๐ Differential stepwise evolution of SARS coronavirus functional proteins in different host species
Background. SARS coronavirus (SARS-CoV) was identified as the etiological agent of SARS, and extensive investigations indicated that it originated from an animal source (probably bats) and was recently introduced into the human population via wildlife animals from wet markets in southern China. Previous studies revealed that the spike (S) protein of SARS had experienced adaptive evolution, but whether other functional proteins of SARS have undergone adaptive evolution is not known. Results. We employed several methods to investigate selective pressure among different SARS-CoV groups representing different epidemic periods and hosts. Our results suggest that most functional proteins of SARS-CoV have experienced a stepwise adaptive evolutionary pathway. Similar to previous studies, the spike protein underwent strong positive selection in the early and middle phases, and became stabilized in the late phase. In addition, the replicase experienced positive selection only in human patients, whereas assembly proteins experienced positive selection mainly in the middle and late phases. No positive selection was found in any proteins of bat SARS-like-CoV. Furthermore, specific amino acid sites that may be the targets of positive selection in each group are identified. Conclusion. This extensive evolutionary analysis revealed the stepwise evolution of different functional proteins of SARS-Co. Vs at different epidemic stages and different hosts. These results support the hypothesis that SARS-CoV originated from bats and that the spill over into civets and humans were more recent events.
keywords
๐ spike protein (353)
๐ etiological agent (62)
๐ amino acid (454)
๐ results suggest (206)
author
๐ค Tang, Xianchun
๐ค Li, Gang
๐ค Vasilakis, Nikos
๐ค Zhang, Yuan
๐ค Shi, Zhengli
๐ค Zhong, Yang
๐ค Wang, Lin Fa
๐ค Zhang, Shuyi
year
โฐ 2009
journal
๐ BMC Evolutionary Biology
issn
๐ 14712148
volume
9
number
1
page
citedbycount
17
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