| Literature DB >> 23758960 |
Yueming Jiang1, Minxian Wang, Hongxiang Zheng, Wei R Wang, Li Jin, Yungang He.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is an important infectious agent that causes widespread concern because billions of people are infected by at least 8 different HBV genotypes worldwide. However, reconstruction of the phylogenetic relationship between HBV genotypes is difficult. Specifically, the phylogenetic relationships among genotypes A, B, and C are not clear from previous studies because of the confounding effects of genotype recombination. In order to clarify the evolutionary relationships, a rigorous approach is required that can effectively explore genetic sequences with recombination. RESULT: In the present study, phylogenetic relationship of the HBV genotypes was reconstructed using a consensus phylogeny of phylogenetic trees of HBV genome segments. Reliability of the reconstructed phylogeny was extensively evaluated in agreements of local phylogenies of genome segments.The reconstructed phylogenetic tree revealed that HBV genotypes B and C had a closer phylogenetic relationship than genotypes A and B or A and C. Evaluations showed the consensus method was capable to reconstruct reliable phylogenetic relationship in the presence of recombinants.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23758960 PMCID: PMC3682936 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2148-13-120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Figure 1Identifying the major phylogenetic relationship from a phylogeny with reticulation. A. The Seq2 is a mosaic sequence in which most of its components (80%) are descendants of sequence Seq1 and the remaining components (20%) are descendants of sequence Seq3. B. A major phylogenetic relationship can be achieved by removing the minor relationship between Seq2 and Seq3. ‘*’ indicated this is a truncated sequence.
Figure 2Schematic presentation of the phylogenetic relationship of HBV genotypes A, B, and C. A. The phylogenetic relationship of the three genotypes is ambiguous when the analyzing window was only 250 bp in size. B. Genotypes B and C showed a closer phylogenetic relationship when the analysis window size was at least 500 bp.
Figure 3Consistency between the consensus phylogenetic trees and corresponding local phylogenies along the HBV genome. Consistency was measured as a percentage of the agreement between local phylogenies of different segment sizes and the corresponding consensus tree. The percentage is shown on the y-axis and the x-axis shows the coordinates of local phylogenies along the aligned HBV sequences. The dashed line indicates the 50% agreement.
Figure 4Reliability of internal branches of the consensus phylogenetic tree. The reliability of each internal branch is marked in red on each internal branch. Only the consensus phylogenetic tree from analyzing a 500-bp window is presented. More results for other window sizes are shown in Additional file 1: Figure S4. Accession Numbers of the HBV sequences are supplied in Additional file 1: Table S1.