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Group Selection and Contribution of Minority Variants during Virus Adaptation Determines Virus Fitness and Phenotype
Authors:Antonio V Bordería  Ofer Isakov  Gonzalo Moratorio  Rasmus Henningsson  Sonia Agüera-González  Lindsey Organtini  Nina F Gn?dig  Hervé Blanc  Andrés Alcover  Susan Hafenstein  Magnus Fontes  Noam Shomron  Marco Vignuzzi
Abstract:Understanding how a pathogen colonizes and adapts to a new host environment is a primary aim in studying emerging infectious diseases. Adaptive mutations arise among the thousands of variants generated during RNA virus infection, and identifying these variants will shed light onto how changes in tropism and species jumps can occur. Here, we adapted Coxsackie virus B3 to a highly permissive and less permissive environment. Using deep sequencing and bioinformatics, we identified a multi-step adaptive process to adaptation involving residues in the receptor footprints that correlated with receptor availability and with increase in virus fitness in an environment-specific manner. We show that adaptation occurs by selection of a dominant mutation followed by group selection of minority variants that together, confer the fitness increase observed in the population, rather than selection of a single dominant genotype.
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