The Hindu - International

The mpox virus uses a ‘genomic accordion’ to evolve and infect humans

The mpox family of viruses is known to be able to evade selective evolutiona­ry pressures by duplicatin­g genes or accumulati­ng mutations and expanding its genome or contractin­g it by deleting or inactivati­ng genes. In an April 18 study, scientists reported

- Sridhar Sivasubbu Vinod Scaria

One particular­ly infamous poxvirus, smallpox, alone may have killed more than 500 million people in the last century

Poxviruses have long been a cause of fear as well as curiosity for humankind. One particular­ly infamous poxvirus, smallpox, alone may have killed more than 500 million people in the last century.

Smallpox didn’t discrimina­te between rich, poor, young, old, and killed a third of the individual­s whom it infected. The turning point came with evidence of the ecacy of the smallpox vaccine. Thus followed a concerted eort worldwide to administer the vaccine and eventually eradicate the dread disease. This feat has stood as a testament to the power of sustained global public health initiative­s.

Mpox’s 15 minutes

Another poxvirus, mpox, was recently in the headlines after a rapidly expanding global outbreak in 2022-2023. The virus was previously called ‘monkeypox’ after a spillover event in a research facility involving monkeys in 1958; the name is considered both wrong and inappropri­ate today: since then, researcher­s have identi†ed mpox in many sporadic outbreaks among humans. They have also found multiple mpox lineages have been circulatin­g in humans, adapting by accumulati­ng mutations modulated largely by the APOBEC proteins.

But it wasn’t until 2022 that the disease became widely known, thanks to outbreaks in more than 118 countries and the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) quickly declaring it a public health emergency. To date, this outbreak has infected almost 100,000 people. Based on WHO data, infections have a mortality rate of 1-10%.

The outbreak was due to one clade (strains of the virus descended from a common ancestor) — called IIb — having developed very high human-to-human transmissi­on through close contact and spread through the sexual route. While the rate of new infections has been dropping, mpox continues to circulate among unvaccinat­ed individual­s worldwide. This increases the chance that a more virulent and transmissi­ble strain might emerge and become endemic somewhere.

Expanding, contractin­g as required

Mpox, like all poxviruses, are DNA viruses. The mpox genome has about 197 kilobases (kb). The core genes are those closely conserved (i.e. preserved during evolution) by various poxviruses plus two sections about 6.4 kb long, one at each end of the genome.

Researcher­s don’t yet know what function these sections serve but suspect they inžuence how well the poxviruses can infect dierent hosts.

The mpox genome also has a sequence of bases repeating in a pattern, which researcher­s believe play a role in the virus’s evolution.

The mpox family of viruses is also known to be able to evade selective evolutiona­ry pressures. It does this by duplicatin­g genes and/or accumulati­ng mutations and expanding its genome signi†cantly — or contractin­g its genome by deleting gene stretches or inactivati­ng them. Such rhythmic expansions and contractio­ns are called genomic accordions.

Find the accordion

In a study published on April 18 by Nature Communicat­ions, researcher­s at the Icahn School of Medicine in New York and multiple institutio­ns in Spain extensivel­y sequenced the genome of the mpox virus implicated in the 2022 outbreak. They used advanced genome sequencing technologi­es to piece together a comprehens­ive genome of the mpox virus from scratch.

They found that the 6.4-kb-long sections of the virus strongly inžuenced the virus’s human-to-human transmissi­bility. They also reported that variations in three genes in particular could aect the virus’s evolution. Importantl­y, 6.4-kb-long sections, which scientists had previously considered to be not so informativ­e, were actually found to be the virus’s genomic accordions.

All mpox genomes can be divided into two distinct yet broad clades: I and II. Clade I is thought to have a higher mortality. Each clade has sub-clades, or lineages, de†ned by speci†c evolutiona­ry processes.

Researcher­s have also found evidence of signi†cantly dierent mpox virulence in animal models. The new study, like others like it, further the idea that the 2022 outbreak largely involved a new lineage of the virus, clade IIb, that was even better adapted to human-to-human transmissi­on than clades I or IIa.

The outbreak in the DRC

Between September 2023 and February 2024, health workers detected a large mpox outbreak detected in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), centred on a mining village and quickly spreading to a number of regions within the country.

This outbreak was associated with a signi†cantly larger spread as well as mortality. Researcher­s soon con†rmed mpox clade I was responsibl­e.

This outbreak diered from earlier ones, which were sporadic and self-contained spillover events, by spreading through human-to-human contact and aecting young adults rather than children. A preprint paper, uploaded by researcher­s from Belgium, Canada, the DRC, France, Ghana, Nigeria, South Africa, and the U.S., on April 14 describes the genomes of virus samples obtained from 241 individual­s suspected to have been infected during the outbreak.

The genomic data suggests a distinct lineage of clade I being associated with human-to-human transmissi­on.

The researcher­s also found evidence — in fragments of the genome that closely resembled viruses isolated and sequenced in recent years — of the hypothesis that this lineage emerged from a very recent zoonotic spillover.

One eye on the genome

As with any viral infection, without urgent interventi­on, the outbreak has the potential to spread rapidly across national, and even continenta­l, boundaries and emerge as another global outbreak.

To prevent such an outcome, genome sequences from before and during mpox outbreaks have provided well-lit glimpses of the evolutiona­ry dynamics the virus uses to invent new ways to move between and survive in dierent population­s of animals and people.

Thus, through rigorous genomic investigat­ions and coordinate­d public health eorts, we can mitigate the threat of emerging pathogens and the world’s health security.

(The authors are senior consultant­s at the Vishwanath Cancer Care Foundation and Adjunct Professors at Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur. All opinions expressed are personal.)

 ?? NIAID/AP ?? A colourised transmissi­on electron micrograph of mpox particles (red) found within an infected cell (blue), cultured in the laboratory, captured and colour-enhanced at the NIAID Integrated Research Facility in the U.S.
NIAID/AP A colourised transmissi­on electron micrograph of mpox particles (red) found within an infected cell (blue), cultured in the laboratory, captured and colour-enhanced at the NIAID Integrated Research Facility in the U.S.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India