Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Serbielle C., Chowdhury S., Pichon S., Dupas Stéphane, Lesobre J., Purisima E. O., Drezen J. M., Huguet E. (2008). Viral cystatin evolution and three-dimensional structure modelling : a case of directional selection acting on a viral protein involved in a host-parasitoid interaction - art. no. 38. Bmc Biology, 6, p. 93-97. ISSN 1741-7007.

Titre du document
Viral cystatin evolution and three-dimensional structure modelling : a case of directional selection acting on a viral protein involved in a host-parasitoid interaction - art. no. 38
Année de publication
2008
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000259743400001
Auteurs
Serbielle C., Chowdhury S., Pichon S., Dupas Stéphane, Lesobre J., Purisima E. O., Drezen J. M., Huguet E.
Source
Bmc Biology, 2008, 6, p. 93-97 ISSN 1741-7007
Background: In pathogens, certain genes encoding proteins that directly interact with host defences coevolve with their host and are subject to positive selection. In the lepidopteran host-wasp parasitoid system, one of the most original strategies developed by the wasps to defeat host defences is the injection of a symbiotic polydnavirus at the same time as the wasp eggs. The virus is essential for wasp parasitism success since viral gene expression alters the immune system and development of the host. As a wasp mutualist symbiont, the virus is expected to exhibit a reduction in genome complexity and evolve under wasp phyletic constraints. However, as a lepidopteran host pathogenic symbiont, the virus is likely undergoing strong selective pressures for the acquisition of new functions by gene acquisition or duplication. To understand the constraints imposed by this particular system on virus evolution, we studied a polydnavirus gene family encoding cyteine protease inhibitors of the cystatin superfamily. Results: We show that cystatins are the first bracovirus genes proven to be subject to strong positive selection within a host-parasitoid system. A generated three-dimensional model of Cotesia congregata bracovirus cystatin 1 provides a powerful framework to position positively selected residues and reveal that they are concentrated in the vicinity of actives sites which interact with cysteine proteases directly. In addition, phylogenetic analyses reveal two different cystatin forms which evolved under different selective constraints and are characterized by independent adaptive duplication events. Conclusion: Positive selection acts to maintain cystatin gene duplications and induces directional divergence presumably to ensure the presence of efficient and adapted cystatin forms. Directional selection has acted on key cystatin active sites, suggesting that cystatins coevolve with their host target. We can strongly suggest that cystatins constitute major virulence factors, as was already proposed in previous functional studies.
Plan de classement
Sciences fondamentales / Techniques d'analyse et de recherche [020] ; Sciences du monde végétal [076]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010044086]
Identifiant IRD
PAR00003095
Contact