AI Article Synopsis

  • Serine is encoded by two distinct codons (UCN and AGY), and switching between them involves intermediate residues like threonine or cysteine and cannot occur through single nucleotide changes.
  • Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infects a significant portion of the population and its surface glycoproteins (E1 and E2) are crucial for infection and immune response, showing evidence of historical codon-switching events at conserved serine residues.
  • Analysis reveals that the presence of intermediate phenotypes is limited due to their negative impact on HCV functionality and their increased vulnerability to immune targeting, leading to natural selection that restricts their prevalence in global HCV lineages.

Article Abstract

Serine is encoded by two divergent codon types, UCN and AGY, which are not interchangeable by a single nucleotide substitution. Switching between codon types therefore occurs via intermediates (threonine or cysteine) or via simultaneous tandem substitutions. Hepatitis C virus (HCV) chronically infects 2 to 3% of the global population. The highly variable glycoproteins E1 and E2 decorate the surface of the viral envelope, facilitate cellular entry, and are targets for host immunity. Comparative sequence analysis of globally sampled E1E2 genes, coupled with phylogenetic analysis, reveals the signatures of multiple archaic codon-switching events at seven highly conserved serine residues. Limited detection of intermediate phenotypes indicates that associated fitness costs restrict their fixation in divergent HCV lineages. Mutational pathways underlying codon switching were probed via reverse genetics, assessing glycoprotein functionality using multiple in vitro systems. These data demonstrate selection against intermediate phenotypes can act at the structural/functional level, with some intermediates displaying impaired virion assembly and/or decreased capacity for target cell entry. These effects act in residue/isolate-specific manner. Selection against intermediates is also provided by humoral targeting, with some intermediates exhibiting increased epitope exposure and enhanced neutralization sensitivity, despite maintaining a capacity for target cell entry. Thus, purifying selection against intermediates limits their frequencies in globally sampled strains, with divergent functional constraints at the protein level restricting the fixation of deleterious mutations. Overall our study provides an experimental framework for identification of barriers limiting viral substitutional evolution and indicates that serine codon-switching represents a genomic "fossil record" of historical purifying selection against E1E2 intermediate phenotypes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3911737PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JVI.01745-13DOI Listing

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