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    Clonality and intracellular polyploidy in virus evolution and pathogenesis

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    In the present article we examine clonality in virus evolution. Most viruses retain an active recombination machinery as a potential means to initiate new levels of genetic exploration that go beyond those attainable solely by point mutations. However, despite abundant recombination that may be linked to molecular events essential for genome replication, herein we provide evidence that generation of recombinants with altered biological properties is not essential for the completion of the replication cycles of viruses, and that viral lineages (near-clades) can be defined. We distinguish mechanistically active but inconsequential recombination from evolutionarily relevant recombination, illustrated by episodes in the field and during experimental evolution. In the field, recombination has been at the origin of new viral pathogens, and has conferred fitness advantages to some viruses once the parental viruses have attained a sufficient degree of diversification by point mutations. In the laboratory, recombination mediated a salient genome segmentation of foot-and-mouth disease virus, an important animal pathogen whose genome in nature has always been characterized as unsegmented. We propose a model of continuous mutation and recombination, with punctuated, biologically relevant recombination events for the survival of viruses, both as disease agents and as promoters of cellular evolution. Thus, clonality is the standard evolutionary mode for viruses because recombination is largely inconsequential, since the decisive events for virus replication and survival are not dependent on the exchange of genetic material and formation of recombinant (mosaic) genomes.Work in Madrid is supported by Grants BFU-2011-23604 and P2013/ABI-2906 (PLATESA from Comunidad Aut贸noma de Madrid) and Fundaci贸n R. Areces; Centro de Investigaci贸n en Red de Enfermedades Hep谩ticas y Digestivas is funded by Instituto de Salud Carlos III; E.M. is supported by a fellowship from Ministerio de Econom铆a y Competitividad; and C.P. is supported by theMiguel Servet program of the FIS Instituto de Salud Carlos III (CP14/00121).Peer Reviewe

    Clonality and intracellular polyploidy in virus evolution and pathogenesis

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