| Literature DB >> 22570609 |
Rebecca R Gray1, Marco Salemi, Paul Klenerman, Oliver G Pybus.
Abstract
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22570609 PMCID: PMC3342959 DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1002656
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Pathog ISSN: 1553-7366 Impact factor: 6.823
Figure 1Aspects of the evolutionary dynamics of chronic HCV infection.
(a), (b), and (c) show various analyses of HCV gene sequences (E1E2 region) sampled longitudinally from a single infected individual (Pt11 in [7]). Sequences were obtained from serum at twelve occasions over 15 years. All results are placed on the same time scale (top). (a) The phylogeny of the sampled sequences was reconstructed using a molecular clock model, such that branch lengths represent time (calculated using BEAST v1.6.2 [30]). To aid explanation, branches have been grouped into four lineages, indicated by colour. Lineages 3 and 4 co-exist between months 30 and 145. Lineage 4 was present in the patient but undetected at months 65, 116, 132, 145. (b) The average diversity of sequences obtained at each sampling time (mean pairwise genetic distance; calculated using MEGA v4 [31]). The vertical scale represents mean substitutions per site. Sample diversity is notably higher at month 82 because both lineages 3 and 4 are detected. (c) An estimate of the genetic diversity of the whole viral quasispecies through time. This figure was calculated using the Bayesian skyline plot method in BEAST [30], [32], which takes into account both sampled and unsampled lineages. The shaded area shows the 95% uncertainty range around the estimate (solid line). (d) A new evolutionary model of HCV infection, as applied to the patient data shown in (a), (b), and (c). Each cartoon represents the state of infection at a different time, as indicated by the shaded areas. Circles represent different sub-populations of HCV-infected cells within the liver (or other sites of extra-hepatic replication), coloured to correspond to the lineages in (a). Solid arrows indicate the fluctuating detection of HCV lineages in serum through time.