Long-term experimental evolution of HIV-1 reveals effects of environment and mutational history

Open access
Date
2020Type
- Journal Article
Abstract
An often-returning question for not only HIV-1, but also other organisms, is how predictable evolutionary paths are. The environment, mutational history, and random processes can all impact the exact evolutionary paths, but to which extent these factors contribute to the evolutionary dynamics of a particular system is an open question. Especially in a virus like HIV-1, with a large mutation rate and large population sizes, evolution is expected to be highly predictable if the impact of environment and history is low, and evolution is not neutral. We investigated the effect of environment and mutational history by analyzing sequences from a long-term evolution experiment, in which HIV-1 was passaged on 2 different cell types in 8 independent evolutionary lines and 8 derived lines, 4 of which involved a switch of the environment. The experiments lasted for 240–300 passages, corresponding to approximately 400–600 generations or almost 3 years. The sequences show signs of extensive parallel evolution—the majority of mutations that are shared between independent lines appear in both cell types, but we also find that both environment and mutational history significantly impact the evolutionary paths. We conclude that HIV-1 evolution is robust to small changes in the environment, similar to a transmission event in the absence of an immune response or drug pressure. We also find that the fitness landscape of HIV-1 is largely smooth, although we find some evidence for both positive and negative epistatic interactions between mutations. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000462342Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
PLoS BiologyVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
PLOSFunding
149769 - Infering virus colonization pathways from high-throughput genetic data (SNF)
179170 - Assessing phylodynamic methods in silico and in vitro (SNF)
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