High rates of molecular evolution in hantaviruses


Autoria(s): RAMSDEN, Cadhla; MELO, Fernando L.; FIGUEIREDO, Luiz. M.; HOLMES, Edward C.; ZANOTTO, Paolo M. A.; VGDN Consortium
Contribuinte(s)

UNIVERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO

Data(s)

19/10/2012

19/10/2012

2008

Resumo

Hantaviruses are rodent-borne Bunyaviruses that infect the Arvicolinae, Murinae, and Sigmodontinae subfamilies of Muridae. The rate of molecular evolution in the hantaviruses has been previously estimated at approximately 10(-7) nucleotide substitutions per site, per year (substitutions/site/year), based on the assumption of codivergence and hence shared divergence times with their rodent hosts. If substantiated, this would make the hantaviruses among the slowest evolving of all RNA viruses. However, as hantaviruses replicate with an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase, with error rates in the region of one mutation per genome replication, this low rate of nucleotide substitution is anomalous. Here, we use a Bayesian coalescent approach to estimate the rate of nucleotide substitution from serially sampled gene sequence data for hantaviruses known to infect each of the 3 rodent subfamilies: Araraquara virus ( Sigmodontinae), Dobrava virus ( Murinae), Puumala virus ( Arvicolinae), and Tula virus ( Arvicolinae). Our results reveal that hantaviruses exhibit shortterm substitution rates of 10(-2) to 10(-4) substitutions/site/year and so are within the range exhibited by other RNA viruses. The disparity between this substitution rate and that estimated assuming rodent-hantavirus codivergence suggests that the codivergence hypothesis may need to be reevaluated.

Identificador

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, v.25, n.7, p.1488-1492, 2008

0737-4038

http://producao.usp.br/handle/BDPI/24037

10.1093/molbev/msn093

http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msn093

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

OXFORD UNIV PRESS

Relação

Molecular Biology and Evolution

Direitos

closedAccess

Copyright OXFORD UNIV PRESS

Palavras-Chave #hantavirus #nucleotide substitution #molecular evolution #substitution rates #PULMONARY SYNDROME #GENETIC DIVERSITY #VIRUS EVOLUTION #NORTH-AMERICA #RNA VIRUSES #INFECTION #MICE #TRANSMISSION #SUBSTITUTION #POPULATIONS #Biochemistry & Molecular Biology #Evolutionary Biology #Genetics & Heredity
Tipo

article

original article

publishedVersion