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Ancient herpes simplex 1 genomes reveal recent viral structure in Eurasia
- Source :
- Science Advances, 2022, Vol.8(30) [Peer Reviewed Journal], Science Advances, bioRxiv
- Publication Year :
- 2022
- Publisher :
- American Association for the Advancement of Science., 2022.
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Abstract
- Human herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1), a life-long infection spread by oral contact, today infects a majority of adults globally1, yet no ancient HSV-1 genomes have yet been published. Phylogeographic clustering of sampled diversity into European, pan-Eurasian, and African groups2, 3 has suggested that the virus co-diverged with anatomically modern humans migrating out of Africa4, although a much younger origin has also been proposed5. The lack of ancient HSV-1 genomes, high rates of recombination, and high mobility of humans in the modern era have impeded the understanding of HSV-1’s evolutionary history. Here we present three full ancient European HSV-1 genomes and one partial genome, dating to between the 3rd and 17th century CE, sequenced to up to 9.5× with paired human genomes up to 10.16×. These HSV-1 strains fall within modern Eurasian diversity. We estimate a mean mutation rate of 7.6 × 10-7 Introduction Results - Retrieved genomes are likely from typical infections - Demographic history of HSV-1 in a global context Discussion Material and Methods - Ethics statement - Sampling - Generation of aDNA libraries - Sequencing - aDNA authentication - Metagenomic screening - Targeted capture of HSV-1 - Alignment of viral data to the reference sequence - Genotyping - HSV-1 linkage disequilibrium and population genetic analysis - Compilation of comparative HSV data - Preparation of genome sequences - HSV-1 phylogenetic analysis and recombination filtering - Phylogenetic dating - Alignment of human data to the reference sequence and quality control - Genetic sex estimation, mtDNA, and Y haplotyping - Human variant calling and imputation of genotypes
- Subjects :
- Multidisciplinary
viruses
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Science Advances, 2022, Vol.8(30) [Peer Reviewed Journal], Science Advances, bioRxiv
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....9fd82e4a62b81454d9da020623ffea6b