Cargando…

Human Anelloviruses: Influence of Demographic Factors, Recombination, and Worldwide Diversity

Anelloviruses represent the major and most diverse component of the healthy human virome, referred to as the anellome. In this study, we determined the anellome of 50 blood donors, forming two sex- and age-matched groups. Anelloviruses were detected in 86% of the donors. The number of detected anell...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Cebriá-Mendoza, María, Beamud, Beatriz, Andreu-Moreno, Iván, Arbona, Cristina, Larrea, Luís, Díaz, Wladimiro, Sanjuán, Rafael, Cuevas, José M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10269794/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37199659
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.04928-22
_version_ 1785059251258916864
author Cebriá-Mendoza, María
Beamud, Beatriz
Andreu-Moreno, Iván
Arbona, Cristina
Larrea, Luís
Díaz, Wladimiro
Sanjuán, Rafael
Cuevas, José M.
author_facet Cebriá-Mendoza, María
Beamud, Beatriz
Andreu-Moreno, Iván
Arbona, Cristina
Larrea, Luís
Díaz, Wladimiro
Sanjuán, Rafael
Cuevas, José M.
author_sort Cebriá-Mendoza, María
collection PubMed
description Anelloviruses represent the major and most diverse component of the healthy human virome, referred to as the anellome. In this study, we determined the anellome of 50 blood donors, forming two sex- and age-matched groups. Anelloviruses were detected in 86% of the donors. The number of detected anelloviruses increased with age and was approximately twice as high in men as in women. A total of 349 complete or nearly complete genomes were classified as belonging to torque teno virus (TTV), torque teno mini virus (TTMV), and torque teno midi virus (TTMDV) anellovirus genera (197, 88, and 64 sequences, respectively). Most donors had intergenus (69.8%) or intragenus (72.1%) coinfections. Despite the limited number of sequences, intradonor recombination analysis showed 6 intragenus recombination events in ORF1. As thousands of anellovirus sequences have been described recently, we finally analyzed the global diversity of human anelloviruses. Species richness and diversity were close to saturation in each anellovirus genus. Recombination was found to be the main factor promoting diversity, although its effect was significantly lower in TTV than in TTMV and TTMDV. Overall, our results suggest that differences in diversity between genera may be caused by variations in the relative contribution of recombination. IMPORTANCE Anelloviruses are the most common human infectious viruses and are considered essentially harmless. Compared to other human viruses, they are characterized by enormous diversity, and recombination is suggested to play an important role in their diversification and evolution. Here, by analyzing the composition of the plasma anellome of 50 blood donors, we find that recombination is also a determinant of viral evolution at the intradonor level. On a larger scale, analysis of anellovirus sequences currently available in databases shows that their diversity is close to saturation and differs among the three human anellovirus genera and that recombination is the main factor explaining this intergenus variability. Global characterization of anellovirus diversity could provide clues about possible associations between certain virus variants and pathologies, as well as facilitate the implementation of unbiased PCR-based detection protocols, which may be relevant for using anelloviruses as endogenous markers of immune status.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10269794
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher American Society for Microbiology
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-102697942023-06-16 Human Anelloviruses: Influence of Demographic Factors, Recombination, and Worldwide Diversity Cebriá-Mendoza, María Beamud, Beatriz Andreu-Moreno, Iván Arbona, Cristina Larrea, Luís Díaz, Wladimiro Sanjuán, Rafael Cuevas, José M. Microbiol Spectr Research Article Anelloviruses represent the major and most diverse component of the healthy human virome, referred to as the anellome. In this study, we determined the anellome of 50 blood donors, forming two sex- and age-matched groups. Anelloviruses were detected in 86% of the donors. The number of detected anelloviruses increased with age and was approximately twice as high in men as in women. A total of 349 complete or nearly complete genomes were classified as belonging to torque teno virus (TTV), torque teno mini virus (TTMV), and torque teno midi virus (TTMDV) anellovirus genera (197, 88, and 64 sequences, respectively). Most donors had intergenus (69.8%) or intragenus (72.1%) coinfections. Despite the limited number of sequences, intradonor recombination analysis showed 6 intragenus recombination events in ORF1. As thousands of anellovirus sequences have been described recently, we finally analyzed the global diversity of human anelloviruses. Species richness and diversity were close to saturation in each anellovirus genus. Recombination was found to be the main factor promoting diversity, although its effect was significantly lower in TTV than in TTMV and TTMDV. Overall, our results suggest that differences in diversity between genera may be caused by variations in the relative contribution of recombination. IMPORTANCE Anelloviruses are the most common human infectious viruses and are considered essentially harmless. Compared to other human viruses, they are characterized by enormous diversity, and recombination is suggested to play an important role in their diversification and evolution. Here, by analyzing the composition of the plasma anellome of 50 blood donors, we find that recombination is also a determinant of viral evolution at the intradonor level. On a larger scale, analysis of anellovirus sequences currently available in databases shows that their diversity is close to saturation and differs among the three human anellovirus genera and that recombination is the main factor explaining this intergenus variability. Global characterization of anellovirus diversity could provide clues about possible associations between certain virus variants and pathologies, as well as facilitate the implementation of unbiased PCR-based detection protocols, which may be relevant for using anelloviruses as endogenous markers of immune status. American Society for Microbiology 2023-05-18 /pmc/articles/PMC10269794/ /pubmed/37199659 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.04928-22 Text en Copyright © 2023 Cebriá-Mendoza et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Cebriá-Mendoza, María
Beamud, Beatriz
Andreu-Moreno, Iván
Arbona, Cristina
Larrea, Luís
Díaz, Wladimiro
Sanjuán, Rafael
Cuevas, José M.
Human Anelloviruses: Influence of Demographic Factors, Recombination, and Worldwide Diversity
title Human Anelloviruses: Influence of Demographic Factors, Recombination, and Worldwide Diversity
title_full Human Anelloviruses: Influence of Demographic Factors, Recombination, and Worldwide Diversity
title_fullStr Human Anelloviruses: Influence of Demographic Factors, Recombination, and Worldwide Diversity
title_full_unstemmed Human Anelloviruses: Influence of Demographic Factors, Recombination, and Worldwide Diversity
title_short Human Anelloviruses: Influence of Demographic Factors, Recombination, and Worldwide Diversity
title_sort human anelloviruses: influence of demographic factors, recombination, and worldwide diversity
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10269794/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37199659
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.04928-22
work_keys_str_mv AT cebriamendozamaria humananellovirusesinfluenceofdemographicfactorsrecombinationandworldwidediversity
AT beamudbeatriz humananellovirusesinfluenceofdemographicfactorsrecombinationandworldwidediversity
AT andreumorenoivan humananellovirusesinfluenceofdemographicfactorsrecombinationandworldwidediversity
AT arbonacristina humananellovirusesinfluenceofdemographicfactorsrecombinationandworldwidediversity
AT larrealuis humananellovirusesinfluenceofdemographicfactorsrecombinationandworldwidediversity
AT diazwladimiro humananellovirusesinfluenceofdemographicfactorsrecombinationandworldwidediversity
AT sanjuanrafael humananellovirusesinfluenceofdemographicfactorsrecombinationandworldwidediversity
AT cuevasjosem humananellovirusesinfluenceofdemographicfactorsrecombinationandworldwidediversity