Abstract

BackgroundViral populations are complex, dynamic, and fast evolving. The evolution of groups of closely related viruses in a competitive environment is termed quasispecies. To fully understand the role that quasispecies play in viral evolution, characterizing the trajectories of viral genotypes in an evolving population is the key. In particular, long-range haplotype information for thousands of individual viruses is critical; yet generating this information is non-trivial. Popular deep sequencing methods generate relatively short reads that do not preserve linkage information, while third generation sequencing methods have higher error rates that make detection of low frequency mutations a bioinformatics challenge. Here we applied BAsE-Seq, an Illumina-based single-virion sequencing technology, to eight samples from four chronic hepatitis B (CHB) patients – once before antiviral treatment and once after viral rebound due to resistance.ResultsWith single-virion sequencing, we obtained 248–8796 single-virion sequences per sample, which allowed us to find evidence for both hard and soft selective sweeps. We were able to reconstruct population demographic history that was independently verified by clinically collected data. We further verified four of the samples independently through PacBio SMRT and Illumina Pooled deep sequencing.ConclusionsOverall, we showed that single-virion sequencing yields insight into viral evolution and population dynamics in an efficient and high throughput manner. We believe that single-virion sequencing is widely applicable to the study of viral evolution in the context of drug resistance and host adaptation, allows differentiation between soft or hard selective sweeps, and may be useful in the reconstruction of intra-host viral population demographic history.

Highlights

  • Viral populations are complex, dynamic, and fast evolving

  • In order to leverage the recent advancements in generation sequencing (NGS) technology, we explored single-virion sequencing as an option for characterizing quasispecies diversity in active infections

  • Haplotype information is vital for revealing hidden population dynamics invisible in standard deep sequencing data

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Summary

Introduction

Dynamic, and fast evolving. The evolution of groups of closely related viruses in a competitive environment is termed quasispecies. Viral intra-host evolution is a critical obstacle in the treatment of chronic infectious diseases. It is the root cause of viral host immune escape and drug resistance, and a major impediment in disease cure and eradication [1, 2]. A sufficiently large viral population can potentially carry, or produce within a short period of time, all possible mutations, providing a genetic reservoir for rapid viral response and adaptation [5,6,7,8,9,10]. Mutations that quickly become predominant in the population are indicators for how the viruses might be circumventing host response and treatment that enable fresh approaches for drug development research [14]

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