Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4360920 Cell Host & Microbe 2016 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Recombination accelerates adaptation in the short time frame of acute poliovirus infection•Recombination is essential to enrich beneficial mutations and purge deleterious mutations•Virus adapts most rapidly at a mutation rate set by trade-off of selection and harmful mutations

SummaryMutation and recombination are central processes driving microbial evolution. A high mutation rate fuels adaptation but also generates deleterious mutations. Recombination between two different genomes may resolve this paradox, alleviating effects of clonal interference and purging deleterious mutations. Here we demonstrate that recombination significantly accelerates adaptation and evolution during acute virus infection. We identified a poliovirus recombination determinant within the virus polymerase, mutation of which reduces recombination rates without altering replication fidelity. By generating a panel of variants with distinct mutation rates and recombination ability, we demonstrate that recombination is essential to enrich the population in beneficial mutations and purge it from deleterious mutations. The concerted activities of mutation and recombination are key to virus spread and virulence in infected animals. These findings inform a mathematical model to demonstrate that poliovirus adapts most rapidly at an optimal mutation rate determined by the trade-off between selection and accumulation of detrimental mutations.

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Related Topics
Life Sciences Immunology and Microbiology Microbiology
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