Authors
Asif M Khan, Olivo Miotto, Eduardo JM Nascimento, KN Srinivasan, AT Heiny, Guang Lan Zhang, ET Marques, Tin Wee Tan, Vladimir Brusic, Jerome Salmon, J Thomas August
Publication date
2008/8/13
Journal
PLoS neglected tropical diseases
Volume
2
Issue
8
Pages
e272
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Description
Background
Genetic variation and rapid evolution are hallmarks of RNA viruses, the result of high mutation rates in RNA replication and selection of mutants that enhance viral adaptation, including the escape from host immune responses. Variability is uneven across the genome because mutations resulting in a deleterious effect on viral fitness are restricted. RNA viruses are thus marked by protein sites permissive to multiple mutations and sites critical to viral structure-function that are evolutionarily robust and highly conserved. Identification and characterization of the historical dynamics of the conserved sites have relevance to multiple applications, including potential targets for diagnosis, and prophylactic and therapeutic purposes.
Methodology/Principal Findings
We describe a large-scale identification and analysis of evolutionarily highly conserved amino acid sequences of the entire dengue virus (DENV) proteome, with a focus on sequences of 9 amino acids or more, and thus immune-relevant as potential T-cell determinants. DENV protein sequence data were collected from the NCBI Entrez protein database in 2005 (9,512 sequences) and again in 2007 (12,404 sequences). Forty-four (44) sequences (pan-DENV sequences), mainly those of nonstructural proteins and representing ∼15% of the DENV polyprotein length, were identical in 80% or more of all recorded DENV sequences. Of these 44 sequences, 34 (∼77%) were present in ≥95% of sequences of each DENV type, and 27 (∼61%) were conserved in other Flaviviruses. The frequencies of variants of the pan-DENV sequences were low (0 to ∼5%), as compared to variant …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
AM Khan, O Miotto, EJM Nascimento, KN Srinivasan… - PLoS neglected tropical diseases, 2008