The evolutionary drivers and correlates of viral host jumps

被引:12
|
作者
Tan, Cedric C. S. [1 ,2 ]
van Dorp, Lucy [1 ]
Balloux, Francois [1 ]
机构
[1] UCL, UCL Genet Inst, London, England
[2] Francis Crick Inst, London, England
关键词
MERS-COV; INTERNATIONAL COMMITTEE; R PACKAGE; VIRUS; RANGE; RISK; VISUALIZATION; ADAPTATION; TAXONOMY; MAFFT;
D O I
10.1038/s41559-024-02353-4
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Most emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases stem from viruses that naturally circulate in non-human vertebrates. When these viruses cross over into humans, they can cause disease outbreaks, epidemics and pandemics. While zoonotic host jumps have been extensively studied from an ecological perspective, little attention has gone into characterizing the evolutionary drivers and correlates underlying these events. To address this gap, we harnessed the entirety of publicly available viral genomic data, employing a comprehensive suite of network and phylogenetic analyses to investigate the evolutionary mechanisms underpinning recent viral host jumps. Surprisingly, we find that humans are as much a source as a sink for viral spillover events, insofar as we infer more viral host jumps from humans to other animals than from animals to humans. Moreover, we demonstrate heightened evolution in viral lineages that involve putative host jumps. We further observe that the extent of adaptation associated with a host jump is lower for viruses with broader host ranges. Finally, we show that the genomic targets of natural selection associated with host jumps vary across different viral families, with either structural or auxiliary genes being the prime targets of selection. Collectively, our results illuminate some of the evolutionary drivers underlying viral host jumps that may contribute to mitigating viral threats across species boundaries. Analysis of publicly available viral genomes shows that humans may give more viruses to animals than they give to us, and reveals evolutionary mechanisms underpinning viral host jumps.
引用
收藏
页码:960 / 971
页数:23
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Simultaneously estimating evolutionary history and repeated traits phylogenetic signal: applications to viral and host phenotypic evolution
    Vrancken, Bram
    Lemey, Philippe
    Rambaut, Andrew
    Bedford, Trevor
    Longdon, Ben
    Guenthard, Huldrych F.
    Suchard, Marc A.
    METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2015, 6 (01): : 67 - 82
  • [2] Impact of viral features, host jumps and phylogeography on the rapid evolution of Aleutian mink disease virus (AMDV)
    Franzo, Giovanni
    Legnardi, Matteo
    Grassi, Laura
    Dotto, Giorgia
    Drigo, Michele
    Cecchinato, Mattia
    Tucciarone, Claudia Maria
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2021, 11 (01)
  • [3] Evolutionary Recovery of a Recombinant Viral Genome
    Springman, Rachael
    Kapadia-Desai, Devanshi S.
    Molineux, Ian J.
    Bull, James J.
    G3-GENES GENOMES GENETICS, 2012, 2 (07): : 825 - 830
  • [4] Evolutionary Profile for (Host and Viral) MLKL Indicates Its Activities as a Battlefront for Extensive Counteradaptation
    Palmer, Suzette N.
    Chappidi, Sruthi
    Pinkham, Chelsea
    Hancks, Dustin C.
    MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2021, 38 (12) : 5405 - 5422
  • [5] Dispersal, habitat filtering, and eco-evolutionary dynamics as drivers of local and global wetland viral biogeography
    ter Horst, Anneliek M.
    Fudyma, Jane D.
    Sones, Jacqueline L.
    Emerson, Joanne B.
    ISME JOURNAL, 2023, 17 (11): : 2079 - 2089
  • [6] Evolutionary persistence of insect bunyavirus infection despite host acquisition and expression of the viral nucleoprotein gene
    Ballinger, Matthew J.
    Taylor, Derek J.
    VIRUS EVOLUTION, 2019, 5 (02)
  • [7] VIDHOP, viral host prediction with deep learning
    Mock, Florian
    Viehweger, Adrian
    Barth, Emanuel
    Marz, Manja
    BIOINFORMATICS, 2021, 37 (03) : 318 - 325
  • [8] The evolutionary genetics of viral emergence
    Holmes, E. C.
    Drummond, A. J.
    WILDLIFE AND EMERGING ZOONOTIC DISEASES: THE BIOLOGY, CIRCUMSTANCES AND CONSEQUENCES OF CROSS-SPECIES TRANSMISSION, 2007, 315 : 51 - 66
  • [9] Are Long Jumps of Cauchy Mutations Effective in Fast Evolutionary Programming?
    Liu, Yong
    2010 IEEE CONGRESS ON EVOLUTIONARY COMPUTATION (CEC), 2010,
  • [10] Evolutionary allometry and ecological correlates of fang length evolution in vipers
    Holding, Matthew L.
    Trevine, Vivian C.
    Zinenko, Oleksandr
    Strickland, Jason L.
    Rautsaw, Rhett M.
    Mason, Andrew J.
    Hogan, Michael P.
    Parkinson, Christopher L.
    Grazziotin, Felipe G.
    Santana, Sharlene E.
    Davis, Mark A.
    Rokyta, Darin R.
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2022, 289 (1982)