| Name: | Description: | Size: | Format: | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 365.73 KB | Adobe PDF |
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
As a consequence of immune pressure, influenza
virus hemagglutinin presents some of its amino acids
under positive selection. Several authors have reported the
existence of influenza A hemagglutinin codons under positive
selective pressure (PSP). In this framework, the present
work objectives were to demonstrate the presence of PSP
and evaluate its effects on Victoria- and Yamagata-like
influenza B viruses. Methodology adopted consisted in
estimating the acceptance rate of nonsynonymous substitutions
(ω = dN/dS) that describe the strength of selective
pressure and identifying codons that may be positively
selected, applying a set of continuous-time Markov chain
codon-substitution models. Two groups of HA1 sequences
(140 from Yamagata and 60 from Victoria lineage) were
used. All the model maximum-likelihood estimates were
obtained using codeml software application (PAML 3.15).
The hypothesis of no existence of sites under PSP was
rejected for both lineages (p<0.001), using likelihood ratio
tests. These results demonstrate the presence of positive
selection acting on hemagglutinin of both Yamagata- and
Victoria-like influenza B viruses. Several different sites
were identified to be under PSP on Yamagata and Victoria hemagglutinins. Sites found with a posterior probability >0.95 were codons 197 and 199 in both lineages, codon
75 in the Yamagata lineage, and codon 129 in the Victoria
lineage. The detected amino acids are located at or near
antigenic sites in influenza A virus H3 hemagglutinin.
Description
Keywords
Infecções Respiratórias Influenza B Positive Selection Hemagglutinin Phylogenetic Analysis Maximum Likelihood Estados de Saúde e de Doença
Pedagogical Context
Citation
J Mol Evol. 2008 Oct;67(4):427-35. Epub 2008 Oct 8
Publisher
Springer
