Wide spectrum and high frequency of genomic structural variation, including transposable elements, in large double-stranded DNA viruses.

Fiche publication


Date publication

janvier 2020

Journal

Virus evolution

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Dr MEIGNIN Carine, Dr DAEFFLER Laurent


Tous les auteurs :
Loiseau V, Herniou EA, Moreau Y, Lévêque N, Meignin C, Daeffler L, Federici B, Cordaux R, Gilbert C

Résumé

Our knowledge of the diversity and frequency of genomic structural variation segregating in populations of large double-stranded (ds) DNA viruses is limited. Here, we sequenced the genome of a baculovirus ( multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus [AcMNPV]) purified from beet armyworm () larvae at depths >195,000× using both short- (Illumina) and long-read (PacBio) technologies. Using a pipeline relying on hierarchical clustering of structural variants (SVs) detected in individual short- and long-reads by six variant callers, we identified a total of 1,141 SVs in AcMNPV, including 464 deletions, 443 inversions, 160 duplications, and 74 insertions. These variants are considered robust and unlikely to result from technical artifacts because they were independently detected in at least three long reads as well as at least three short reads. SVs are distributed along the entire AcMNPV genome and may involve large genomic regions (30,496 bp on average). We show that no less than 39.9 per cent of genomes carry at least one SV in AcMNPV populations, that the vast majority of SVs (75%) segregate at very low frequency (<0.01%) and that very few SVs persist after ten replication cycles, consistent with a negative impact of most SVs on AcMNPV fitness. Using short-read sequencing datasets, we then show that populations of two iridoviruses and one herpesvirus are also full of SVs, as they contain between 426 and 1,102 SVs carried by 52.4-80.1 per cent of genomes. Finally, AcMNPV long reads allowed us to identify 1,757 transposable elements (TEs) insertions, 895 of which are truncated and occur at one extremity of the reads. This further supports the role of baculoviruses as possible vectors of horizontal transfer of TEs. Altogether, we found that SVs, which evolve mostly under rapid dynamics of gain and loss in viral populations, represent an important feature in the biology of large dsDNA viruses.

Mots clés

baculovirus, genomic structural variation, herpesvirus, iridovirus, large double-stranded DNA viruses, transposable elements

Référence

Virus Evol. 2020 Jan;6(1):vez060