| Literature DB >> 28708485 |
Bartram L Smith1, Claus O Wilke1.
Abstract
The influenza virus mutates faster than we previously thought.Entities:
Keywords: diversity; evolution; evolutionary biology; genomics; infectious disease; microbiology; mutation rate; virus
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28708485 PMCID: PMC5511007 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.29586
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140
Figure 1.Fluorescence-reversion fluctuation test for the influenza virus.
Pauly et al. started with a recombinant influenza strain known as ΔHA-GFP in which the gene encoding the hemagglutinin surface protein (HA) had been replaced by a gene encoding a version of green fluorescent protein (GFP). This GFP gene contained a single point mutation (shown as a red circle) that prevented the protein from producing green fluorescence. The ΔHA-GFP viruses were allowed to infect mammalian cells and replicate. If, during the first round of replication, a reversion mutation occurs at the site of the original mutation (green triangle), then green fluorescence is restored to GFP. If this particular virus particle then infects a mammalian cell, its progeny virions also produce green fluorescence (bottom right). The ratio of fluorescing to non-fluorescing infected cells in the second round of infection provides an estimate of the mutation rate for this specific reversion mutation.