Abstract

BackgroundSeveral lines of evidence suggest that recombination plays a central role in replication and evolution of herpes simplex virus-1 (HSV-1). G-quadruplex (G4)-motifs have been linked to recombination events in human and microbial genomes, but their role in recombination has not been studied in DNA viruses.ResultsThe availability of near full-length sequences from 40 HSV-1 recombinant strains with exact position of the recombination breakpoints provided us with a unique opportunity to investigate the role of G4-motifs in recombination among herpes viruses. We mapped the G4-motifs in the parental and all the 40 recombinant strains. Interestingly, the genome-wide distribution of breakpoints closely mirrors the G4 densities in the HSV-1 genome; regions of the genome with higher G4 densities had higher number of recombination breakpoints. Biophysical characterization of oligonucleotides from a subset of predicted G4-motifs confirmed the formation of G-quadruplex structures. Our analysis also reveals that G4-motifs are enriched in regions flanking the recombination breakpoints. Interestingly, about 11% of breakpoints lie within a G4-motif, making these DNA secondary structures hotspots for recombination in the HSV-1 genome. Breakpoints within G4-motifs predominantly lie within G4-clusters rather than individual G4-motifs. Of note, we identified the terminal guanosine of G4-clusters at the boundaries of the UL (unique long) region on either side of the OriL (origin of replication within UL) represented the commonest breakpoint among the HSV-1 recombinants.ConclusionOur findings suggest a correlation between the HSV-1 recombination landscape and the distribution of G4-motifs and G4-clusters, with possible implications for the evolution of DNA viruses.

Highlights

  • Several lines of evidence suggest that recombination plays a central role in replication and evolution of herpes simplex virus-1 (HSV-1)

  • The distribution of recombination breakpoints mirrors G4 densities in the HSV-1 genome First, we sought to analyze the co-distribution of G4-motifs and recombination breakpoints, if any, by a sliding window method

  • We identified that recombination landscape is closely associated with the density of G4-motifs in the HSV-1 genome (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Several lines of evidence suggest that recombination plays a central role in replication and evolution of herpes simplex virus-1 (HSV-1). G-quadruplex (G4)-motifs have been linked to recombination events in human and microbial genomes, but their role in recombination has not been studied in DNA viruses. Herpes simplex virus-I (HSV-1), known as Human Herpes Virus-I (HHV-1), is a double-stranded DNA virus with a genome size of about 150 kb. Each segment (i.e. the L and the S segment) further comprises a central unique region (U) flanked by repeats (terminal repeats –TR; inverted repeats –IR) inverted with respect to each other. The HSV-1 genome is canonically represented as: TRL-UL-IRL-IRS-US-TRS. This genomic arrangement allows unique regions to invert, resulting in four isomeric forms of HSV-1 genome.

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