Directed evolution of a nascent immune function
openNIAID - National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
Project Summary
Many endemic viruses, such as HIV-1 and Ebola, hijack the host ESCRT pathway to bud and spread infection.
Most host-pathogen interfaces rapidly evolve to evade infection, but ESCRT subunits remain highly conserved
across eukaryotes, as adaptations that block viral piracy also disrupt essential cellular functions such as
cytokinetic abscission. This evolutionary constraint has allowed a broad class of ESCRT-dependent viruses to
bud unchallenged. However, we recently discovered retroCHMP3, a species-specific ESCRT subunit that
selectively inhibits ESCRT-dependent viral budding while permitting essential host functions. RetroCHMP3 arose
independently in primates (~45 million years ago) and mice (~7 million years ago) as the truncated
retrotransposition of the ESCRT subunit, CHMP3. Curiously, previous studies revealed CHMP3 truncation alone
is cytotoxic due to dominant-negative inhibition of both host and viral ESCRT functions. These observations raise
questions about the selective pressures driving the convergent evolution of retroCHMP3 and how ancestral
retroCHMP3 precursors were detoxified while retaining antiviral properties.
This project aims to understand the evolutionary mechanism for the detoxification of retroCHMP3, a non-
inflammatory restriction factor in its evolutionary infancy. Traditional genetic and mechanistic studies of
retroCHMP3 have proved challenging; the sensitivity of ESCRT complexes result in low expression levels of
aberrant subunits and inviable stable cell lines and animal models. To overcome these barriers, I’ve established
MEDUSA, an experimental evolution system in the budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, that allows stable
expression and adaptive evolution of mammalian retroCHMP3 under selection. S. cerevisiae is an ideal system
to study retroCHMP3 considering its conserved ESCRT machinery, genetic malleability, and tolerance to subunit
modifications. My primary hypothesis is that novel immune functions first mitigate cytotoxicity before optimizing
antiviral effector properties. Testing this hypothesis will inform us on 1) the adaptive strategies that mitigate its
cytotoxicity while preserving its ability to inhibit viral budding, and 2) the compensatory host changes in response
to a novel antiviral mechanism. Aim 1 will determine the mechanism of detoxifying retroCHMP3 and its tradeoffs
to host function. Aim 2 will determine evolutionary steps for tolerating a nascent ESCRT-dependent restriction
factor in a new host. Together, these aims will reveal adaptive pathways for detoxifying emerging immune
processes and provide insight into how hosts rapidly evolve in real time to disruptions to core cellular functions.
RetroCHMP3 has broad implications for targeted therapeutics for HIV/AIDS and many other viral infections. This
fellowship proposal will explore the possibility of a new class of non-inflammatory restriction factor by
understanding mechanism for detoxification of a nascent immune pathway and its evolutionary host-pathogen
dynamics. As such, this project is ideally suited for a training physician-scientist, as it combines innovative
infection biology with comparative and evolutionary studies of emerging immune functions.
Up to $41K
health research