Back to Search Start Over

Dengue virus preferentially uses human and mosquito non-optimal codons

Authors :
Luciana A Castellano
Ryan J McNamara
Horacio M Pallarés
Andrea V Gamarnik
Diego E Alvarez
Ariel A Bazzini
Source :
Molecular Systems Biology, Vol 20, Iss 10, Pp 1085-1108 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Springer Nature, 2024.

Abstract

Abstract Codon optimality refers to the effect that codon composition has on messenger RNA (mRNA) stability and translation level and implies that synonymous codons are not silent from a regulatory point of view. Here, we investigated the adaptation of virus genomes to the host optimality code using mosquito-borne dengue virus (DENV) as a model. We demonstrated that codon optimality exists in mosquito cells and showed that DENV preferentially uses nonoptimal (destabilizing) codons and avoids codons that are defined as optimal (stabilizing) in either human or mosquito cells. Human genes enriched in the codons preferentially and frequently used by DENV are upregulated during infection, and so is the tRNA decoding the nonoptimal and DENV preferentially used codon for arginine. We found that adaptation during single-host passaging in human or mosquito cells results in the selection of synonymous mutations towards DENV’s preferred nonoptimal codons that increase virus fitness. Finally, our analyses revealed that hundreds of viruses preferentially use nonoptimal codons, with those infecting a single host displaying an even stronger bias, suggesting that host–pathogen interaction shapes virus-synonymous codon choice.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17444292
Volume :
20
Issue :
10
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Molecular Systems Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.184320cf386d41939753e9b6e637626c
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s44320-024-00052-7