Abstract

BackgroundSynonymous or silent mutations are usually thought to evolve neutrally. However, accumulating recent evidence has demonstrated that silent mutations may destabilize RNA structures or disrupt cis regulatory motifs superimposed on coding sequences. Such observations suggest the existence of stretches of codon sites that are evolutionary conserved at both DNA-RNA and protein levels. Such stretches may point to functionally important regions within protein coding sequences not necessarily reflecting functional constraints on the amino-acid sequence. The HIV-1 genome is highly compact, and often harbors overlapping functional elements at the protein, RNA, and DNA levels. This superimposition of functions leads to complex selective forces acting on all levels of the genome and proteome. Considering the constraints on HIV-1 to maintain such a highly compact genome, we hypothesized that stretches of synonymous conservation would be common within its genome.ResultsWe used a combined computational-experimental approach to detect and characterize regions exhibiting strong purifying selection against synonymous substitutions along the HIV-1 genome. Our methodology is based on advanced probabilistic evolutionary models that explicitly account for synonymous rate variation among sites and rate dependencies among adjacent sites. These models are combined with a randomization procedure to automatically identify the most statistically significant regions of conserved synonymous sites along the genome. Using this procedure we identified 21 conserved regions. Twelve of these are mapped to regions within overlapping genes, seven correlate with known functional elements, while the functions of the remaining four are yet unknown. Among these four regions, we chose the one that deviates most from synonymous rate homogeneity for in-depth computational and experimental characterization. In our assays aiming to quantify viral fitness in both early and late stages of the replication cycle, no differences were observed between the mutated and the wild type virus following the introduction of synonymous mutations.ConclusionsThe contradiction between the inferred purifying selective forces and the lack of effect of these mutations on viral replication may be explained by the fact that the phenotype was measured in single-cycle infection assays in cell culture. Such a system does not account for the complexity of HIV-1 infections in vivo, which involves multiple infection cycles and interaction with the host immune system.

Highlights

  • Synonymous or silent mutations are usually thought to evolve neutrally

  • This study provides and explores a comprehensive map of the evolutionary selective forces operating on Human Immunodeficiency Virus type 1 (HIV-1)

  • We show that complex inter-related selective forces may operate on all protein coding genes within HIV-1

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Summary

Introduction

Accumulating recent evidence has demonstrated that silent mutations may destabilize RNA structures or disrupt cis regulatory motifs superimposed on coding sequences Such observations suggest the existence of stretches of codon sites that are evolutionary conserved at both DNA-RNA and protein levels. Sites playing an essential role, such as those composing the active site of an enzyme, are unlikely to undergo amino-acid replacements over evolutionary time This constraint reflects a purifying selection force, which prevents the fixation of mutations that otherwise would disturb protein structure or function [1,2]. The Influenza virus Hemagglutinin (HA) gene encodes a major surface antigen, targeted by neutralizing antibodies during infection Sequence analysis of this gene suggested a few sites to be positively selected [3], and these were shown to be responsible for evading the host immune system. Sites that are under strong purifying or positive selection are likely to be functionally or structurally important and their identification is often a critical first step towards understanding and manipulating a protein’s function [Reviewed in 4,5]

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