PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases (Sep 2018)

Phylogenomic analysis unravels evolution of yellow fever virus within hosts.

  • Chen Chen,
  • Dong Jiang,
  • Ming Ni,
  • Jing Li,
  • Zhihai Chen,
  • Jingyuan Liu,
  • Hanhui Ye,
  • Gary Wong,
  • Wei Li,
  • Yuanyuan Zhang,
  • Beibei Wang,
  • Yuhai Bi,
  • Danying Chen,
  • Ping Zhang,
  • Xuesen Zhao,
  • Yaxian Kong,
  • Weifeng Shi,
  • Pengcheng Du,
  • Gengfu Xiao,
  • Juncai Ma,
  • George F Gao,
  • Jie Cui,
  • Fujie Zhang,
  • Wenjun Liu,
  • Xiaochen Bo,
  • Ang Li,
  • Hui Zeng,
  • Di Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0006738
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 9
p. e0006738

Abstract

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The yellow fever virus (YFV) recently reemerged in the large outbreaks in Africa and Brazil, and the first imported patients into Asia have recalled the concerns of YFV evolution. Here we show phylogenomics of YFV with serial clinical samples of the 2016 YFV infections. Phylogenetics exhibited that the 2016 strains were close to Angola 1971 strains and only three amino acid changes presented new to other lineages. Deep sequencing of viral genomes discovered 101 intrahost single nucleotide variations (iSNVs) and 234 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Analysis of iSNV distribution and mutated allele frequency revealed that the coding regions were under purifying selection. Comparison of the evolutionary rates estimated by iSNV and SNP showed that the intrahost rate was ~2.25 times higher than the epidemic rate, and both rates were higher than the long-term YFV substitution rate, as expected. In addition, the result also hinted that short viremia duration of YFV might further hinder the evolution of YFV.