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An example How does an evolutionary perspective integrate information generated in other biological disciplines? HIV Human Immunodeficiency virus • Set the stage • You come up with a list of evolutionary q questions • How evolutionary has an evolutionary perspective informed our understanding The problem • Recognized 1981 • Infected 65 million people • 25 million illi h have di died d • Virtually 100% fatal • 2020 AIDs will kill 90 million • 5% of all deaths worldwide • 70 % in SubSaharan Africa • Thought Th ht to t be b mostt infectious disease to affect humankind ttp://data.unaids.org/pub/GlobalReport/2006/2006_GRExecutiveSummary_en.pdf AIDs epidemic • Infection rates 15-45yr 15 45yr • 2/3 in sub-Sarahan Africa • % adults d l iinfected f d • • • • 37.3 Botswana 24.6 Zimbabwe 38 8 Swaziland 38.8 28.9 Lesothos • Reduced life expectancy from 62 to 47 years • 90 % in poor countries t i off Southern p hemisphere UNAIDS 2002 • Rapid increase What is HIV? • Intracellular p parasite • Enters host through body fluids • Parasitizes cells of human i immune system t – macrophages and T cells • Simple structure • Co-opts cell’s machinery for replication Freeman and Heron 2004 How does your body react? Acute state • Explosive replication of virus • T-cells plummet as they are destroyed by viral replication Chronic state • HIV replication slows – fewer host cells/Immune response • Immune system activated – CD4 T fight HIV/other pathogens AIDS • Naïve T-cells are depleted • Slower production with age • Opportunistic infections by bacteria and fungus that do not normally cause disease proliferate Nelson et al. 2002 How can we fight HIV? Before infection Ghys et al. 2002 Men in Amsterdam D k Dukers ett al.l 2002 • • • • Reduce riskyy behavior Safe sex Used needle exchange Effective? How can we fight HIV? After infection • Treat with drugs • Drug D ttargets? t ? • Interfere with cell’s surface proteins to prevent attachment • Prevent reverse transcription • Block integrase protein • Prevent HIV protease enzyme from cleaving viral precursors into mature components for virions Freeman and Heron 2004 How can we fight HIV? After infection • Treat with drugs • AZT mimics i i normall th thymidine idi b butt llacks k h hydroxyl d l group (azide group instead) • Halts replication What is going on here?!? • Sometimes in host DNA • Short-lived effectiveness AZT Thymidine Freeman and Heron 2004 List of evolutionary questions • Where did this disease come from anyway? • Whyy do diseases shift hosts? • How often do diseases shift hosts? • Why do diseases kill their hosts? • Is there any natural resistance to HIV in the human population? • Why are there more resistant humans in some parts of the world ld vs. others? th ? • Why do drugs stop working? • Where does variation in the virus come from? • How does HIV resistance evolve? • Why does human behavior change? • How much does perceived risk influence behavior? • Are people relying upon conscientious behavior of others? Where did this disease come from anyway? • Genome and life cycle similar to SIV (Simian immunodeficiency viruses) but doesn’t cause disease in primates p Is there a history of the host shift recorded in the genes? • Sequenced reverse transcriptase • Phylogeny reconstruction • Two main types of HIV represent separate host shifts • HIV-1 causes most human disease How did host shift occur? • Chimps hunted to food in Africa How many times has this happened? Hahn et al. 2000 How many transmission events? • Phylogeny based on virion surface proteins p • Three transmission events • HIV-1 group M most diverse and causes majority of AIDs infectons When did transmission happen? • Samples p collected over the last two decades • Rapid divergence has occurred over that short time • Plotted divergence relative to time of collection Hahn et al. 2000 When did the host shift happen? 159 samples of M HIV1 • Scatter plot of genetic difference between original g collection (common ancestors) and virions collected each subsequent year • Greater divergence with time • Slope of the line indicates rate of divergence • Back B k extrapolated t l t d rate t to t time ti when there was no genetic variation • Host shift occurred between 19151941 with 95% confidence (1931 is best fit) Korber et al 2000 List of evolutionary questions • Where did this disease come from anyway? • Is there anyy natural resistance to HIV in the human population? How could you study this? • Examine people have been repeatedly been exposed but not infected • Resistant people have unusual coreceptor molecules that thwart entry of HIV into cells (Samon et al. 1998) • CCR5 CCR5-Δ32 Δ32 has 32 base pair deletion in sequence Do human populations differ in frequency of CCR5-Δ 32? Distribution of CCR5-∆32 ~ max 17 % Whyy higher g in N. Europe? p Test? • Drift • Also confers resistance to bubonic plague – killed 30 3040% of Europeans in 1340’s • Or small pox – killed more people l b but over a llonger time i period Limborskaa et al. 2002 Drift, plague or small pox? • Origin of CCR5-Δ32 estimated to be 1,100 years ago • Plague • Two T greatt plague l outbreaks tb k • Black death 1346-1352 (killed 40%) and Great Plague 1665-1666 (killed 20%) • Intermittent outbreaks for ~400 yrs (killed 10%) • Disappeared 1750 • Affected all ages equally • Small pox • Epidemics occurred in Europe 2,000 years ago • Constant low level of p presence ((killed 30%)) • Eradicated 1978 • Affects children disproportionately Galvani, A.P. and Slatkin M 2003. Evaluating plague and small pox as historical selective pressures for the CCR5-delta32 HIV resistance allele. PNAS 100:15276-15279 Evolutionary model evaluates three hypotheses Subscripts x = age class t = time CCR5, CCR5 Susceptible homozyotes CCR5, CCR5-Δ32 Background Fedundity - # female offspring mortality Genotypic born to female age x resistance Mortality from disease Number of females in the age class x at time t Heterozygotes CCR5-Δ32, CCR5-Δ32 Resistant homozygotes yg Galvani and Slatkin 2003 Drift, plague or small pox? • M Model d l results lt • Plague could not generate sufficient selection pressure to explain current frequency in such a short time • Small box alone can account for pattern • Genetic drift also unlikely to lead to high frequency 0.8 % Plague 10 % Small pox Galvani and Slatkin 2003 Drift, plague or small pox? • M Model d l results lt • Plague could not generate sufficient selection pressure to explain current frequency in such a short time • Small box alone can account for pattern • Genetic drift also unlikely to lead to high frequency • Geographical distribution of the allele • Bubonic plague more intense in central Europe, small pox in Scandinavian populations • Spread via Viking dispersal • Clinical effect of the deletion • CCR5-∆32 probably has other adverse fitness effects • Should have been reduced in population Galvani, A.P. and Slatkin M 2003. Evaluating plague and small pox as historical selective pressures for the CCR5-delta32 HIV resistance allele. PNAS 100:15276-15279 List of evolutionary questions • Where did this disease come from anyway? • Is there anyy natural resistance to HIV in the human population? • Why are there more resistant humans in some parts of the world vs vs. others? • Why do drugs stop working? • Host physiology? • Viral Vi l evolution? l ti ? Viral evolution? • Cells cultured from two patients receiving AZT over time • Does the amount of AZT required to kill the virus change over time? Larder et al. 1989 Highest mutation rate ever characterized • Reverse transcriptase makes ~0.2 errors p per g genome p per replication cycle • RNA polymerase also prone to errors • Extremely high rates of replication • Generation G ti time ti off 2.5 25d days • Produces 1010 – 1012 new virions each dayy • Frequent recombination produces new strains • Frequency-dependent selection favors variation Freeman and Heron 2004 Hypervariable yp env gene What changes could lead to resistance to AZT? • Change in binding site • Some contain amino acid substitutions b i i that h llessen affinity ffi i to AZT • More successful in replication p • Increase in frequency in host Cohen 1993 Evolution of resistance How could you test whether this is really happening? Rambaut et al. 2004 With-host evolution • 9 patients taking AZT • Viral DNA sampled overtime • What should the phylogeny look lik ? like? • Continual drug and immune driven selection • Selective replacement of strains overtime Palella et al. 2000 What is the next strategy? t t ? • Cocktails (HAART) • Interfere with cell’s surface proteins to prevent attachment • Prevent formation of DNA • Block integrase protien • Prevent HIV protease enzyme from cleaving viral precursors into mature components for virions ii Multiple drug resistance Rambaut et al. 2004 ttp://data.unaids.org/pub/GlobalReport/2006/2006_GR-ExecutiveSummary_en.pdf HIV and AIDS E l ti Evolutionary process att ttwo levels l l • Genetic differences among g individuals • Human resistance - CCR5-∆32 coreceptor • Virus mutants - Sequence coding active site among individuals • Sorting among variants • Historical diseases caused selection in humans • Selection S off viruses within infected f person by drugs • Changes in the proportions of individuals in populations • Geographic g p variation in human resistance • Host shift in virus “Felix qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas” Happy is the person who has been able to learn the causes of things Virgil