Abstract

BackgroundInfection with feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) causes an immunosuppressive disease whose consequences are less severe if cats are co-infected with an attenuated FIV strain (PLV). We use virus diversity measurements, which reflect replication ability and the virus response to various conditions, to test whether diversity of virulent FIV in lymphoid tissues is altered in the presence of PLV. Our data consisted of the 3′ half of the FIV genome from three tissues of animals infected with FIV alone, or with FIV and PLV, sequenced by 454 technology.ResultsSince rare variants dominate virus populations, we had to carefully distinguish sequence variation from errors due to experimental protocols and sequencing. We considered an exponential-normal convolution model used for background correction of microarray data, and modified it to formulate an error correction approach for minor allele frequencies derived from high-throughput sequencing. Similar to accounting for over-dispersion in counts, this accounts for error-inflated variability in frequencies – and quite effectively reproduces empirically observed distributions. After obtaining error-corrected minor allele frequencies, we applied ANalysis Of VAriance (ANOVA) based on a linear mixed model and found that conserved sites and transition frequencies in FIV genes differ among tissues of dual and single infected cats. Furthermore, analysis of minor allele frequencies at individual FIV genome sites revealed 242 sites significantly affected by infection status (dual vs. single) or infection status by tissue interaction. All together, our results demonstrated a decrease in FIV diversity in bone marrow in the presence of PLV. Importantly, these effects were weakened or undetectable when error correction was performed with other approaches (thresholding of minor allele frequencies; probabilistic clustering of reads). We also queried the data for cytidine deaminase activity on the viral genome, which causes an asymmetric increase in G to A substitutions, but found no evidence for this host defense strategy.ConclusionsOur error correction approach for minor allele frequencies (more sensitive and computationally efficient than other algorithms) and our statistical treatment of variation (ANOVA) were critical for effective use of high-throughput sequencing data in understanding viral diversity. We found that co-infection with PLV shifts FIV diversity from bone marrow to lymph node and spleen.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12859-015-0607-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Infection with feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) causes an immunosuppressive disease whose consequences are less severe if cats are co-infected with an attenuated FIV strain (PLV)

  • We investigate mechanisms contributing to the differential outcomes of FIV infection in the presence and absence of PLV by testing the hypothesis that FIV diversity in immune tissues is altered in the presence of PLV

  • Performance of our error correction approach To evaluate our error correction approach we considered its sensitivity in terms of number of retained minor alleles and, relatedly, the statistical power it affords in detecting effects on FIV diversity through ANalysis Of VAriance (ANOVA)

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Summary

Introduction

Infection with feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) causes an immunosuppressive disease whose consequences are less severe if cats are co-infected with an attenuated FIV strain (PLV). The dynamics of lentiviral infection within a host have been intensively studied because they reveal important temporal and spatial features of virus-host interaction [1,2,3]. These interesting dynamics arise largely due to the unique lentiviral life history strategy that leaves a DNA copy (a provirus) of the viral RNA in the genome of an infected cell. Virus diversity in a tissue will change depending on the number of infected cells migrating into or out of a tissue and virus replication in the tissue even if there is no change in census size

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