respect to each other. In several cases the nucleotide sequences at the joints between cell and viral sequences have been determined: usually there is a sharp transition between cellular and viral DNAs. The viral sequences are integrated at different locations within the genomes of different cell lines; likewise there is no specific site on the viral genomes at which integration occurs. Sometimes the viral sequences are integrated within repetitive cellular DNA, and sometimes within unique sequences. In some cases there is evidence that the viral sequences along with the flanking cell DNA have been amplified after integration. The sequences that flank the viral insertion in the line of SV40-transformed rat cells known as 14B have been used as probes to isolate, from untransformed rat cells, clones that carry the region of the chromosome in which integration occurred. Analysis of the structure of these clones by restriction endonuclease digestion and heteroduplex formation shows that a rearrangement of cellular sequences has occurred, presumably as a consequence of integration.


2006 ◽  
Vol 87 (12) ◽  
pp. 3495-3502 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shih-Heng Chen ◽  
Yu-Wen Lin ◽  
Anthony Griffiths ◽  
Wen-Yen Huang ◽  
Shun-Hua Chen

Laboratory strains of herpes simplex virus lacking thymidine kinase (TK) cannot replicate acutely to detectable levels in mouse trigeminal ganglia and do not reactivate from latency. However, many pathogenic clinical isolates that are resistant to the antiviral drug acyclovir are heterogeneous populations of TK-negative (TK−) and TK-positive (TK+) viruses. To recapitulate this in vivo, mice were infected with mixtures of wild-type virus and a recombinant TK− mutant in various ratios. Following co-infection, the replication, number of latent viral genomes and reactivation efficiency of TK+ virus in trigeminal ganglia were reduced in a manner related to the amount of TK− virus in the inoculum. TK+ virus did not always complement the acute replication or increase the number of latent viral genomes of TK− mutant in mouse ganglia. Even so, TK+ virus could still confer the pathogenic phenotype to a TK− mutant, somehow providing sufficient TK activity in trans to permit a TK− mutant to reactivate from latently infected ganglia.


2014 ◽  
Vol 89 (3) ◽  
pp. 1523-1536 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony R. Fehr ◽  
Jeremiah Athmer ◽  
Rudragouda Channappanavar ◽  
Judith M. Phillips ◽  
David K. Meyerholz ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTAll coronaviruses encode a macrodomain containing ADP-ribose-1″-phosphatase (ADRP) activity within the N terminus of nonstructural protein 3 (nsp3). Previous work showed that mouse hepatitis virus strain A59 (MHV-A59) with a mutated catalytic site (N1348A) replicated similarly to wild-type virus but was unable to cause acute hepatitis in mice. To determine whether this attenuated phenotype is applicable to multiple disease models, we mutated the catalytic residue in the JHM strain of MHV (JHMV), which causes acute and chronic encephalomyelitis, using a newly developed bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC)-based MHV reverse genetics system. Infection of mice with the macrodomain catalytic point mutant virus (N1347A) resulted in reductions in lethality, weight loss, viral titers, proinflammatory cytokine and chemokine expression, and immune cell infiltration in the brain compared to mice infected with wild-type virus. Specifically, macrophages were most affected, with approximately 2.5-fold fewer macrophages at day 5 postinfection in N1347A-infected brains. Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and interferon (IFN) signaling were not required for effective host control of mutant virus as all N1347A virus-infected mice survived the infection. However, the adaptive immune system was required for protection since N1347A virus was able to cause lethal encephalitis in RAG1−/−(recombination activation gene 1 knockout) mice although disease onset was modestly delayed. Overall, these results indicate that the BAC-based MHV reverse genetics system will be useful for studies of JHMV and expand upon previous studies, showing that the macrodomain is critical for the ability of coronaviruses to evade the immune system and promote viral pathogenesis.IMPORTANCECoronaviruses are an important cause of human and veterinary diseases worldwide. Viral processes that are conserved across a family are likely to be good targets for the development of antiviral therapeutics and vaccines. The macrodomain is a ubiquitous structural domain and is also conserved among all coronaviruses. The coronavirus macrodomain has ADP-ribose-1″-phosphatase activity; however, its function during infection remains unclear as does the reason that coronaviruses have maintained this enzymatic activity throughout evolution. For MHV, this domain has now been shown to promote multiple types of disease, including hepatitis and encephalitis. These data indicate that this domain is vital for the virus to replicate and cause disease. Understanding the mechanism used by this enzyme to promote viral pathogenesis will open up novel avenues for therapies and may give further insight into the role of macrodomain proteins in the host cell since these proteins are found in all living organisms.


2003 ◽  
Vol 77 (21) ◽  
pp. 11459-11470 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valery Fikkert ◽  
Bénédicte Van Maele ◽  
Jo Vercammen ◽  
Anke Hantson ◽  
Barbara Van Remoortel ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The diketo acid L-708,906 has been reported to be a selective inhibitor of the strand transfer step of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) integration process (D. Hazuda, P. Felock, M. Witmer, A. Wolfe, K. Stillmock, J. A. Grobler, A. Espeseth, L. Gabryelski, W. Schleif, C. Blau, and M. D. Miller, Science 287:646-650, 2000). We have now studied the development of antiviral resistance to L-708,906 by growing HIV-1 strains in the presence of increasing concentrations of the compound. The mutations T66I, L74M, and S230R emerged successively in the integrase gene. The virus with three mutations (T66I L74M S230R) was 10-fold less susceptible to L-708,906, while displaying the sensitivity of the wild-type virus to inhibitors of the RT or PRO or viral entry process. Chimeric HIV-1 strains containing the mutant integrase genes displayed the same resistance profile as the in vitro-selected strains, corroborating the impact of the reported mutations on the resistance phenotype. Phenotypic cross-resistance to S-1360, a diketo analogue in clinical trials, was observed for all strains. Interestingly, the diketo acid-resistant strain remained fully sensitive to V-165, a novel integrase inhibitor (C. Pannecouque, W. Pluymers, B. Van Maele, V. Tetz, P. Cherepanov, E. De Clercq, M. Witvrouw, and Z. Debyser, Curr. Biol. 12:1169-1177, 2002). Antiviral resistance was also studied at the level of recombinant integrase. Single mutations did not appear to impair specific enzymatic activity. However, 3′ processing and strand transfer activities of the recombinant integrases with two (T66I L74M) and three (T66I L74M S230R) mutations were notably lower than those of the wild-type integrase. Although the virus with three mutations was resistant to inhibition by diketo acids, the sensitivity of the corresponding enzyme to L-708,906 or S-1360 was reduced only two- to threefold. As to the replication kinetics of the selected strains, the replication fitness for all strains was lower than that of the wild-type HIV-1 strain.


mBio ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Koenraad Van Doorslaer ◽  
Dan Chen ◽  
Sandra Chapman ◽  
Jameela Khan ◽  
Alison A. McBride

ABSTRACTHuman papillomavirus (HPV) genomes are replicated and maintained as extrachromosomal plasmids during persistent infection. The viral E2 proteins are thought to promote stable maintenance replication by tethering the viral DNA to host chromatin. However, this has been very difficult to prove genetically, as the E2 protein is involved in transcriptional regulation and initiation of replication, as well as its assumed role in genome maintenance. This makes mutational analysis of viraltransfactors andciselements in the background of the viral genome problematic and difficult to interpret. To circumvent this problem, we have developed a complementation assay in which the complete wild-type HPV18 genome is transfected into primary human keratinocytes along with subgenomic or mutated replicons that contain the minimal replication origin. The wild-type genome provides the E1 and E2 proteins intrans, allowing us to determine additionalciselements that are required for long-term replication and partitioning of the replicon. We found that, in addition to the core replication origin (and the three E2 binding sites located therein), additional sequences from the transcriptional enhancer portion of the URR (upstream regulatory region) are required incisfor long-term genome replication.IMPORTANCEHuman papillomaviruses infect cutaneous and mucosal epithelial cells of the host, and this results in very-long-lived, persistent infection. The viral genomes are small, circular, double-stranded DNA molecules that replicate extrachromosomally in concert with cellular DNA. This replication strategy requires that the virus has a robust mechanism to partition and retain the viral genomes in dividing cells. This has been difficult to study, because viral transcription, replication, and partitioning are regulated by the same viral proteins and involve overlapping elements in the viral genome. We developed a complementation assay that allows us to separate these functions and define the elements required for long-term replication and stable maintenance replication of the HPV genome. This has important implications, as disruption of viral maintenance replication can eliminate viral genomes from infected cells, thus curing persistent HPV infection.


2001 ◽  
Vol 75 (7) ◽  
pp. 3240-3249 ◽  
Author(s):  
William P. Halford ◽  
Priscilla A. Schaffer

ABSTRACT Relative to wild-type herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1), ICP0-null mutant viruses reactivate inefficiently from explanted, latently infected mouse trigeminal ganglia (TG), indicating that ICP0 is not essential for reactivation but plays a central role in enhancing the efficiency of reactivation. The validity of these findings has been questioned, however, because the replication of ICP0-null mutants is impaired in animal models during the establishment of latency, such that fewer mutant genomes than wild-type genomes are present in latently infected mouse TG. Therefore, the reduced number of mutant viral genomes available to reactivate, rather than mutations in the ICP0 gene per se, may be responsible for the reduced reactivation efficiency of ICP0-null mutants. We have recently demonstrated that optimization of the size of the ICP0 mutant virus inoculum and transient immunosuppression of mutant-infected mice with cyclophosphamide can be used to establish wild-type levels of ICP0-null mutant genomes in latently infected TG (W. P. Halford and P. A. Schaffer, J. Virol. 74:5957–5967, 2000). Using this procedure to equalize mutant and wild-type genome numbers, the goal of the present study was to determine if, relative to wild-type virus, the absence of ICP0 function in two ICP0-null mutants, n212 and 7134, affects reactivation efficiency from (i) explants of latently infected TG and (ii) primary cultures of latently infected TG cells. Although equivalent numbers of viral genomes were present in TG of mice latently infected with either wild-type or mutant viruses, reactivation of n212 and 7134 from heat-stressed TG explants was inefficient (31 and 37% reactivation, respectively) relative to reactivation of wild-type virus (KOS) (95%). Similarly, n212 and 7134 reactivated inefficiently from primary cultures of dissociated TG cells plated directly after removal from the mouse (7 and 4% reactivation, respectively), relative to KOS (60% reactivation). The efficiency and kinetics of reactivation of KOS, n212, and 7134 from cultured TG cells (treated with acyclovir to facilitate the establishment of latency) in response to heat stress or superinfection with a nonreplicating HSV-1 ICP4−mutant, n12, were compared. Whereas heat stress induced reactivation of KOS from 69% of latently infected TG cell cultures, reactivation of n212 and 7134 was detected in only 1 and 7% of cultures, respectively. In contrast, superinfection with the ICP4− virus, which expresses high levels of ICP0, resulted in the production of infectious virus in nearly 100% of cultures latently infected with KOS, n212, or 7134 within 72 h. Thus, although latent mutant viral genome loads were equivalent to that of wild-type virus, in the absence of ICP0, n212 and 7134 reactivated inefficiently from latently infected TG cells during culture establishment and following heat stress. Collectively, these findings demonstrate that ICP0 is required to induce efficient reactivation of HSV-1 from neuronal latency.


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