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  • Homologous Recombination is Very Rare or Absent in Human Influenza A Virus

    Homologous Recombination is Very Rare or Absent in Human Influenza A Virus

    <nobr>Maciej F. Boni<sup>*</sup>,</nobr> <nobr>Yang Zhou,</nobr> <nobr>Jeffery K. Taubenberger,</nobr> and <nobr>Edward C. Holmes</nobr> Resources for the Future, Washington, DC 20036, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544; Center for Infectious Disease Dynamics, Department of Biology, The Pennsylvania State University, State College, PA, 16802; Laboratory of Infectious Diseases, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892. USA; Fogarty International Center, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892. USA
    <sup>*</sup> To whom correspondence should be addressed. Email: boni@rff.org<script type="text/javascript"><!-- var u = "boni", d = "rff.org"; document.getElementById("em0").innerHTML = '<a href="mailto:' + u + '@' + d + '">' + u + '@' + d + '<\/a>'//--></script>.



    Abstract
    To determine the extent of homologous recombination in human<sup> </sup>influenza A virus we assembled a data set of 13,852 sequences<sup> </sup>representing all eight segments and of both major circulating<sup> </sup>subtypes, H3N2 and H1N1. Using an exhaustive search and a nonparametric<sup> </sup>test for mosaic structure, we identified 315 sequences (2&#37<sup> </sup>in five different RNA segments that, after a multiple comparisons<sup> </sup>correction, had statistically significant mosaic signals compatible<sup> </sup>with homologous recombination. Of these, only two contained<sup> </sup>recombinant regions of sufficient length (>100 nt) that the<sup> </sup>occurrence of homologous recombination could be verified using<sup> </sup>phylogenetic methods, with the rest involving very short sequence<sup> </sup>regions (15–30 nt). Although this secondary analysis revealed<sup> </sup>patterns of phylogenetic incongruence compatible with the action<sup> </sup>of recombination, neither candidate recombinant was strongly<sup> </sup>supported. Given our inability to exclude the occurrence of<sup> </sup>mixed infection and template switching during amplification,<sup> </sup>laboratory artifact provides an alternative and likely explanation<sup> </sup>for the occurrence of phylogenetic incongruence in these two<sup> </sup>cases. We therefore conclude that, if it occurs at all, homologous<sup> </sup>recombination plays only a very minor role in the evolution<sup> </sup>of human influenza A virus.


    http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/abstract/JVI.02683-07v1

  • #2
    Re: Homologous Recombination is Very Rare or Absent in Human Influenza A Virus

    my list of candidates is here:



    about 40000 sequences were considered
    only homologuous recombinations in influenza A
    with one cut per segment were considered (AA+BB-->AB)
    I'm interested in expert panflu damage estimates
    my current links: http://bit.ly/hFI7H ILI-charts: http://bit.ly/CcRgT

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Homologous Recombination is Very Rare or Absent in Human Influenza A Virus

      Originally posted by gsgs View Post
      my list of candidates is here:



      about 40000 sequences were considered
      only homologuous recombinations in influenza A
      with one cut per segment were considered (AA+BB-->AB)
      Why limit to one cut?

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Homologous Recombination is Very Rare or Absent in Human Influenza A Virus

        It is worth noting that the group publishing this paper have been denying recombination for some time. The recombination in the 1918 sequence was said to be due to "differential evolution". Now its "lab error" and use of phylogentic analysis to mask origins.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Homologous Recombination is Very Rare or Absent in Human Influenza A Virus

          Originally posted by niman View Post
          Why limit to one cut?
          because it's faster. With many sequences, this routine is
          time-critical. If you have spare computer time, we might
          run it with 2 cuts...

          Most recombinations are of this 1-cut-sort or are detected
          as recombination by the 1-cut-routine.
          I'm interested in expert panflu damage estimates
          my current links: http://bit.ly/hFI7H ILI-charts: http://bit.ly/CcRgT

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Homologous Recombination is Very Rare or Absent in Human Influenza A Virus

            I'm curious ... did you read the whole paper ?
            Is their list of 315 somehow secret,copyright
            (for 6 months) ?
            I'm interested in expert panflu damage estimates
            my current links: http://bit.ly/hFI7H ILI-charts: http://bit.ly/CcRgT

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Homologous Recombination is Very Rare or Absent in Human Influenza A Virus

              Originally posted by gsgs View Post
              because it's faster. With many sequences, this routine is
              time-critical. If you have spare computer time, we might
              run it with 2 cuts...

              Most recombinations are of this 1-cut-sort or are detected
              as recombination by the 1-cut-routine.
              Please. Influenza knows how to recombine and there is no "one cut" rule (especially since sequences represent recombination events over a long period. Influenza doesn't replicate once and then stop, and co-infections are common).

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Homologous Recombination is Very Rare or Absent in Human Influenza A Virus

                More controversial, however, is the occurrence of homologous recombination in
                67
                influenza viruses, most likely involving copy-choice (template-switching) replication of RNA

                68
                molecules that co-infect a single cell. Although bioinformatic evidence for homologous

                recombination has been suggested (13, 19), these results remain unsubstantiated, 69 with

                70
                extensive lineage-specific rate variation a likely source of a false-positive signal for at least

                71
                some putative recombination events (24, 31). Indeed, because the genomic RNA generated

                72
                during replication is rapidly packaged with ribonucleoprotein, which will act to prevent the

                73
                occurrence of template-switching that is central to copy-choice replication, homologous RNA

                74
                recombination is thought to occur rarely, if at all, in both influenza viruses (17), and negative75

                strand RNA viruses in general (8). In particular, a comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of
                76
                recombination in negative-sense RNA viruses found only sporadic evidence for recombination,

                77
                and not among influenza viruses (8), although the process was recently demonstrated in Zaire

                78
                ebolavirus, an unsegmented negative-sense single-stranded RNA virus (30). If proven to occur,

                79
                homologous recombination would facilitate two evolutionary processes in influenza virus: the

                80
                purging of deleterious mutations and the rapid generation of novel genotypes, potentially

                81
                including new antigenic and drug-resistant variants.

                82
                To assess whether homologous recombination has played a role in shaping the genetic

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                diversity of human influenza A virus we compiled a data set of 13,852 sequences representing

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                all eight RNA segments of isolates of A/H1N1 and A/H3N2 subtypes. Using an exhaustive

                85
                search method (4), we statistically assessed the possibility of every potential two-breakpoint

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                homologous recombination event, considering each sequence as a possible recombinant and

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                searching over all possible parents and all possible breakpoints. In our data set, this translated

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                to considering over seven billion sequence triplets, where two of the sequences in each triplet

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                are posited to have recombined to form the third sequence in the triplet. For those sequences

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                identified by this method to contain putative recombinant sections longer than 100 nucleotides

                91
                (nt), we used more stringent phylogenetic methods to further verify that they contained an

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                evolutionary signal (i.e. phylogenetic incongruence) compatible with the action of homologous

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                recombination.

                94

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Homologous Recombination is Very Rare or Absent in Human Influenza A Virus

                  282
                  19. Niman, H. 2007. Swine Influenza A Evolution via Recombination ? Genetic Drift

                  283
                  Reservoir, Available from Nature Precedings.

                  284 <http://hdl.handle.net/10101/npre.2007.385.1>.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Homologous Recombination is Very Rare or Absent in Human Influenza A Virus

                    Originally posted by niman View Post
                    282
                    19. Niman, H. 2007. Swine Influenza A Evolution via Recombination ? Genetic Drift


                    283
                    Reservoir, Available from Nature Precedings.
                    284 <http://hdl.handle.net/10101/npre.2007.385.1>.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Homologous Recombination is Very Rare or Absent in Human Influenza A Virus

                      Briefly, the authors found many examples of short sequences, but couldn't verify with phylogenetic analysis (which doesn't work for short segments). Although they cited the swine data, they didn't address the swine data. For two human sequences they assumed that they had to be artifacts because the the parents were from the distant past.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Homologous Recombination is Very Rare or Absent in Human Influenza A Virus

                        We need a translation in everyday terms, why they found homologous recombination only rarely.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Homologous Recombination is Very Rare or Absent in Human Influenza A Virus

                          Originally posted by Malcolm View Post
                          We need a translation in everyday terms, why they found homologous recombination only rarely.
                          They were looking for the "obvious" recombination and ignored small regions (or couldn't verfiy them). However, their program also appears to have missed obvious examples in Korea, which suggest there are some systematic errors in their search. They cite the swine paper, but don't address the swine data in the paper or avian data, which have more obvious examples. They also ignore movement of single nucleotide polymorphisms, which is the most common form of recombination.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Homologous Recombination is Very Rare or Absent in Human Influenza A Virus

                            For the two candidate recombinants A/New York/11/2003 (PB2) and
                            188 A/Christchurch/14/2004 (NP), it is also puzzling that the parental sequences were sampled 25
                            189 and 31 years apart, respectively. Hence, for one of these recombination events to have
                            190 occurred, a lineage of viruses closely related to an ?archaic? virus (either A/Hong Kong/14/1974
                            191 or A/Beijing/1/1968) must have circulated until at least 1999 and recombined with A/New
                            192 York/424/1999 or A/New York/153/1999. Given the rapid rate of influenza A virus mutation
                            193 through frequent RNA polymerase error, as well as the rapid lineage turnover driven by positive
                            194 selection on the major antigenic proteins (6, 11, 12, 23), this scenario seems extremely unlikely.
                            195 Thus, laboratory error, such as template switching during amplification in a mixed or contaminated sample, is a likely explanation of these apparent homologous
                            196 recombination
                            197 events.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Homologous Recombination is Very Rare or Absent in Human Influenza A Virus

                              It is therefore possible that homologous recombination, should it occur in
                              218 influenza A virus, more commonly involves the transfer of very short sections of RNA, a process
                              219 that would be undetectable by the majority of other methods devised to detect recombination. If
                              220 homologous recombination of short segments is determined to be a relevant process in
                              221 influenza A virus evolution, the basis of our more frequent observation of mosaicism in A/H3N2 viruses compared to A/H1N1 viruses will need to be investigated further. However,
                              222 by far the
                              223 strongest signal in the influenza A virus sequence data analyzed here is that of strict clonality,
                              224 supporting most models of influenza virus evolution proposed to date.

                              Comment

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