[HTML][HTML] Multi-peaked adaptive landscape for chikungunya virus evolution predicts continued fitness optimization in Aedes albopictus mosquitoes

KA Tsetsarkin, R Chen, R Yun, SL Rossi… - Nature …, 2014 - nature.com
KA Tsetsarkin, R Chen, R Yun, SL Rossi, KS Plante, M Guerbois, N Forrester, GC Perng
Nature communications, 2014nature.com
Host species-specific fitness landscapes largely determine the outcome of host switching
during pathogen emergence. Using chikungunya virus (CHIKV) to study adaptation to a
mosquito vector, we evaluated mutations associated with recently evolved sub-lineages.
Multiple Aedes albopictu s-adaptive fitness peaks became available after CHIKV acquired
an initial adaptive (E1-A226V) substitution, permitting rapid lineage diversification observed
in nature. All second-step mutations involved replacements by glutamine or glutamic acid of …
Abstract
Host species-specific fitness landscapes largely determine the outcome of host switching during pathogen emergence. Using chikungunya virus (CHIKV) to study adaptation to a mosquito vector, we evaluated mutations associated with recently evolved sub-lineages. Multiple Aedes albopictus-adaptive fitness peaks became available after CHIKV acquired an initial adaptive (E1-A226V) substitution, permitting rapid lineage diversification observed in nature. All second-step mutations involved replacements by glutamine or glutamic acid of E2 glycoprotein amino acids in the acid-sensitive region, providing a framework to anticipate additional A. albopictus-adaptive mutations. The combination of second-step adaptive mutations into a single, ‘super-adaptive’ fitness peak also predicted the future emergence of CHIKV strains with even greater transmission efficiency in some current regions of endemic circulation, followed by their likely global spread.
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