病毒在野外的传播速度有多快?

IF 9.8 1区 生物学 Q1 Agricultural and Biological Sciences
PLoS Biology Pub Date : 2024-12-03 eCollection Date: 2024-12-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pbio.3002914
Simon Dellicour, Paul Bastide, Pauline Rocu, Denis Fargette, Olivier J Hardy, Marc A Suchard, Stéphane Guindon, Philippe Lemey
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引用次数: 0

摘要

从病毒爆发中收集的基因组数据可以利用连续的系统地理推断在二维空间中重建病毒谱系的传播历史。这些空间显式重建随后可用于估计传播指标,这些指标可以提供传播动态和在宿主之间传播能力的信息。然而,基因组序列的异质性采样工作可能会影响系统地理分散度量的准确性。虽然空间采样偏差对连续系统地理推断结果的影响已经被探索过,但采样强度(即采样大小)在通过连续系统地理重建来表征分散模式时的影响尚未得到彻底评估。在我们的研究中,我们使用模拟来评估3个扩散指标-谱系扩散速度,扩散系数和距离隔离(IBD)信号指标-对采样强度的鲁棒性。我们的研究结果表明,扩散系数和IBD信号指标似乎对用于系统地理重建的样本数量最稳健。然后,我们使用这两种传播度量来比较各种病毒在动物种群中传播的传播模式和能力。我们的比较分析揭示了广泛的IBD模式和扩散系数,主要反映了主要受感染宿主物种的传播能力,但在某些情况下,也可能是由人类介导的动物贸易运动驱动的快速和/或长距离传播事件的特征。总的来说,我们的研究为未来研究中谱系传播指标的使用提供了关键建议,并说明了它们在不同环境中比较病毒传播的应用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How fast are viruses spreading in the wild?

Genomic data collected from viral outbreaks can be exploited to reconstruct the dispersal history of viral lineages in a two-dimensional space using continuous phylogeographic inference. These spatially explicit reconstructions can subsequently be used to estimate dispersal metrics that can be informative of the dispersal dynamics and the capacity to spread among hosts. Heterogeneous sampling efforts of genomic sequences can however impact the accuracy of phylogeographic dispersal metrics. While the impact of spatial sampling bias on the outcomes of continuous phylogeographic inference has previously been explored, the impact of sampling intensity (i.e., sampling size) when aiming to characterise dispersal patterns through continuous phylogeographic reconstructions has not yet been thoroughly evaluated. In our study, we use simulations to evaluate the robustness of 3 dispersal metrics - a lineage dispersal velocity, a diffusion coefficient, and an isolation-by-distance (IBD) signal metric - to the sampling intensity. Our results reveal that both the diffusion coefficient and IBD signal metrics appear to be the most robust to the number of samples considered for the phylogeographic reconstruction. We then use these 2 dispersal metrics to compare the dispersal pattern and capacity of various viruses spreading in animal populations. Our comparative analysis reveals a broad range of IBD patterns and diffusion coefficients mostly reflecting the dispersal capacity of the main infected host species but also, in some cases, the likely signature of rapid and/or long-distance dispersal events driven by human-mediated movements through animal trade. Overall, our study provides key recommendations for the use of lineage dispersal metrics to consider in future studies and illustrates their application to compare the spread of viruses in various settings.

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来源期刊
PLoS Biology
PLoS Biology BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY-BIOLOGY
CiteScore
15.40
自引率
2.00%
发文量
359
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: PLOS Biology is the flagship journal of the Public Library of Science (PLOS) and focuses on publishing groundbreaking and relevant research in all areas of biological science. The journal features works at various scales, ranging from molecules to ecosystems, and also encourages interdisciplinary studies. PLOS Biology publishes articles that demonstrate exceptional significance, originality, and relevance, with a high standard of scientific rigor in methodology, reporting, and conclusions. The journal aims to advance science and serve the research community by transforming research communication to align with the research process. It offers evolving article types and policies that empower authors to share the complete story behind their scientific findings with a diverse global audience of researchers, educators, policymakers, patient advocacy groups, and the general public. PLOS Biology, along with other PLOS journals, is widely indexed by major services such as Crossref, Dimensions, DOAJ, Google Scholar, PubMed, PubMed Central, Scopus, and Web of Science. Additionally, PLOS Biology is indexed by various other services including AGRICOLA, Biological Abstracts, BIOSYS Previews, CABI CAB Abstracts, CABI Global Health, CAPES, CAS, CNKI, Embase, Journal Guide, MEDLINE, and Zoological Record, ensuring that the research content is easily accessible and discoverable by a wide range of audiences.
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