The evolutionary impacts of secondary structures within genomes of eukaryote-infecting single-stranded DNA viruses

Includes bibliographical references === Secondary structures forming through base-pairing in virus genomes have been proven to regulate several processes during viral replication cycles, including genome replication, transcription, post-transcriptional activities, protein synthesis, genome packaging...

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Main Author: Muhire, Brejnev Muhizi
Other Authors: Martin, Darren P
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/16933
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-169332020-07-22T05:07:45Z The evolutionary impacts of secondary structures within genomes of eukaryote-infecting single-stranded DNA viruses Muhire, Brejnev Muhizi Martin, Darren P Bioinformatics Includes bibliographical references Secondary structures forming through base-pairing in virus genomes have been proven to regulate several processes during viral replication cycles, including genome replication, transcription, post-transcriptional activities, protein synthesis, genome packaging, generation of viral sub-genomes and evasion of host-cell immune responses. Although computational DNA/RNA folding methods based-on free energy minimisation approaches are capable of predicting structures that form within virus genomes, these methods are not entirely accurate. Notably, many of structures that are accurately predicted will likely have no biological importance within the genomes in which they reside because even randomly generated single-stranded RNA/DNA sequences will form stable secondary structures. Nevertheless, with additional genome evolution analyses involving the detection of natural selection, sequence co-evolution, and genetic recombination, it is possible to both validate the existence of, and infer the biological importance of, computationally predicted structures. Here I implement and deploy free bioinformatics tools to (1) automate nucleotide and protein sequences classification into datasets useful for downstream molecular evolution analyses; (2) improve the accuracy of computational virus-genome-scale secondary structure prediction; (3) enable the identification of biologically relevant secondary structures using signals of purifying selection, coevolution and recombination within aligned sequence datasets; and (4) enable efficient visualisation of structural and selection data for better characterisation of individual secondary structural elements. Using these tools I carried-out large scale studies that predicted and characterised novel functional secondary structures, that potentially regulate transcription, translation, gene splicing, and replication, within the genomes of eukaryote-infecting ssDNA viruses (Circoviridae, Anelloviridae, Parvoviridae, Nanoviridae, and Geminiviridae). I show that purifying selection tends to be stronger at base-paired sites than it is at unpaired sites and, wherever mutations are tolerable within paired regions, I demonstrate that there exist strong associations between base-pairing and complementary coevolution. Finally, I show that the recombinant genomes of some, but not all, eukaryote-infecting ssDNA virus groups display weak evidence of both homologous and non-homologous recombination break-points preferentially occurring at genome sites that minimally disrupt secondary structures. Altogether, these results suggest that natural selection acting to maintain important biologically functional secondary structural elements has been a major process during the evolution of eukaryote-infecting ssDNA viruses. 2016-02-09T12:16:37Z 2016-02-09T12:16:37Z 2015 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/16933 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Health Sciences Institute of Infectious Disease and Molecular Medicine
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Bioinformatics
spellingShingle Bioinformatics
Muhire, Brejnev Muhizi
The evolutionary impacts of secondary structures within genomes of eukaryote-infecting single-stranded DNA viruses
description Includes bibliographical references === Secondary structures forming through base-pairing in virus genomes have been proven to regulate several processes during viral replication cycles, including genome replication, transcription, post-transcriptional activities, protein synthesis, genome packaging, generation of viral sub-genomes and evasion of host-cell immune responses. Although computational DNA/RNA folding methods based-on free energy minimisation approaches are capable of predicting structures that form within virus genomes, these methods are not entirely accurate. Notably, many of structures that are accurately predicted will likely have no biological importance within the genomes in which they reside because even randomly generated single-stranded RNA/DNA sequences will form stable secondary structures. Nevertheless, with additional genome evolution analyses involving the detection of natural selection, sequence co-evolution, and genetic recombination, it is possible to both validate the existence of, and infer the biological importance of, computationally predicted structures. Here I implement and deploy free bioinformatics tools to (1) automate nucleotide and protein sequences classification into datasets useful for downstream molecular evolution analyses; (2) improve the accuracy of computational virus-genome-scale secondary structure prediction; (3) enable the identification of biologically relevant secondary structures using signals of purifying selection, coevolution and recombination within aligned sequence datasets; and (4) enable efficient visualisation of structural and selection data for better characterisation of individual secondary structural elements. Using these tools I carried-out large scale studies that predicted and characterised novel functional secondary structures, that potentially regulate transcription, translation, gene splicing, and replication, within the genomes of eukaryote-infecting ssDNA viruses (Circoviridae, Anelloviridae, Parvoviridae, Nanoviridae, and Geminiviridae). I show that purifying selection tends to be stronger at base-paired sites than it is at unpaired sites and, wherever mutations are tolerable within paired regions, I demonstrate that there exist strong associations between base-pairing and complementary coevolution. Finally, I show that the recombinant genomes of some, but not all, eukaryote-infecting ssDNA virus groups display weak evidence of both homologous and non-homologous recombination break-points preferentially occurring at genome sites that minimally disrupt secondary structures. Altogether, these results suggest that natural selection acting to maintain important biologically functional secondary structural elements has been a major process during the evolution of eukaryote-infecting ssDNA viruses.
author2 Martin, Darren P
author_facet Martin, Darren P
Muhire, Brejnev Muhizi
author Muhire, Brejnev Muhizi
author_sort Muhire, Brejnev Muhizi
title The evolutionary impacts of secondary structures within genomes of eukaryote-infecting single-stranded DNA viruses
title_short The evolutionary impacts of secondary structures within genomes of eukaryote-infecting single-stranded DNA viruses
title_full The evolutionary impacts of secondary structures within genomes of eukaryote-infecting single-stranded DNA viruses
title_fullStr The evolutionary impacts of secondary structures within genomes of eukaryote-infecting single-stranded DNA viruses
title_full_unstemmed The evolutionary impacts of secondary structures within genomes of eukaryote-infecting single-stranded DNA viruses
title_sort evolutionary impacts of secondary structures within genomes of eukaryote-infecting single-stranded dna viruses
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/16933
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