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Mutational load causes stochastic evolutionary outcomes in acute RNA viral infection
Author(s) -
Lei Zhao,
Ali Abbasi,
Christopher J. R. Illingworth
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
virus evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.231
H-Index - 23
ISSN - 2057-1577
DOI - 10.1093/ve/vez008
Subject(s) - biology , viral evolution , mutation rate , fitness landscape , viral load , experimental evolution , genetic fitness , population , evolutionary dynamics , genetic drift , genetics , natural selection , evolutionary biology , context (archaeology) , mutation , adaptation (eye) , viral quasispecies , epistasis , mutation accumulation , selection (genetic algorithm) , rna , genetic variation , virus , gene , computer science , genome , sociology , paleontology , demography , neuroscience , artificial intelligence
Mutational load is known to be of importance for the evolution of RNA viruses, the combination of a high mutation rate and large population size leading to an accumulation of deleterious mutations. However, while the effects of mutational load on global viral populations have been considered, its quantitative effects at the within-host scale of infection are less well understood. We here show that even on the rapid timescale of acute disease, mutational load has an effect on within-host viral adaptation, reducing the effective selection acting upon beneficial variants by ∼10 per cent. Furthermore, mutational load induces considerable stochasticity in the pattern of evolution, causing a more than five-fold uncertainty in the effective fitness of a transmitted beneficial variant. Our work aims to bridge the gap between classic models from population genetic theory and the biology of viral infection. In an advance on some previous models of mutational load, we replace the assumption of a constant variant fitness cost with an experimentally-derived distribution of fitness effects. Expanding previous frameworks for evolutionary simulation, we introduce the Wright-Fisher model with continuous mutation, which describes a continuum of possible modes of replication within a cell. Our results advance our understanding of adaptation in the context of strong selection and a high mutation rate. Despite viral populations having large absolute sizes, critical events in viral adaptation, including antigenic drift and the onset of drug resistance, arise through stochastic evolutionary processes.

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