Quasispecies spatial models for RNA viruses with different replication modes and infection strategies.

Empirical observations and theoretical studies suggest that viruses may use different replication strategies to amplify their genomes, which impact the dynamics of mutation accumulation in viral populations and therefore, their fitness and virulence. Similarly, during natural infections, viruses rep...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Josep Sardanyés, Santiago F Elena
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/21949777/pdf/?tool=EBI
_version_ 1818460654190723072
author Josep Sardanyés
Santiago F Elena
author_facet Josep Sardanyés
Santiago F Elena
author_sort Josep Sardanyés
collection DOAJ
description Empirical observations and theoretical studies suggest that viruses may use different replication strategies to amplify their genomes, which impact the dynamics of mutation accumulation in viral populations and therefore, their fitness and virulence. Similarly, during natural infections, viruses replicate and infect cells that are rarely in suspension but spatially organized. Surprisingly, most quasispecies models of virus replication have ignored these two phenomena. In order to study these two viral characteristics, we have developed stochastic cellular automata models that simulate two different modes of replication (geometric vs stamping machine) for quasispecies replicating and spreading on a two-dimensional space. Furthermore, we explored these two replication models considering epistatic fitness landscapes (antagonistic vs synergistic) and different scenarios for cell-to-cell spread, one with free superinfection and another with superinfection inhibition. We found that the master sequences for populations replicating geometrically and with antagonistic fitness effects vanished at low critical mutation rates. By contrast, the highest critical mutation rate was observed for populations replicating geometrically but with a synergistic fitness landscape. Our simulations also showed that for stamping machine replication and antagonistic epistasis, a combination that appears to be common among plant viruses, populations further increased their robustness by inhibiting superinfection. We have also shown that the mode of replication strongly influenced the linkage between viral loci, which rapidly reached linkage equilibrium at increasing mutations for geometric replication. We also found that the strategy that minimized the time required to spread over the whole space was the stamping machine with antagonistic epistasis among mutations. Finally, our simulations revealed that the multiplicity of infection fluctuated but generically increased along time.
first_indexed 2024-12-14T23:33:41Z
format Article
id doaj.art-3ca25529eb90420ca40324be0eab3ca9
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1932-6203
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-14T23:33:41Z
publishDate 2011-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj.art-3ca25529eb90420ca40324be0eab3ca92022-12-21T22:43:39ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-0169e2488410.1371/journal.pone.0024884Quasispecies spatial models for RNA viruses with different replication modes and infection strategies.Josep SardanyésSantiago F ElenaEmpirical observations and theoretical studies suggest that viruses may use different replication strategies to amplify their genomes, which impact the dynamics of mutation accumulation in viral populations and therefore, their fitness and virulence. Similarly, during natural infections, viruses replicate and infect cells that are rarely in suspension but spatially organized. Surprisingly, most quasispecies models of virus replication have ignored these two phenomena. In order to study these two viral characteristics, we have developed stochastic cellular automata models that simulate two different modes of replication (geometric vs stamping machine) for quasispecies replicating and spreading on a two-dimensional space. Furthermore, we explored these two replication models considering epistatic fitness landscapes (antagonistic vs synergistic) and different scenarios for cell-to-cell spread, one with free superinfection and another with superinfection inhibition. We found that the master sequences for populations replicating geometrically and with antagonistic fitness effects vanished at low critical mutation rates. By contrast, the highest critical mutation rate was observed for populations replicating geometrically but with a synergistic fitness landscape. Our simulations also showed that for stamping machine replication and antagonistic epistasis, a combination that appears to be common among plant viruses, populations further increased their robustness by inhibiting superinfection. We have also shown that the mode of replication strongly influenced the linkage between viral loci, which rapidly reached linkage equilibrium at increasing mutations for geometric replication. We also found that the strategy that minimized the time required to spread over the whole space was the stamping machine with antagonistic epistasis among mutations. Finally, our simulations revealed that the multiplicity of infection fluctuated but generically increased along time.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/21949777/pdf/?tool=EBI
spellingShingle Josep Sardanyés
Santiago F Elena
Quasispecies spatial models for RNA viruses with different replication modes and infection strategies.
PLoS ONE
title Quasispecies spatial models for RNA viruses with different replication modes and infection strategies.
title_full Quasispecies spatial models for RNA viruses with different replication modes and infection strategies.
title_fullStr Quasispecies spatial models for RNA viruses with different replication modes and infection strategies.
title_full_unstemmed Quasispecies spatial models for RNA viruses with different replication modes and infection strategies.
title_short Quasispecies spatial models for RNA viruses with different replication modes and infection strategies.
title_sort quasispecies spatial models for rna viruses with different replication modes and infection strategies
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/21949777/pdf/?tool=EBI
work_keys_str_mv AT josepsardanyes quasispeciesspatialmodelsforrnaviruseswithdifferentreplicationmodesandinfectionstrategies
AT santiagofelena quasispeciesspatialmodelsforrnaviruseswithdifferentreplicationmodesandinfectionstrategies