Authors
Joel O Wertheim, Martin D Smith, Davey M Smith, Konrad Scheffler, Sergei L Kosakovsky Pond
Publication date
2014/9/1
Journal
Molecular biology and evolution
Volume
31
Issue
9
Pages
2356-2364
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Herpesviruses have been infecting and codiverging with their vertebrate hosts for hundreds of millions of years. The primate simplex viruses exemplify this pattern of virus–host codivergence, at a minimum, as far back as the most recent common ancestor of New World monkeys, Old World monkeys, and apes. Humans are the only primate species known to be infected with two distinct herpes simplex viruses: HSV-1 and HSV-2. Human herpes simplex viruses are ubiquitous, with over two-thirds of the human population infected by at least one virus. Here, we investigated whether the additional human simplex virus is the result of ancient viral lineage duplication or cross-species transmission. We found that standard phylogenetic models of nucleotide substitution are inadequate for distinguishing among these competing hypotheses; the extent of synonymous substitutions causes a substantial underestimation of …
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Scholar articles
JO Wertheim, MD Smith, DM Smith, K Scheffler… - Molecular biology and evolution, 2014