Tradeoffs between proliferation and transmission in virus evolution --
insights from evolutionary and functional analyses of SARS-CoV-2
- Jui-Hung Tai,
- Ding-Chin Lee,
- Hsin-Fu Lin,
- Tai-Ling Chao,
- Yongsen Ruan,
- Ya-Wen Cheng,
- Yu-Chi Chou,
- You-Yu Lin,
- Sui-Yuan Chang,
- Pei-Jer Chen,
- Shiou-Hwei Yeh,
- Hurng-Yi Wang
Jui-Hung Tai
National Taiwan University College of Medicine
Author ProfileDing-Chin Lee
National Taiwan University College of Medicine
Author ProfileHsin-Fu Lin
National Taiwan University College of Medicine
Author ProfileTai-Ling Chao
National Taiwan University College of Medicine
Author ProfileYa-Wen Cheng
National Taiwan University College of Medicine
Author ProfileYou-Yu Lin
National Taiwan University and Academia Sinica
Author ProfileSui-Yuan Chang
National Taiwan University College of Medicine
Author ProfilePei-Jer Chen
National Taiwan University College of Medicine
Author ProfileShiou-Hwei Yeh
National Taiwan University College of Medicine
Author ProfileAbstract
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To be successful a virus must maintain high between-host
transmissibility while also effectively adapting within hosts. The
impact of these potentially conflicting demands on viral genetic
diversity and adaptation remains largely unexplored. These modes of
adaptation can induce uncorrelated selection, bring to high frequency
mutations that enhance certain fitness aspects at others’ expense, and
contribute to the maintenance of genetic variation. The vast wealth of
SARS-CoV-2 genetic data gathered from within and across hosts offers an
unparalleled opportunity to test the above hypothesis. By analyzing a
large set of SARS-CoV-2 sequences (~ 2 million)
collected from early 2020 to mid-2021, we found that high frequency
mutations within hosts are sometimes detrimental during between-host
transmission. This highlights potential inverse selection pressures
within- versus between-hosts. We also identified a group of
nonsynonymous changes likely maintained by pleiotropy, as their
frequencies are significantly higher than neutral expectation, yet they
have never experienced clonal expansion. Analyzing one such mutation,
spike M1237I, reveals that spike I1237 boosts viral assembly but reduces
in vitro transmission, highlighting its pleiotropic effect. Though they
make up about 2% of total changes, these types of variants represent
37% of SARS-CoV-2 genetic diversity. These mutations are notably
prevalent in the Omicron variant from late 2021, hinting that pleiotropy
may promote positive epistasis and new successful variants. Estimates of
viral population dynamics, such as population sizes and transmission
bottlenecks, assume neutrality of within-host variation. Our
demonstration that these changes may affect fitness calls into question
the robustness of these estimates.