Intra-host quasispecies reconstructions resemble inter-host variability of transmitted chronic hepatitis B virus strains

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dc.contributor leclercq.l.s@gmail.com en_US
dc.contributor.upauthor Le Clercq, Louis-Stéphane
dc.contributor.upauthor Bowyer, Sheila M.
dc.contributor.upauthor Mayaphi, Simnikiwe H.
dc.date.accessioned 2024-07-25T09:17:51Z
dc.date.available 2024-07-25T09:17:51Z
dc.date.issued 2023-05-15
dc.description Preprint of article en_US
dc.description.abstract The hepatitis B virus is a partially double stranded DNA virus in the Hepadnaviridae family of viruses that infect the liver cells of vertebrates including humans. The virus replicates through the reverse transcription of an RNA intermediate by a viral poly-merase, akin to retroviruses. The viral polymerase has high replication capacity but low fidelity and no proofreading activity resulting in a high mutation rate. This contributes to the emergence of a cloud of mutants or quasispecies within host systems during infection. Several host and viral factors have been identified that contribute to mutations and mutation frequency in shaping viral evolution, however, because the dynamics of viral evolution cannot be understood from the fittest strain alone, the need exists to sequence and reconstruct intra-host diversity, recently made possible through next generation sequencing. Due to the extensive pipeline of bioinformatic analyses associated with next generation sequencing studies are needed to ascertain if quasispecies reconstruction methods and diversity measures accurately model known diversity. Here, next generation sequencing and various quasispecies reconstruction methods are used to model the natural evolution of viral populations across the full genome of hepatitis B virus strains from South Africa. This study illustrates that (i) different methods of quasispecies reconstruction reconstruct the same amount of diversity, (ii) intra-host diversity derived from full quasispecies analyses re-sembles diversity measures obtained from previous methods, (iii) inter-host diversity resembles the diversity between closely related quasispecies variants, (iv) diversity is increased in HIV-negative individuals, and (v) corroborate that seroconversion of HBV biomarkers increases mutation rates. en_US
dc.description.sponsorship National Research Foundation, Poliomyelitis Research Foundation en_US
dc.format.extent PDF, 18 pages en_US
dc.format.medium PDF en_US
dc.identifier.citation Le Clercq, L.S., Bowyer, S.M., Mayaphi, S.H. 2023. Intra-host quasispecies reconstructions resemble inter-host variability of transmitted chronic hepatitis B virus strains. bioRxiv 2023.05.15.540814; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.05.15.540814. en_US
dc.identifier.other https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.05.15.540814
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2263/97241
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher bioRxiv en_US
dc.rights University of Pretoria en_US
dc.subject Quasispecies en_US
dc.subject Reconstruction en_US
dc.subject Hepatitis B Virus en_US
dc.subject Variation en_US
dc.subject Next Generation Sequencing en_US
dc.subject Intra-host en_US
dc.subject Inter-host en_US
dc.subject QuRe en_US
dc.subject QuasiRecomb en_US
dc.subject k-GEM en_US
dc.title Intra-host quasispecies reconstructions resemble inter-host variability of transmitted chronic hepatitis B virus strains en_US
dc.type Preprint Article en_US


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