Parallel evolution of influenza across multiple spatiotemporal scales

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Abstract

Viral variants that arise in the global influenza population begin as de novo mutations in single infected hosts, but the evolutionary dynamics that transform within-host variation to global genetic diversity are poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that influenza evolution within infected humans recapitulates many evolutionary dynamics observed at the global scale. We deep-sequence longitudinal samples from four immunocompromised patients with long-term H3N2 influenza infections. We find parallel evolution across three scales: within individual patients, in different patients in our study, and in the global influenza population. In hemagglutinin, a small set of mutations arises independently in multiple patients. These same mutations emerge repeatedly within single patients and compete with one another, providing a vivid clinical example of clonal interference. Many of these recurrent within-host mutations also reach a high global frequency in the decade following the patient infections. Our results demonstrate surprising concordance in evolutionary dynamics across multiple spatiotemporal scales.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Xue, K. S., Stevens-Ayers, T., Campbell, A. P., Englund, J. A., Pergam, S. A., Boeckh, M., & Bloom, J. D. (2017). Parallel evolution of influenza across multiple spatiotemporal scales. ELife, 6. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.26875

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