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   Prevalence of epistasis in the evolution of influenza A surface proteins  
   
نویسنده kryazhimskiy s. ,dushoff j. ,bazykin g.a. ,plotkin j.b.
منبع plos genetics - 2011 - دوره : 7 - شماره : 2
چکیده    The surface proteins of human influenza a viruses experience positive selection to escape both human immunity and,more recently,antiviral drug treatments. in bacteria and viruses,immune-escape and drug-resistant phenotypes often appear through a combination of several mutations that have epistatic effects on pathogen fitness. however,the extent and structure of epistasis in influenza viral proteins have not been systematically investigated. here,we develop a novel statistical method to detect positive epistasis between pairs of sites in a protein,based on the observed temporal patterns of sequence evolution. the method rests on the simple idea that a substitution at one site should rapidly follow a substitution at another site if the sites are positively epistatic. we apply this method to the surface proteins hemagglutinin and neuraminidase of influenza a virus subtypes h3n2 and h1n1. compared to a non-epistatic null distribution,we detect substantial amounts of epistasis and determine the identities of putatively epistatic pairs of sites. in particular,using sequence data alone,our method identifies epistatic interactions between specific sites in neuraminidase that have recently been demonstrated,in vitro,to confer resistance to the drug oseltamivir; these epistatic interactions are responsible for widespread drug resistance among h1n1 viruses circulating today. this experimental validation demonstrates the predictive power of our method to identify epistatic sites of importance for viral adaptation and public health. we conclude that epistasis plays a large role in shaping the molecular evolution of influenza viruses. in particular,sites with dn/ds<1,which would normally not be identified as positively selected,can facilitate viral adaptation through epistatic interactions with their partner sites. the knowledge of specific interactions among sites in influenza proteins may help us to predict the course of antigenic evolution and,consequently,to select more appropriate vaccines and drugs. © 2011 kryazhimskiy et al.
آدرس department of biology,university of pennsylvania,philadelphia,pa,united states,department of organismic and evolutionary biology,harvard university,cambridge,ma, United States, department of biology,mcmaster university,hamilton, Canada, institute for information transmission problems (kharkevich institute),russian academy of sciences,moscow, Russian Federation, department of biology,university of pennsylvania,philadelphia,pa,united states,program in applied mathematics and computational science,university of pennsylvania,philadelphia,pa, United States
 
     
   
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