Sequential bottlenecks drive viral evolution in early acute hepatitis C virus infection

Hepatitis C is a pandemic human RNA virus, which commonly causes chronic infection and liver disease. The characterization of viral populations that successfully initiate infection, and also those that drive progression to chronicity is instrumental for understanding pathogenesis and vaccine design....

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Published inPLoS pathogens Vol. 7; no. 9; p. e1002243
Main Authors Bull, Rowena A, Luciani, Fabio, McElroy, Kerensa, Gaudieri, Silvana, Pham, Son T, Chopra, Abha, Cameron, Barbara, Maher, Lisa, Dore, Gregory J, White, Peter A, Lloyd, Andrew R
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Public Library of Science 01.09.2011
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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Summary:Hepatitis C is a pandemic human RNA virus, which commonly causes chronic infection and liver disease. The characterization of viral populations that successfully initiate infection, and also those that drive progression to chronicity is instrumental for understanding pathogenesis and vaccine design. A comprehensive and longitudinal analysis of the viral population was conducted in four subjects followed from very early acute infection to resolution of disease outcome. By means of next generation sequencing (NGS) and standard cloning/Sanger sequencing, genetic diversity and viral variants were quantified over the course of the infection at frequencies as low as 0.1%. Phylogenetic analysis of reassembled viral variants revealed acute infection was dominated by two sequential bottleneck events, irrespective of subsequent chronicity or clearance. The first bottleneck was associated with transmission, with one to two viral variants successfully establishing infection. The second occurred approximately 100 days post-infection, and was characterized by a decline in viral diversity. In the two subjects who developed chronic infection, this second bottleneck was followed by the emergence of a new viral population, which evolved from the founder variants via a selective sweep with fixation in a small number of mutated sites. The diversity at sites with non-synonymous mutation was higher in predicted cytotoxic T cell epitopes, suggesting immune-driven evolution. These results provide the first detailed analysis of early within-host evolution of HCV, indicating strong selective forces limit viral evolution in the acute phase of infection.
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PAW and ARL are joint senior authors on this work.
Conceived and designed the experiments: RAB FL PAW ARL. Performed the experiments: RAB FL. Analyzed the data: RAB FL KM. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: FL RAB SG AC KM STP BC LM GJD PAW. Wrote the paper: RAB FL ARL. Contributed to the manuscript writing: KM PAW.
ISSN:1553-7374
1553-7366
1553-7374
DOI:10.1371/journal.ppat.1002243