4.5 Review

Determinants of Virus Variation, Evolution, and Host Adaptation

Journal

PATHOGENS
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pathogens11091039

Keywords

virus evolution; co-evolution; host adaptation; mutation; reassortment; recombination; selection pressure; quasispecies

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [R01GM120108]
  2. Nebraska Agricultural Experiment Station
  3. Hatch Act [1007272]
  4. USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture

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Virus evolution refers to the changes in the genetic structure of a viral population over time, leading to the emergence of new viral variants, strains, and species. Viruses generate genetic diversity through mutation, reassortment, and recombination, allowing them to adapt to different hosts, vectors, and environments. Selection effects and mutations play important roles in virus host adaptation and the emergence of new species.
Virus evolution is the change in the genetic structure of a viral population over time and results in the emergence of new viral variants, strains, and species with novel biological properties, including adaptation to new hosts. There are host, vector, environmental, and viral factors that contribute to virus evolution. To achieve or fine tune compatibility and successfully establish infection, viruses adapt to a particular host species or to a group of species. However, some viruses are better able to adapt to diverse hosts, vectors, and environments. Viruses generate genetic diversity through mutation, reassortment, and recombination. Plant viruses are exposed to genetic drift and selection pressures by host and vector factors, and random variants or those with a competitive advantage are fixed in the population and mediate the emergence of new viral strains or species with novel biological properties. This process creates a footprint in the virus genome evident as the preferential accumulation of substitutions, insertions, or deletions in areas of the genome that function as determinants of host adaptation. Here, with respect to plant viruses, we review the current understanding of the sources of variation, the effect of selection, and its role in virus evolution and host adaptation.

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