Fixations of the HIV-1 env gene refute neutralism: New evidence for pan-selective evolution

We examined 103 nucleotide sequences of the HIV-1 env gene, sampled from 35 countries and tested: I) the random (neutral) distribution of the number of nucleotide changes; II) the proportion of bases at molecular equilibrium; III) the neutral expected homogeneity of the distribution of new fxated bases; IV) the hypothesis of the neighbor infuence on the mutation rates in a site. The expected random number of fxations per site was estimated by Bose-Einstein statistics, and the expected frequencies of bases by matrices of mutation-fxation rates. The homogeneity of new fxations was analyzed using χ2 and trinomial tests for homogeneity. Fixations of the central base in trinucleotides were used to test the neighbor infuence on base substitutions. Neither the number of fxations nor the frequencies of bases ftted the expected neutral distribution. There was a highly signifcant heterogeneity in the distribution of new fxations, and several sites showed more transversions than transitions, showing that each nucleotide site has its own pattern of change. These three independent results make the neutral theory, the nearly neutral and the neighbor infuence hypotheses untenable and indicate that evolution of env is rather highly selective.

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Auteurs principaux: Valenzuela,Carlos Y, Flores,Sergio V, Cisternas,Javier
Format: Digital revista
Langue:English
Publié: Sociedad de Biología de Chile 2010
Accès en ligne:http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0716-97602010000200002
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spelling oai:scielo:S0716-976020100002000022010-09-24Fixations of the HIV-1 env gene refute neutralism: New evidence for pan-selective evolutionValenzuela,Carlos YFlores,Sergio VCisternas,Javier Bose-Einstein distribution fxations HIV-1 env gene neutral evolution pan-selective evolution We examined 103 nucleotide sequences of the HIV-1 env gene, sampled from 35 countries and tested: I) the random (neutral) distribution of the number of nucleotide changes; II) the proportion of bases at molecular equilibrium; III) the neutral expected homogeneity of the distribution of new fxated bases; IV) the hypothesis of the neighbor infuence on the mutation rates in a site. The expected random number of fxations per site was estimated by Bose-Einstein statistics, and the expected frequencies of bases by matrices of mutation-fxation rates. The homogeneity of new fxations was analyzed using χ2 and trinomial tests for homogeneity. Fixations of the central base in trinucleotides were used to test the neighbor infuence on base substitutions. Neither the number of fxations nor the frequencies of bases ftted the expected neutral distribution. There was a highly signifcant heterogeneity in the distribution of new fxations, and several sites showed more transversions than transitions, showing that each nucleotide site has its own pattern of change. These three independent results make the neutral theory, the nearly neutral and the neighbor infuence hypotheses untenable and indicate that evolution of env is rather highly selective.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessSociedad de Biología de ChileBiological Research v.43 n.2 20102010-01-01text/htmlhttp://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0716-97602010000200002en10.4067/S0716-97602010000200002
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Chile
countrycode CL
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-cl
tag revista
region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Valenzuela,Carlos Y
Flores,Sergio V
Cisternas,Javier
spellingShingle Valenzuela,Carlos Y
Flores,Sergio V
Cisternas,Javier
Fixations of the HIV-1 env gene refute neutralism: New evidence for pan-selective evolution
author_facet Valenzuela,Carlos Y
Flores,Sergio V
Cisternas,Javier
author_sort Valenzuela,Carlos Y
title Fixations of the HIV-1 env gene refute neutralism: New evidence for pan-selective evolution
title_short Fixations of the HIV-1 env gene refute neutralism: New evidence for pan-selective evolution
title_full Fixations of the HIV-1 env gene refute neutralism: New evidence for pan-selective evolution
title_fullStr Fixations of the HIV-1 env gene refute neutralism: New evidence for pan-selective evolution
title_full_unstemmed Fixations of the HIV-1 env gene refute neutralism: New evidence for pan-selective evolution
title_sort fixations of the hiv-1 env gene refute neutralism: new evidence for pan-selective evolution
description We examined 103 nucleotide sequences of the HIV-1 env gene, sampled from 35 countries and tested: I) the random (neutral) distribution of the number of nucleotide changes; II) the proportion of bases at molecular equilibrium; III) the neutral expected homogeneity of the distribution of new fxated bases; IV) the hypothesis of the neighbor infuence on the mutation rates in a site. The expected random number of fxations per site was estimated by Bose-Einstein statistics, and the expected frequencies of bases by matrices of mutation-fxation rates. The homogeneity of new fxations was analyzed using χ2 and trinomial tests for homogeneity. Fixations of the central base in trinucleotides were used to test the neighbor infuence on base substitutions. Neither the number of fxations nor the frequencies of bases ftted the expected neutral distribution. There was a highly signifcant heterogeneity in the distribution of new fxations, and several sites showed more transversions than transitions, showing that each nucleotide site has its own pattern of change. These three independent results make the neutral theory, the nearly neutral and the neighbor infuence hypotheses untenable and indicate that evolution of env is rather highly selective.
publisher Sociedad de Biología de Chile
publishDate 2010
url http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0716-97602010000200002
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AT floressergiov fixationsofthehiv1envgenerefuteneutralismnewevidenceforpanselectiveevolution
AT cisternasjavier fixationsofthehiv1envgenerefuteneutralismnewevidenceforpanselectiveevolution
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