- Research article
- Open access
- Published:
Different papillomaviruses have different repertoires of transcription factor binding sites: convergence and divergence in the upstream regulatory region
BMC Evolutionary Biology volume 6, Article number: 20 (2006)
Abstract
Background
Papillomaviruses (PVs) infect stratified squamous epithelia in warm-blooded vertebrates and have undergone a complex evolutionary process. The control of the expression of the early ORFs in PVs depends on the binding of cellular and viral transcription factors to the upstream regulatory region (URR) of the virus. It is believed that there is a core of transcription factor binding sites (TFBS) common to all PVs, with additional individual differences, although most of the available information focuses only on a handful of viruses.
Results
We have studied the URR of sixty-one PVs, covering twenty different hosts. We have predicted the TFBS present in the URR and analysed these results by principal component analysis and genetic algorithms. The number and nature of TFBS in the URR might be much broader than thus far described, and different PVs have different repertoires of TFBS.
Conclusion
There are common fingerprints in the URR in PVs that infect primates, although the ancestors of these viruses diverged a long time ago. Additionally, there are obvious differences between the URR of alpha and beta PVs, despite these PVs infect similar histological cell types in the same host, i.e. human. A thorough analysis of the TFBS in the URR might provide crucial information about the differential biology of cancer-associated PVs.
Background
Papillomaviridae are a family of small dsDNA viruses that infect warm-blooded vertebrates [1]. Papillomaviruses (PVs) infect different species of mammals in the orders Primates (human, chimpanzee, bonobo, gorilla, macaque monkey, colobus monkey, and spider monkey), Carnivora (cat and dog), Perissodactyla (horse), Artiodactyla (cattle, sheep, deer, reindeer, elk), Cetacea (porpoise), Lagomorpha (rabbit and cottontail rabbit), Sirenia (manatee) and Rodentia (african soft-furred rat, hamster, porcupine). They also infect other distantly related hosts, such as marsupials (opossum) and birds (chaffinch and parrot), and it can be easily inferred that similar viruses will be found in many, if not all, vertebrates [2]. Despite the obvious absence of a sexual link in the PV cycle to ensure cohesiveness of the genome, stable PV types are identified, reflecting a sustained molecular selection through continuity in the ecological conditions and in the virus-host interactions.
Members of Papillomaviridae are associated to virtually all clinical cases of cervical cancer [3, 4]. Others are also involved in different benign and malignant proliferative disorders, such as skin warts, genital warts, laryngeal papillomas and possibly non-melanoma skin cancer [3, 5–7]. In all cases, independently of the host and the clinical manifestations, PVs infect stratified squamous epithelia, both mucosal and cutaneous. The target cells are located in the basal cell layer of the epithelia, which are available for infection via microlesions. The viral life cycle depends on keratinocyte differentiation. Thus, viral genomes are primarily present as nuclear episomes, which replicate in parallel to cell division. As the daughter cell migrates upwards and undergoes differentiation, the viral DNA is amplified, the viral expression pattern is modified and results finally in virion release [8].
PVs are non-enveloped viruses, with a circular dsDNA genome of ca. 8 Kb. The elements that regulate the expression of the early genes are located in the upstream regulatory region (URR) of the genome. This is a ca. 800 bp DNA stretch, spanning the region between the L1 and the E6 genes. Some of the transcription factor binding sites (TFBS) in the URR are present in all PVs, such as the binding sites for AP1, E2, NF1, Oct1, Sp1 or YY1 [9–17]. The presence of other TFBS is type-specific [18], and could therefore partially account for the differential anatomical tropism of the individual viral genotype [8]. Moreover, point mutations in the URR in variants of the same PV type lead to changes in the replication behaviour and in the transforming capacity of the viruses [19, 20]. However, most of the available experimental information about the presence of TFBS refers to merely a handful of viruses, mainly classified as high-risk viruses regarding their association with cervical cancer. This is the case for HPV16, HPV18 or HPV31. For most PVs, however, the only available data concerns their genomic sequence and the epidemiological results linking them to various diseases. Their molecular characteristics, genetic maps, transcription patterns, life cycle, interaction partners and modes of action are often inferred by homology with those of the known viruses. This might have lead to an over-generalisation of the PV biology, systematically overlooking the fact that different PV types within a given genus are not genetically homogeneous, and that different PVs infecting the same host -i.e. Alphapapillomaviruses and Betapapillomaviruses- might indeed be different organisms with different biologies [21]. This is likely to be the case for the different and distantly related human PVs. In this sense systematic attempts to provide a comprehensive picture of the PVs are available [2, 21], but they still do not have noticeable impact in either clinical or basic research [22].
In this paper we have addressed the in silico analysis of the URR of the PVs. The currently assumed hypothesis states that most of the TFBS in the URR are common to all PVs, with differences that could influence the different individual behaviours [23]. Our results suggest that the differences within and between genera are more dramatic than expected. The repertoires of TFBS present in the URR are both type- and genus-specific.
The history of the URRs in the PVs exemplifies both divergent and convergent evolution. Thus, there is an obvious divergence between different groups that once shared a common ancestor, such as delta and beta+gamma PVs. In this sense we also show that PVs that infect the same host do not necessarily share the same TFBS in the URR, as is the case in alpha and beta PVs. Finally, the presence of TFBS in the URR also illustrates convergent evolution between PVs only vaguely related but that infect related hosts. This is the case in alpha, beta, gamma, delta, mu and nu PVs. The last common ancestor of these genera, if any, is remote but they all infect primates and cluster together regarding to the repertoire of TFBS present in their URR.
Results and discussion
The untranslated regulatory region of the papillomavirus genome does not allow a proper phylogenetic reconstruction
We have performed a phylogenetic reconstruction of the URRs extracted from a selection of sixty-one phylogenetically representative PVs. In order to place this in a genomic context, the L1, E1 and E7 genes were also analysed. Phylogeny was reconstructed using three different alignment algorithms, four different phylogenetic algorithms, and two different nucleotide substitution models were used with each phylogenetic algorithm. Clusters were contrasted with the PV classification as revisited by de Villiers et al. [2]. The results for L1, E7 and the URR are given in Table 1.
We and others have already shown that the phylogenetic relationships between PV taxa are not homogeneous throughout the whole PV genome [21, 24–26]. Instead, they depend on the segment of the genome being considered. The results presented here stress further this concept, as they show that the support for the different individual taxa is different with regards to different elements of the genome. Some taxa are consistently recovered. This is the case of beta PVs, infecting Primates, and delta PVs, infecting Artiodactyla. These taxa appear with good bootstrap values in the consensus tree that gathers twelve phylogenetic reconstructions, and therefore show a homogeneous evolutionary pattern (Table 1).
Alpha PVs have undergone a complex evolutionary history [21], and the picture for the phylogeny of the URR region adds further complexity to it. Alpha PVs do not cluster together according to the URR phylogeny. Only the alignment with DIALIGN analysed with the parsimony approach was able to recover the alpha PV as a group, but even in this case the rendered topology did not resemble that of L1 or that of E7. In the rest of the cases there was no obvious pattern explaining the branching topologies. In all analysed trees, however, as well as in the consensus tree, the alpha PV in species 10 -HPV6, 13, 74, CPV1 and PCPV1- clustered together with a good bootstrap support: 79% support in the consensus tree. This was not the case for other alpha PV species. The most evident cases were HPV16 and HPV2. Thus, HPV16 did not cluster with HPV33 and HPV52 the other two analysed members of the alpha PV species 9. On the other hand, HPV2 did not cluster with the rest of the alpha PVs, and other viruses were unexpectedly closer to the rest of the alpha group than HPV2.
Kappa PVs -infecting Lagomorpha-, lambda PVs -infecting Carnivora- and mu PVs -infecting Primates- appear together regarding the L1 protein sequence, and it has been described that they share an ancient common ancestor [21]. Regarding the E7 protein sequence, lambda and mu PVs appear together, but kappa PVs do not cluster with them. This has been previously interpreted as a consequence of the different evolutionary patterns of the early and late genes in these PVs [21]. The phylogeny of these taxa according to the URR adds further complexity. Species in genus mu -HPV1 and 63- are consistently recovered as a cluster in the URR phylogenetic consensus tree. Genera kappa and lambda, on the contrary, do not appear as separate entities, although the four species analysed here -CRPV, ROPV, COPV1 and FdPV- cluster together with a 39% support in the final consensus tree.
Our results therefore show that the reconstruction of the phylogeny of the URR based exclusively on sequence alignments does not provide stable topologies. Molecular phylogenetic algorithms rely on the basic assumption that species closely related share identities/similarities in their sequences, and that species with high evolutionary distances show more dissimilar sequences. However, certain conditions might result in the recovery of the false tree, such as particular branch-length combinations, heterogeneous evolutionary rates in different branches of the tree or heterotachy in different positions within a sequence [27, 28]. The URRs are highly heterogeneous along the different PVs, both in composition and in length. These facts could prevent a proper phylogenetic reconstruction [29]. Since it has been proved that different regions of the genome of the PV show different evolutionary distances, we have analysed this issue in the context of the evolution of the URRs.
The untranslated regulatory region of the papillomaviruses has diverged faster than the rest of the genome
In general, the support values for the different taxa are higher for the L1 protein than for the E7 protein and are lowest for the URR (Table 1). We have already shown that late proteins have diverged less than early proteins in PVs [21, 26]. Phylogenetic reconstruction strongly depends on the sequence similarity, and all algorithms tend to fail when sequences are evolutionary too far from each other [27, 30]. We have therefore addressed the question whether the poor results in the phylogenetic reconstruction for the URR could be due to a relatively higher divergence rate. Results are shown in Figure 1. We have analysed the phylogeny of the L1, E1, E7 and URR sequences at the DNA level. The analysis was restricted to the genera beta and delta, since these were the only taxa that rendered confident clustering of all their members based on the URR (Table 1). There is an obvious gradient of normalised divergence rate as follows: L1<E1<E7<URR, in both beta and delta PV. The results communicated here for L1, E1 and E7 at the DNA level coincide with previous reports for the corresponding protein sequences [21]. In genera beta and delta, the URR sequences have diverged more than twice as much as the corresponding L1 sequences. These results are not unexpected, due to the lack of coding regions in the URR. However, the phylogenies of genera beta and delta could be properly determined regarding only to the URR sequences, and phylogenetic reconstruction is exclusively sequence-dependent. High divergences hamper proper alignments, and it is not possible to properly infer phylogenetic relationships without good alignments, as exemplified before for the alpha PVs. Thus, despite the absence of coding regions in the URR our results point towards the existence of conserved elements or stretches, which might have a functional importance. All these facts make it obvious that alternative tools are required for the proper analysis of the relationships between PVs, with regards to the URR.
Different papillomaviruses contain different transcription factor binding sites in the untranslated regulatory region
Our results in the analysis of the phylogeny of the URR in the PVs suggest the existence of locally conserved motifs, which could be embedded in a less conserved environment. It is thought that all PVs contain binding sites in the URR for the E2 protein, as well as for other transcription factors [29]. Although it is believed that most URR contain the same repertoire of TFBS [23, 29], experimental confirmation has only been provided for a handful of PVs. We have addressed the question whether the TFBS could be some of the conserved elements in the URR that allowed the phylogenetic reconstruction of certain PV taxa. We have therefore predicted the presence of TFBS in the URR of a representative selection of PVs with the software MATCH. The algorithm compares the sequence to be analysed with a matricial description gathering experimental information about the TFBS sequence. A similar approach was already suggested for HPV31 using the TRANSFAC database [23]. We have chosen a rather generous approach, computing a sum of both error rates – false positive and false negative predictions – to find cut-offs that give an optimal number of false positives and false negatives. The results yielded a list with the presence of the different considered TFBS in the corresponding URR sequences.
The in silico prediction of probable TFBS in the URR of PVs with the software MATCH yielded results comparable to the experimental ones. As an example, the URR sequence of HPV16 consisted of 832 bp and was predicted to contain 77 binding sites for 30 different transcription factors. The density of TFBS in the URR was higher than in the rest of the HPV16 genome, and also higher than in a random DNA sequence with the same base composition -32.9%A, 30.6%T, 19.1%G, 17.4%C- (Fig. 2). Furthermore, all the previously experimentally determined TFBS in the URR of HPV16 were recovered as predicted, thus validating our approach. An example of the results for five different PVs from genera alpha, beta and gamma is given in Table 2. From the results shown here it can be inferred that different PVs contain different TFBS in the URR. Some TFBS are predicted to be present in most PVs. This is the case of AP-1, AREB-6, CF2-II, E2, Elf-1, Freac-7, HFH-3, Oct-1, Skn-1 or v-Myb. Other TFBS are restricted to only certain PVs, which could be seen to reflect differential host species- cell type- or differentiation state-specificity. The information thus gained in silico might widen our knowledge of the potential reciprocal virus-cell interactions and guide future experimental approaches.
It might be argued that the in silico prediction of TFBS might yield both false positive and false negative results. The higher density of predicted TFBS in the URR as compared to the rest of the genome, as well as the concordance of the predictions with the experimental data suggest a low risk of false negative results. Regarding the putative false positive results, although it is possible that some of the predicted TFBS are really not such, our approach addresses the conservation of functional DNA stretches in similar viruses. As an example, the presence of a HFH-3 binding site in very different viruses highlights the importance of the conservation of this DNA sequence, even if it does not act as a HFH-3 binding site.
Beta PVs are more homogeneous than alpha PVs regarding the repertoire of predicted TFBS in the URR
Our results suggest that the repertoire of TFBS is different in different PVs. We have therefore hypothesised that there are patterns of presence/absence of TFBS that could be different in different PVs taxa. To test this hypothesis we predicted again the presence of TFBS in the URR of PVs, with a more conservative approach, aiming to minimise the number of false positives. The URRs were then grouped according to the present PV classification, and the results analysed and searched for conserved patterns of presence/absence of TFBS in the different viral groups. A simple initial display of the results for alpha, beta and gamma PVs confirmed our hypothesis, as shown in Figure 3. It can be seen that certain TFBS are predicted to be present with high confidence in some of these taxa, but not in others. This is the case for v-Myb, present in beta and gamma PVs, or HNF-3beta, present in gamma PVs. Interestingly, the presence of the E2 binding sites in gamma PVs was relatively low, and should be experimentally analysed. The absence of a predicted E2 binding site in gamma PVs is a result of the stringent conditions chosen for the TFBS predicted, since this binding site was also predicted in gamma PVs in the above described les restrictive conditions. However, the selective disappearance of this predicted E2 binding site in particular taxa might also be highly informative. It could reflect slightly different sequence specificity of the E2 protein in these viruses, and/or a different regulatory scheme.
The achieved results consisted of a matrix of ninety-seven predicted TFBS along the sixty-one analysed URR. As shown in Fig. 2, the density of both predicted TFBS and predicted binding TF was higher in the URR than in the rest of the genome or in a random DNA sequence of the same composition. Due to the high dimensionality of the data we approached the hypothesis of the existence of clusters using Principal Component Analysis.
PCA reduces the dimensionality of the initial dataset by finding new variables -components or eigenvectors- which gather the different overall tendencies of the variance in the data [31, 32]. The new variables can then be extracted, displayed and analysed. Results for the two more important components in alpha and beta PVs are displayed in Figure 4. It can be seen that beta PVs tend to have high values in both principal components, 1 and 2, and tend to cluster in the upper-right quadrant. On the contrary, alpha PVs do not behave homogeneously and appear dispersed throughout the other three quadrants. Both facts correlate with our findings described above while trying to reconstruct the phylogeny of the corresponding URR: beta PVs clustered together confidently according to the URR sequence, whereas alpha PVs did not appear together as a definite group. In parallel to this, the clinical manifestations associated to infections by beta PVs are more homogeneous than those associated with infections by alpha PVs. All these facts further strengthen the concept of a higher diversity within alpha PVs than within beta PVs [21]. Finally, the newly obtained Principal Components are lineal combinations of the original variables, in our case the presence/absence of TFBS in the URR. Our PCA results suggest that the repertoire of TFBS in alpha and beta PVs is different. We have seeked further confirmation of this statement by analysing the matrix of predicted TFBS by means of genetic algorithms.
Different taxa within Papillomaviridae show different repertoires of TFBS in their URRs
Genetic algorithms allow the identification of patterns and the formulation of predictions in highly dimensional datasets [33]. We have applied this tool to the interpretation of our predictions of TBFS in the URR of PVs, using the NEUROSHELLL software. Our aim was to investigate whether different PV taxa could be distinguished attending to the predicted repertoire of TFBS in the URR. Genetic algorithms were trained with the original results, providing additional categorical information. The defined categories corresponded either to actual taxa in the PV classification [2], or to functional criteria, i.e. a given virus infects primates/does not infect primates. We expected therefore from the trained genetic algorithms answers to the questions: i) does a given combination of TFBS distinguish a PV that infect primates from one that infect non-primates? ii) can we predict from the combination of TFBS to which taxon a given PV belongs? As a control, the same input data were randomly classified into the same number of artificial categories. Results are summarised in Table 3. A graphical example for the alpha and beta PVs is provided in Figure 5.
Using the predictions of the presence/absence of TFBS in the URR of different PVs, genetic algorithms were able to accurately predict the adscription of a given virus to a given group. In general, a high number of members in a group resulted in more accurate predictions. This was the case for genera alpha, beta and delta. For other groups, still unrepresented, genetic algorithms were unable to generate predictions. This was the case for kappa, lambda, mu, theta or iota PVs.
Genetic algorithms were able to discern between PVs infecting primates and PVs non-infecting primates (Table 3). The algorithms could not formulate any prediction for only one primate PV, HPV4, a gamma PV. Intriguingly, HPV4 also did not cluster together with the rest of the gamma genus when analysing the phylogeny of the URR. For the rest of primate PVs, including human, chimpanzee, bonobo and macaque PVs, the algorithms formulated accurate predictions. Interestingly this included also mu PVs, which are evolutionary distant from alpha, beta and gamma PVs. The phylogenetic reconstruction of the URR allowed the recovery of beta, gamma and mu PVs as separate taxa, but there was no obvious close topological relationship among them. The last common ancestor of alpha, beta, gamma and mu PVs existed before the emergence of primates as a taxon, possibly even before the major radiative events in the mammalian lineage. Our present results, therefore, point towards the convergent evolution of PVs infecting primates, which is not obvious at the mere sequence level, but is noticeable when analysing the URR at a functional level, i.e. considering the putative TFBS encoded therein.
Genetic algorithms were able to discriminate in virtually all cases between alpha and beta PVs with regards to the TFBS repertoire in the URR (Figure 5). Moreover, genetic algorithms could also correctly identify alpha and beta PVs as definite groups, both when trained with the data corresponding to all analysed PVs, and when trained with the data corresponding to human PVs only (Table 3). These results further show the strength of our approach and suggest interesting implications in the differential regulation caused by both virus genera. On the one hand, we were able to recover alpha PVs as a distinct group, despite the absence of a high degree of sequence similarity among their members. On the other hand, alpha and beta PVs share histologically the same host, namely the keratinocytes in the basal cell layer of stratified squamous epithelia in primates [2, 8]. However, the repertoire of TFBS is different in alpha and beta PVs. Different hypotheses could explain this fact. This might reflect the existence of different subpopulations of keratinocytes in the basal cell layer, histologically not distinguishable, with differential susceptibilities to the infection by alpha and beta PVs. Alternatively, alpha and beta PVs could have taken advantage of different protein expression regulatory mechanisms in the infected cell, which would correlate with the presence of different TFBS in their URR.
Conclusion
The URR of the PVs is at least partially responsible for the tissue tropism, differential transcription, and for the changes in transcription patterns related to host-cell differentiation [8]. The sequence divergence in the URR is very high, and this fact prevents a proper phylogenetic reconstruction of the URR for most of the PV genera. We have therefore addressed the in silico analysis of the URR from a functional point of view. We have predicted the presence of TFBS in the URR of a phylogenetically representative selection of PVs. The results were analysed by means of principal component analysis and genetic algorithms.
We have shown that different PVs have different repertoires of TFBS in the URR, even in PVs that infect the same host. This fact could correlate with differential expression patterns and changes as a response to host-cell differentiation. PVs infecting primates show a characteristic TFBS fingerprint, and can therefore be distinguished from other PVs. Since these PVs are polyphyletic [21], the similarities in the functionality of the URR might have appeared as a result of convergent coevolution, arisen under the evolutionary pressure of sharing the same host. The alpha and beta PVs genera are stably recovered as distinct groups according to the TFBS they contain, despite the absence of a high degree of sequence similarity between their members. Both genera infect the same cell type in the same host, but the differences in the TFBS they contain may reflect the existence of different subtypes of keratinocytes and/or the existence of different regulatory mechanisms in different viruses.
Our results indicate that the diversity among alpha PVs regarding the URR is higher than among other groups, such as beta or delta PVs. This suggests that a thorough analysis of the repertoire of TFBS within the alpha PV genus could provide us with functional hints explaining the differences in the biology of their members, such as their differential association with benign or malignant growth.
Finally, it is obvious that different PVs have different repertoires of TFBS. Thus far, most of research concerning URR and transcriptional regulation has focused for obvious reasons on high-risk PVs. Our results again stress the concept that different viruses are different organisms, with potentially different biological properties that might not be directly extrapolated from the results of a human-based biased selection of PVs. The broadening of the number and diversity of the PVs to be empirically studied will surely provide us not only with a broader knowledge of Papillomaviridae, but also will strengthen our armoury against the diseases they cause.
Methods
DNA sequences. Taxonomic diversity
The PV genome sequences were retrieved either from Los Alamos HPV Sequence Database or from the public databases at EMBL. At present, most of the complete PV sequences belong to alpha, beta and gamma human PVs [2]. To avoid overrepresentation of these taxa, a representative selection of sequences was chosen, adequately covering all the human PV species comprised therein, as follows: alpha-PV HPV32 [NC_001586] (species 1), HPV3 [NC_001588] and 29 [NC_001685] (species 2), HPV61 [NC_001694], 83 [NC_000856] and 84 [NC_002676] (species 3), HPV2 [NC_001352] (species 4), HPV26 [NC_001583] and 51 [NC_001533] (species 5), HPV30 [NC_001585] (species 6), HPV18 [NC_001357] and 39 [NC_001535] (species 7), HPV7 [NC_001595] and 91 [NC_004085] (species 8), HPV16 [NC_001526], 33 [NC_001528] and 52 [NC_001592] (species 9), HPV6 [NC_000904], 13 [NC_001349] and 74 [NC_004501] (species 10), HPV34 [NC_001587] (species 11), HPV54 [NC_001676] (species 13), HPV90 [NC_004104] (species 14) and HPV71 [NC_002644] (species15); beta-PV HPV5 [NC_001531], 8 [NC_001532], 14 [NC_001578], 19 [NC_001581] and 20 [NC_001679] (species 1), HPV9 [NC_001596], 22 [NC_001681], 37 [NC_001687] and 38 [NC_001688] (species 2), HPV49 [NC_001591] (species 3), HPV92 [NC_004500] (species 4), and HPV24 [NC_001683] and HPVRTR [NC_004761] (not assigned); gamma PV HPV4 [NC_001457] (species 1), HPV48 [NC_001690] (species 2) and HPV 60 [NC_001693] (species 4). Other HPV sequences distantly related to the former were also included: HPV1 [NC_001356], 41 [NC_001354] and 63 [NC_001458]. All the non-human PV complete sequences were included, aiming to cover the widest possible interval of host diversity, as follows: PV infecting Primates, Pan troglodytes PV [NC_001838] (CPV), Pan paniscus PV [NC_006163] (PCPV) and Macacca mulatta PV [NC_001678] (RHPV1); PV infecting Rodentia, Mastomys natalensis PV [NC_001605] (MnPV); PV infecting Cetartiodactyla, Phocoena spinipinnis PV [NC_003348] (PsPV), Bos taurus BPV1 [NC_001522] and 4 [NC_004711], Ovis aries PV [NC_001789] (OPV1), Rangifer tarandus PV [NC_004196] (RPV), Alces alces alces PV [NC_001524] (EEPV) and Odocoileus virginianus PV [NC_001523] (DPV); PV infecting Perissodactyla, Equus caballus EcPV [NC_004194] and EqPV [NC_003748]; PV infecting Sirenia, Trichechus manatus latirostris PV [NC_006563] (TmPV); PV infecting Carnivora, Felis catus PV [AF377865] (FPV) and Canis familiaris PV [NC_001619] (COPV); PV infecting Lagomorpha, Oryctolagus cuniculus PV [NC_002232] (ROPV) and Sylvilagus floridanus [NC_001541] (CRPV); PV infecting Aves, Passeriformes, Fringilla coelebs PV [NC_004068] (FcPV); PV infecting Aves, Psittaciformes, Psittacus erithacus PV [NC_003973] (PePV).
Phylogenetic analysis
ORF sequences identified in the databases as coding L1 or E7, and DNA sequences corresponding to the entire URR were used for phylogenetic inference. The URRs were defined as the DNA sequences lying between the L1 and the E6 ORFs of the PV circular genome. Three alignment algorithms were used: T-COFFEE, which combines information for both global and local homologies [34], CLUSTALW, a progressive alignment algorithm [35], and DIALIGN [36], a local segment alignment algorithm. The results were fed into the PHYLIP programme package for both parsimony and distance matrix evolutionary analysis. DNA phylogeny was estimated by the parsimony method with DNAPARS. Two distance matrices were also generated with DNADIST, under two different nucleotide substitution models, a Kimura-two-parameter model or a maximum likelihood model. Both distance matrices were then analysed with FITCH, which estimates phylogenies from distance matrix data under the "additive tree model" according to which the distances are expected to equal the sums of branch lengths between the species, using the Fitch-Margoliash criterion. Alternatively, the distance matrix was analysed with NEIGHBOR, under both the Neighbor-Joining and UPGMA methods of clustering. The statistical support was assessed by 1000 cycles bootstrapping with the SEQBOOT and CONSENSE programmes. Thus, three different alignments were analysed with four different phylogenetic methods, yielding twenty-one different estimates of the phylogenetic relationship within DNA PV sequences.
Prediction of transcription factor binding sites
Transcription factor binding sites (TFBS) in the genome region between the L1 and the E6 genes were predicted with MATCH, designed for searching potential binding sites for TFBS nucleotide sequences. MATCH uses a library of mononucleotide weight matrices from TRANSFAC 6.0. In brief, the MATCH algorithm looks for matches between the nucleotide weight matrices that experimentally define the TFBS and the analysed URR sequence. A matrix similarity value is then calculated depending on the quality of the match between the core sequence of the matrix -the most conserved positions- and a part of the input sequence. A positive match must have a score higher than or equal to the core similarity cut-off. We have chosen a high cut-off value, designed to reduce the number of random sites found by MATCH.
Analysis of transcription factor binding sites
The results of the prediction of TFBS in the URR were used to build a matrix presence/absence of ninety-two different TFBS in sixty-one different Pvs. Due to the high dimensionality of the matrix it was analysed by Principal Component Analysis (PCA) or by means of genetic algorithms.
PCA is a method widely used in pattern-recognition studies [31, 32]. This statistical tool promotes dimension reduction and modelling of the original data by creating new coordinate axes defined according to the principal components (PCs) extracted from the original data. The initial dataset is displayed in an n-dimensional space, n being the number of defined variables. In our case n is the total number of different predicted TFBS in the whole sequence dataset. The first PC is determined by looking for the direction of the maximum residual variance in the n-dimensional space. From the remaining data variance -after the removal of the first PC- a second PC that is completely uncorrelated with – i.e. orthogonal to – the first one is extracted, and accounts for the maximum possible remaining dataset variance. PC1 always explains more of the total information than PC2, PC3 and others. The procedure is then repeated until all PCs are generated.
PCA is an extremely useful tool, which maps samples through scores and loadings. Score plots allow sample identification, clarifying whether they are similar or dissimilar, typical or outliers. Moreover, loadings plots allow the checking of the correlation between variables and also enable the variables that contribute most to each principal component to be defined.
A genetic algorithm is a random, yet directed search for an optimal solution to a problem [33]. In our case the problem is the categorisation of the MATCH results describing the presence/absence of the different TFBS in the original URR sequences dataset. We have used the NEUROSHELL software. The algorithm searches for optimisation by first encoding the initial information into a "genetic" formalism. Thus, a population of "organisms" that contain a "genome" made up of "genes" is first formally defined. The genes are the parameters to be optimised and the organisms are solutions to the optimisation problems. In each generation organisms are allowed to recombine and mutate. For each new organism it is calculated how well its parameters solve our categorisation problem. The better they solve the problem the "fitter" they are, and therefore the probability of "surviving" and "breeding" will also be higher. After many generations the error surface is thoroughly explored and the population evolves towards a fitter state. At this point we are provided with an algorithm that weights the contribution of each variable, in our case presence/absence of TFBS, to the solution of the problem, in our case the categorisation of the initial URR sequences. The accuracy of the categorisation predictions can then be tested and their usefulness evaluated.
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This work was supported in part by grants from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Technology (BIO2003-07672), the BBVA Foundation (BIO04) and the Instituto Carlos III (C03/08).
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SGV carried out the Principal Component Analysis and participated in the global data analysis. JRIR participated in the Genetic Algorithm Analysis. AA participated in the design of the study and in the draft of the paper. IGB conceived the study and coordinated it, and performed the TFBS prediction and analysis.
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García-Vallvé, S., Iglesias-Rozas, J.R., Alonso, Á. et al. Different papillomaviruses have different repertoires of transcription factor binding sites: convergence and divergence in the upstream regulatory region. BMC Evol Biol 6, 20 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-6-20
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-6-20