Litcius/Paper detail

SARS-CoV-2 evolution in animals suggests mechanisms for rapid variant selection

Laura Bashor, Roderick B. Gagne, Angela M. Bosco‐Lauth, Richard A. Bowen, Mark D. Stenglein, Sue VandeWoude

2021Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences106 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

= 1) following experimental exposure. Five nonsynonymous changes relative to the USA-WA1/2020 prototype strain were near fixation in the stock used for inoculation but had reverted to wild-type sequences at these sites in dogs, cats, and hamsters within 1- to 3-d postexposure. A total of 14 emergent variants (six in nonstructural genes, six in spike, and one each in orf8 and nucleocapsid) were detected in viruses recovered from animals. This included substitutions in spike residues H69, N501, and D614, which also vary in human lineages of concern. Even though a live virus was not cultured from dogs, substitutions in replicase genes were detected in amplified sequences. The rapid selection of SARS-CoV-2 variants in vitro and in vivo reveals residues with functional significance during host switching. These observations also illustrate the potential for spillback from animal hosts to accelerate the evolution of new viral lineages, findings of particular concern for dogs and cats living in households with COVID-19 patients. More generally, this glimpse into viral host switching reveals the unrealized rapidity and plasticity of viral evolution in experimental animal model systems.

Topics & Concepts

MinkCATSBiologyViral evolutionNonsynonymous substitutionVirologyVirusVero cellRodentGeneGenomeGeneticsEcologyComputer scienceEmbedded systemSARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 ResearchAnimal Virus Infections StudiesViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology