Accumulating variation at conserved sites in potyvirus genomes is driven by species discovery and affects degenerate primer design
Loading...
Date
Authors
Zheng, Linda
Wayper, Paul
Gibbs, Adrian
Fourment, Mathieu
Rodoni, Brendan
Gibbs, Mark
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Abstract
Unknown and foreign viruses can be detected using degenerate primers targeted at conserved sites in the known viral gene
sequences. Conserved sites are found by comparing sequences and so the usefulness of a set of primers depends crucially
on how well the known sequences represent the target group including unknown sequences.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We developed a method for assessing the apparent stability of consensus sequences at
sites over time using deposition dates from Genbank. We tested the method using 17 conserved sites in potyvirus genomes.
The accumulation of knowledge of sequence variants over 20 years caused ‘consensus decay’ of the sites. Rates of decay
were rapid at all sites but varied widely and as a result, the ranking of the most conserved sites changed. The discovery and
reporting of sequences from previously unknown and distinct species, rather than from strains of known species, dominated
the decay, indicating it was largely a sampling effect related to the progressive discovery of species, and recent virus
mutation was probably only a minor contributing factor.
CONCLUSION/SIGNIFICANCE: We showed that in the past, the sampling bias has misled the choice of the most conserved target
sites for genus specific degenerate primers. The history of sequence discoveries indicates primer designs should be updated
regularly and provides an additional dimension for improving the design of degenerate primers.
Description
Citation
PLoS ONE 3.2 (2008): e1586
Collections
Source
PLOS ONE (Public Library of Science)
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description