Abstract

BackgroundEpistasis is one of the central themes in viral evolution due to its importance in drug resistance, immune escape, and interspecies transmission. However, there is a lack of experimental approach to systematically probe for epistatic residues.ResultsBy utilizing the information from natural occurring sequences and high-throughput genetics, this study established a novel strategy to identify epistatic residues. The rationale is that a substitution that is deleterious in one strain may be prevalent in nature due to the presence of a naturally occurring compensatory substitution. Here, high-throughput genetics was applied to influenza A virus M segment to systematically identify deleterious substitutions. Comparison with natural sequence variation showed that a deleterious substitution M1 Q214H was prevalent in circulating strains. A coevolution analysis was then performed and indicated that M1 residues 121, 207, 209, and 214 naturally coevolved as a group. Subsequently, we experimentally validated that M1 A209T was a compensatory substitution for M1 Q214H.ConclusionsThis work provided a proof-of-concept to identify epistatic residues by coupling high-throughput genetics with phylogenetic information. In particular, we were able to identify an epistatic interaction between M1 substitutions A209T and Q214H. This analytic strategy can potentially be adapted to study any protein of interest, provided that the information on natural sequence variants is available.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12864-015-2358-7) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Epistasis is one of the central themes in viral evolution due to its importance in drug resistance, immune escape, and interspecies transmission

  • Epistasis is a critical factor in viral evolution [1, 2], in which the phenotypic effect of a given mutation varies under different genetic backgrounds

  • This study demonstrates the power of combining high-throughput genetics and phylogenetic information to identify epistatic residues

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Summary

Introduction

Epistasis is one of the central themes in viral evolution due to its importance in drug resistance, immune escape, and interspecies transmission. Identification of pairwise epistatic interaction offers valuable information to understand the functional basis of viral evolution in nature. Numerous computational algorithms and analytical tools have been developed to identify molecular interactions based on coevolving residues (reviewed in [13]). Such phylogenetic information may lead to the identification of epistatic interactions [5, 12]. Coevolving mutations may be attributed to genetic drift and hitchhiking, which can be pervasive in evolution [14,15,16], rather than epistatic interactions. It becomes inefficient to probe for epistatic interaction based on coevolutionary

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