Literature DB >> 29720515

Small Bottleneck Size in a Highly Multipartite Virus during a Complete Infection Cycle.

Romain Gallet1, Frédéric Fabre2, Gaël Thébaud3, Mircea T Sofonea4, Anne Sicard3, Stéphane Blanc3, Yannis Michalakis5.   

Abstract

Multipartite viruses package their genomic segments independently and thus incur the risk of being unable to transmit their entire genome during host-to-host transmission if they undergo severe bottlenecks. In this paper, we estimated the bottleneck size during one infection cycle of Faba bean necrotic stunt virus (FBNSV), an octopartite nanovirus whose segments have been previously shown to converge to particular and unequal relative frequencies within host plants and aphid vectors. Two methods were used to derive this estimate, one based on the probability of transmission of the virus and the other based on the temporal evolution of the relative frequency of markers for two genomic segments, one frequent and one rare (segment N and S, respectively), both in plants and vectors. Our results show that FBNSV undergoes severe bottlenecks during aphid transmission. Further, even though the bottlenecks are always narrow under our experimental conditions, they slightly widen with the number of transmitting aphids. In particular, when several aphids are used for transmission, the bottleneck size of the segments is also affected by within-plant processes and, importantly, significantly differs across segments. These results indicate that genetic drift not only must be an important process affecting the evolution of these viruses but also that these effects vary across genomic segments and, thus, across viral genes, a rather unique and intriguing situation. We further discuss the potential consequences of our findings for the transmission of multipartite viruses.IMPORTANCE Multipartite viruses package their genomic segments in independent capsids. The most obvious cost of such genomic structure is the risk of losing at least one segment during host-to-host transmission. A theoretical study has shown that for nanoviruses, composed of 6 to 8 segments, hundreds of copies of each segment need to be transmitted to ensure that at least one copy of each segment was present in the host. These estimations seem to be very high compared to the size of the bottlenecks measured with other viruses. Here, we estimated the bottleneck size during one infection cycle of FBNSV, an octopartite nanovirus. We show that these bottlenecks are always narrow (few viral particles) and slightly widen with the number of transmitting aphids. These results contrast with theoretical predictions and illustrate the fact that a new conceptual framework is probably needed to understand the transmission of highly multipartite viruses.
Copyright © 2018 American Society for Microbiology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  FBNSV; aphid transmission; bottleneck; effective population size; multipartite virus

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29720515      PMCID: PMC6026758          DOI: 10.1128/JVI.00139-18

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Virol        ISSN: 0022-538X            Impact factor:   5.103


  30 in total

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8.  Within-host Evolution of Segments Ratio for the Tripartite Genome of Alfalfa Mosaic Virus.

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2.  Nonconcomitant host-to-host transmission of multipartite virus genome segments may lead to complete genome reconstitution.

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Review 5.  Influence of virus-host interactions on plant response to abiotic stress.

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6.  Modeling multipartite virus evolution: the genome formula facilitates rapid adaptation to heterogeneous environments.

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Journal:  Virus Evol       Date:  2020-05-08

7.  A multicellular way of life for a multipartite virus.

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Review 8.  Virus-Host Coevolution with a Focus on Animal and Human DNA Viruses.

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Review 9.  Nanovirus Disease Complexes: An Emerging Threat in the Modern Era.

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10.  Detection of Multiple Variants of Grapevine Fanleaf Virus in Single Xiphinema index Nematodes.

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