AI Article Synopsis

  • Double-stranded DNA viruses like poxvirus vaccinia adapt to host defenses despite having low mutation rates by utilizing "gene-accordions," which involve temporary amplifications of specific genes.
  • In a study, the inoculated vaccinia virus rapidly increased its genome size by 7%-10% through amplifications of the K3L gene, enhancing its ability to counteract the human antiviral factor PKR.
  • After acquiring necessary adaptive changes, the virus reduced gene amplifications to avoid costs from the larger genome, illustrating a unique strategy for rapid adaptation in response to host defense mechanisms.

Article Abstract

In contrast to RNA viruses, double-stranded DNA viruses have low mutation rates yet must still adapt rapidly in response to changing host defenses. To determine mechanisms of adaptation, we subjected the model poxvirus vaccinia to serial propagation in human cells, where its antihost factor K3L is maladapted against the antiviral protein kinase R (PKR). Viruses rapidly acquired higher fitness via recurrent K3L gene amplifications, incurring up to 7%-10% increases in genome size. These transient gene expansions were necessary and sufficient to counteract human PKR and facilitated the gain of an adaptive amino acid substitution in K3L that also defeats PKR. Subsequent reductions in gene amplifications offset the costs associated with larger genome size while retaining adaptive substitutions. Our discovery of viral "gene-accordions" explains how poxviruses can rapidly adapt to defeat different host defenses despite low mutation rates and reveals how classical Red Queen conflicts can progress through unrecognized intermediates.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3499626PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2012.05.049DOI Listing

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