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Evolution of monkeypox virus from 2017 to 2022: In the light of point mutations

Desingu, PA and Rubeni, TP and Sundaresan, NR (2022) Evolution of monkeypox virus from 2017 to 2022: In the light of point mutations. In: Frontiers in Microbiology, 13 .

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.1037598

Abstract

Monkeypox virus (MPXV) causing multi-country outbreak-2022 is related to viruses caused outbreak-2017–2018 in West Africa. Still not fully understood which proteins of the MPXV discovered in Nigeria in 2017 have mutated through different lineages to the extent that it could cause a multi-country outbreak in 2022; similarly, codon usage bias, host adaptation indices, and the role of selection or mutation pressure in the mutated genes are also not fully studied. Here we report that according to the available sequence data this monkeypox virus acquires point mutations in multiple proteins in each period, and these point mutations accumulate and become a virus that can root outbreak-2022. Viruses exported from Nigeria to Singapore, Israel, and the United Kingdom in 2018–2019 were developed as evolutionary ancestors to B.1 viruses (MPXVs causing multi-country outbreak-2022) through MPXV/United States/2021/MD virus. Although these exported viruses have different amino acid mutations in different proteins, amino acid mutations in 10 proteins are common among them. The MPXV-United Kingdom-P2 virus evolved with only mutations in these 10 proteins and further evolved into MPXV/United States/2021/MD with amino acid mutations in 26 (including amino acid mutations in 10 proteins of the MPXV-United States-P2) proteins. It is noteworthy that specific amino acid mutations in these 22/26 (presence in MPXV/United States/2021/MD) proteins are present in B.1 viruses. Further, analysis of Relative Synonymous Codon Usage (RSCU), Synonymous Codon Usage Fraction (SCUF), and Effective Number of Codons (ENc) revealed codon usage bias in genes that exhibited nucleotide mutations in lineage B.1. Also, host adaptation indices analyzes such as Codon Adaptation Index (CAI), Expected-CAI (eCAI), Relative Codon Deoptimization Index (RCDI) and Expected value for the RCDI (eRCDI) analyzes reveal that the genes that demonstrated nucleotide mutations in lineage B.1 are favorable for human adaptation. Similarly, ENc-GC3s plot, Neutrality plot, and Parity Rule 2 (PR2)-bias plot analyzes suggest a major role of selection pressure than mutation pressure in the evolution of genes displaying nucleotide mutations in lineage B.1. Overall, from 2017 to 2022, MPXV’s mutation and spread suggests that this virus continues to evolve through point mutation in the genes according to the available sequence data.

Item Type: Journal Article
Publication: Frontiers in Microbiology
Publisher: Frontiers Media S.A.
Additional Information: The copyright for this article belongs to the Authors.
Keywords: adaptive evolution of MPXVs in humans; monkeypox; monkeypox virus evolution from 2017 to 2022; multi-country outbreak-2022; point mutations; selection and mutation pressure
Department/Centre: Division of Biological Sciences > Microbiology & Cell Biology
Date Deposited: 27 Jan 2023 09:16
Last Modified: 27 Jan 2023 09:16
URI: https://eprints.iisc.ac.in/id/eprint/79545

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