Evolution of genome size and complexity in the rhabdoviridae.

RNA viruses exhibit substantial structural, ecological and genomic diversity. However, genome size in RNA viruses is likely limited by a high mutation rate, resulting in the evolution of various mechanisms to increase complexity while minimising genome expansion. Here we conduct a large-scale analys...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Peter J Walker, Cadhla Firth, Steven G Widen, Kim R Blasdell, Hilda Guzman, Thomas G Wood, Prasad N Paradkar, Edward C Holmes, Robert B Tesh, Nikos Vasilakis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-02-01
Series:PLoS Pathogens
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004664
id doaj-e5d6de170173494e86bec5bceed3a640
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e5d6de170173494e86bec5bceed3a6402021-04-21T17:47:24ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Pathogens1553-73661553-73742015-02-01112e100466410.1371/journal.ppat.1004664Evolution of genome size and complexity in the rhabdoviridae.Peter J WalkerCadhla FirthSteven G WidenKim R BlasdellHilda GuzmanThomas G WoodPrasad N ParadkarEdward C HolmesRobert B TeshNikos VasilakisRNA viruses exhibit substantial structural, ecological and genomic diversity. However, genome size in RNA viruses is likely limited by a high mutation rate, resulting in the evolution of various mechanisms to increase complexity while minimising genome expansion. Here we conduct a large-scale analysis of the genome sequences of 99 animal rhabdoviruses, including 45 genomes which we determined de novo, to identify patterns of genome expansion and the evolution of genome complexity. All but seven of the rhabdoviruses clustered into 17 well-supported monophyletic groups, of which eight corresponded to established genera, seven were assigned as new genera, and two were taxonomically ambiguous. We show that the acquisition and loss of new genes appears to have been a central theme of rhabdovirus evolution, and has been associated with the appearance of alternative, overlapping and consecutive ORFs within the major structural protein genes, and the insertion and loss of additional ORFs in each gene junction in a clade-specific manner. Changes in the lengths of gene junctions accounted for as much as 48.5% of the variation in genome size from the smallest to the largest genome, and the frequency with which new ORFs were observed increased in the 3' to 5' direction along the genome. We also identify several new families of accessory genes encoded in these regions, and show that non-canonical expression strategies involving TURBS-like termination-reinitiation, ribosomal frame-shifts and leaky ribosomal scanning appear to be common. We conclude that rhabdoviruses have an unusual capacity for genomic plasticity that may be linked to their discontinuous transcription strategy from the negative-sense single-stranded RNA genome, and propose a model that accounts for the regular occurrence of genome expansion and contraction throughout the evolution of the Rhabdoviridae.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004664
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Peter J Walker
Cadhla Firth
Steven G Widen
Kim R Blasdell
Hilda Guzman
Thomas G Wood
Prasad N Paradkar
Edward C Holmes
Robert B Tesh
Nikos Vasilakis
spellingShingle Peter J Walker
Cadhla Firth
Steven G Widen
Kim R Blasdell
Hilda Guzman
Thomas G Wood
Prasad N Paradkar
Edward C Holmes
Robert B Tesh
Nikos Vasilakis
Evolution of genome size and complexity in the rhabdoviridae.
PLoS Pathogens
author_facet Peter J Walker
Cadhla Firth
Steven G Widen
Kim R Blasdell
Hilda Guzman
Thomas G Wood
Prasad N Paradkar
Edward C Holmes
Robert B Tesh
Nikos Vasilakis
author_sort Peter J Walker
title Evolution of genome size and complexity in the rhabdoviridae.
title_short Evolution of genome size and complexity in the rhabdoviridae.
title_full Evolution of genome size and complexity in the rhabdoviridae.
title_fullStr Evolution of genome size and complexity in the rhabdoviridae.
title_full_unstemmed Evolution of genome size and complexity in the rhabdoviridae.
title_sort evolution of genome size and complexity in the rhabdoviridae.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Pathogens
issn 1553-7366
1553-7374
publishDate 2015-02-01
description RNA viruses exhibit substantial structural, ecological and genomic diversity. However, genome size in RNA viruses is likely limited by a high mutation rate, resulting in the evolution of various mechanisms to increase complexity while minimising genome expansion. Here we conduct a large-scale analysis of the genome sequences of 99 animal rhabdoviruses, including 45 genomes which we determined de novo, to identify patterns of genome expansion and the evolution of genome complexity. All but seven of the rhabdoviruses clustered into 17 well-supported monophyletic groups, of which eight corresponded to established genera, seven were assigned as new genera, and two were taxonomically ambiguous. We show that the acquisition and loss of new genes appears to have been a central theme of rhabdovirus evolution, and has been associated with the appearance of alternative, overlapping and consecutive ORFs within the major structural protein genes, and the insertion and loss of additional ORFs in each gene junction in a clade-specific manner. Changes in the lengths of gene junctions accounted for as much as 48.5% of the variation in genome size from the smallest to the largest genome, and the frequency with which new ORFs were observed increased in the 3' to 5' direction along the genome. We also identify several new families of accessory genes encoded in these regions, and show that non-canonical expression strategies involving TURBS-like termination-reinitiation, ribosomal frame-shifts and leaky ribosomal scanning appear to be common. We conclude that rhabdoviruses have an unusual capacity for genomic plasticity that may be linked to their discontinuous transcription strategy from the negative-sense single-stranded RNA genome, and propose a model that accounts for the regular occurrence of genome expansion and contraction throughout the evolution of the Rhabdoviridae.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004664
work_keys_str_mv AT peterjwalker evolutionofgenomesizeandcomplexityintherhabdoviridae
AT cadhlafirth evolutionofgenomesizeandcomplexityintherhabdoviridae
AT stevengwiden evolutionofgenomesizeandcomplexityintherhabdoviridae
AT kimrblasdell evolutionofgenomesizeandcomplexityintherhabdoviridae
AT hildaguzman evolutionofgenomesizeandcomplexityintherhabdoviridae
AT thomasgwood evolutionofgenomesizeandcomplexityintherhabdoviridae
AT prasadnparadkar evolutionofgenomesizeandcomplexityintherhabdoviridae
AT edwardcholmes evolutionofgenomesizeandcomplexityintherhabdoviridae
AT robertbtesh evolutionofgenomesizeandcomplexityintherhabdoviridae
AT nikosvasilakis evolutionofgenomesizeandcomplexityintherhabdoviridae
_version_ 1714665861348851712