Recurrent Loss-of-Function Mutations Reveal Costs to OAS1 Antiviral Activity in Primates

反复出现的失活突变揭示了灵长类动物中 OAS1 抗病毒活性的代价

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作者:Clayton M Carey ,Apurva A Govande ,Juliane M Cooper ,Melissa K Hartley ,Philip J Kranzusch ,Nels C Elde

Abstract

Immune responses counteract infections but also cause collateral damage to hosts. Oligoadenylate synthetase 1 (OAS1) binds double-stranded RNA from invading viruses and produces 2'-5' linked oligoadenylate (2-5A) to activate ribonuclease L (RNase L), which cleaves RNA to inhibit virus replication. OAS1 can also undergo autoactivation by host RNAs, a potential trade-off to antiviral activity. We investigated functional variation in primate OAS1 as a model for how immune pathways evolve to mitigate costs and observed a surprising frequency of loss-of-function variation. In gorillas, we identified a polymorphism that severely decreases catalytic function, mirroring a common variant in humans that impairs 2-5A synthesis through alternative splicing. OAS1 loss-of-function variation is also common in monkeys, including complete loss of 2-5A synthesis in tamarins. The frequency of loss-of-function alleles suggests that costs associated with OAS1 activation can be so detrimental to host fitness that pathogen-protective effects are repeatedly forfeited. Keywords: OAS1; RNase L; double-stranded RNA; dsRNA; loss-of-function mutation; oligoadenylate synthetase 1; polymorphism; primates; rapid evolution; yeast.

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