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Intertypic modular exchanges of genomic segments by homologous recombination at universally conserved segments in human adenovirus species D
Authors:Gabriel Gonzalez  Kanako O. Koyanagi  Koki Aoki  Nobuyoshi Kitaichi  Shigeaki Ohno  Hisatoshi Kaneko  Susumu Ishida  Hidemi Watanabe
Affiliation:1. Graduate School of Information Science and Technology, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060-0814, Japan;2. Department of Ophthalmology, Hokkaido University Graduate School of Medicine, Sapporo 060-8638, Japan;3. Department of Ophthalmology, Health Sciences University of Hokkaido, Sapporo 002-8072, Japan;4. Department of Ophthalmology, Fukushima Medical University School of Medicine, Fukushima 960-1295, Japan;5. Hobara Eye clinic, Date 960-0612, Japan
Abstract:
Human adenovirus species D (HAdV-D), which is composed of clinically and epidemiologically important pathogens worldwide, contains more taxonomic “types” than any other species of the genus Mastadenovirus, although the mechanisms accounting for the high level of diversity remain to be disclosed. Recent studies of known and new types of HAdV-D have indicated that intertypic recombination between distant types contributes to the increasing diversity of the species. However, such findings raise the question as to how homologous recombination events occur between diversified types since homologous recombination is suppressed as nucleotide sequences diverge. In order to address this question, we investigated the distribution of the recombination boundaries in comparison with the landscape of intergenomic sequence conservation assessed according to the synonymous substitution rate (dS). The results revealed that specific genomic segments are conserved between even the most distantly related genomes; we call these segments “universally conserved segments” (UCSs). These findings suggest that UCSs facilitate homologous recombination, resulting in intergenomic segmental exchanges of UCS-flanking genomic regions as recombination modules. With the aid of such a mechanism, the haploid genomes of HAdV-Ds may have been reshuffled, resulting in chimeric genomes out of diversified repertoires in the HAdV-D population analogous to the MHC region reshuffled via crossing over in vertebrates. In addition, some HAdVs with chimeric genomes may have had the opportunity to avoid host immune responses thereby causing epidemics.
Keywords:HAdV, human adenovirus   HAdV-D, human adenovirus species D   GT, genotype   dS, synonymous substitution rate   UCSs, universally conserved segments   MHC, major histocompatibility complex   INSDC, International Nucleotide Sequence Database Collaboration   MGA, multiple genome sequence alignment   RRE, reliable recombination event   UTR, untranslated region
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