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Active Ebola Virus Replication and Heterogeneous Evolutionary Rates in EVD Survivors

Authors :
Ute Ströher
Stuart T. Nichol
Ellie Carmody
Gibrilla F. Deen
Dhamari Naidoo
Pierre Formenty
Gustavo Palacios
Jason T. Ladner
Foday Sahr
Gytis Dudas
Michael R. Wiley
Karla Prieto
Samuel S. Shepard
Ketan Patel
Andrew Rambaut
Shannon L M Whitmer
Barbara Knust
Source :
Whitmer, S L M, Ladner, JT, Wiley, M R, Patel, K J, Dudas, G, Rambaut, A, Sahr, F, Prieto, K, Shepard, S S, Carmody, E, Knust, B, Naidoo, D, Deen, G, Formenty, P, Nichol, ST & Palacios, GF & Ströher, U 2018, ' Active Ebola Virus Replication and Heterogeneous Evolutionary Rates in EVD Survivors ', Cell Reports, vol. 22, no. 5, pp. 1159-1168 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2018.01.008, Cell Reports, Cell Reports, Vol 22, Iss 5, Pp 1159-1168 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Summary Following cessation of continuous Ebola virus (EBOV) transmission within Western Africa, sporadic EBOV disease (EVD) cases continued to re-emerge beyond the viral incubation period. Epidemiological and genomic evidence strongly suggests that this represented transmission from EVD survivors. To investigate whether persistent infections are characterized by ongoing viral replication, we sequenced EBOV from the semen of nine EVD survivors and a subset of corresponding acute specimens. EBOV evolutionary rates during persistence were either similar to or reduced relative to acute infection rates. Active EBOV replication/transcription continued during convalescence, but decreased over time, consistent with viral persistence rather than viral latency. Patterns of genetic divergence suggest a moderate relaxation of selective constraints within the sGP carboxy-terminal tail during persistent infections, but do not support widespread diversifying selection. Altogether, our data illustrate that EBOV persistence in semen, urine, and aqueous humor is not a quiescent or latent infection.<br />Graphical Abstract<br />Highlights • During persistence, EBOV exhibits heterogeneous evolutionary rates • Active EBOV transcription and replication occurs during persistence • RNA hyper-editing observed during viral persistence • No evidence for significant selective pressure during persistence<br />Whitmer et al. find that Ebola virus continues replication/transcription within the eye and male genital tract of Ebola virus disease survivors. They describe viral replication, evolutionary rates, and selective pressures experienced during acute and persistent infection.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Whitmer, S L M, Ladner, JT, Wiley, M R, Patel, K J, Dudas, G, Rambaut, A, Sahr, F, Prieto, K, Shepard, S S, Carmody, E, Knust, B, Naidoo, D, Deen, G, Formenty, P, Nichol, ST & Palacios, GF & Ströher, U 2018, ' Active Ebola Virus Replication and Heterogeneous Evolutionary Rates in EVD Survivors ', Cell Reports, vol. 22, no. 5, pp. 1159-1168 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2018.01.008, Cell Reports, Cell Reports, Vol 22, Iss 5, Pp 1159-1168 (2018)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c8165a1de7bc9208ef2994e718059d34