eLife (Sep 2020)

Mutational resilience of antiviral restriction favors primate TRIM5α in host-virus evolutionary arms races

  • Jeannette L Tenthorey,
  • Candice Young,
  • Afeez Sodeinde,
  • Michael Emerman,
  • Harmit S Malik

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.59988
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

Read online

Host antiviral proteins engage in evolutionary arms races with viruses, in which both sides rapidly evolve at interaction interfaces to gain or evade immune defense. For example, primate TRIM5α uses its rapidly evolving ‘v1’ loop to bind retroviral capsids, and single mutations in this loop can dramatically improve retroviral restriction. However, it is unknown whether such gains of viral restriction are rare, or if they incur loss of pre-existing function against other viruses. Using deep mutational scanning, we comprehensively measured how single mutations in the TRIM5α v1 loop affect restriction of divergent retroviruses. Unexpectedly, we found that the majority of mutations increase weak antiviral function. Moreover, most random mutations do not disrupt potent viral restriction, even when it is newly acquired via a single adaptive substitution. Our results indicate that TRIM5α’s adaptive landscape is remarkably broad and mutationally resilient, maximizing its chances of success in evolutionary arms races with retroviruses.

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