key: cord-1011605-ppi2yrwr authors: Pimentel, André C.; Beraldo, Camila S.; Cogni, Rodrigo title: Host-shift as the cause of emerging infectious diseases: Experimental approaches using Drosophila-virus interactions date: 2020-11-23 journal: Genetics and molecular biology DOI: 10.1590/1678-4685-gmb-2020-0197 sha: 3d52e449aa4d809729245bcfb08ec4125d6ecf79 doc_id: 1011605 cord_uid: ppi2yrwr Host shifts, when a cross-species transmission of a pathogen can lead to successful infections, are the main cause of emerging infectious diseases, such as COVID-19. A complex challenge faced by the scientific community is to address the factors that determine whether the cross-species transmissions will result in spillover or sustained onwards infections. Here we review recent literature and present a perspective on current approaches we are using to understand the mechanisms underlying host shifts. We highlight the usefulness of the interactions between Drosophila species and viruses as an ideal study model. Additionally, we discuss how cross-infection experiments — when pathogens from a natural reservoir are intentionally injected in novel host species— can test the effect cross-species transmissions may have on the fitness of virus and host, and how the host phylogeny may influence this response. We also discuss experiments evaluating how cooccurrence with other viruses or the presence of the endosymbiont bacteria Wolbachia may affect the performance of new viruses in a novel host. Finally, we discuss the need of surveys of virus diversity in natural populations using next-generation sequencing technologies. In the long term, these approaches can contribute to a better understanding of the basic biology of host shifts. In less than eight months, COVID-19 has spread from a few cases in Wuhan, China, to more than eighteen million people in almost everywhere in the world (Coronavirus Research Center, https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/map.html visited on August 6 th , 2020). The disease is caused by a new humaninfecting virus, SARS-CoV-2 Sironi et al., 2020) . Phylogenetic analyses suggest that the natural host of this virus is likely bats, and that a possible wild animal sold at the Wuhan food market might be an intermediate host that helped transmission to humans . This is a classic example of an emerging infectious diseases (EID) -infections recognized in a host population for the first time (Morens and Fauci, 2013) . The causes of the emergence of novel diseases are pointed out as due to multiple factors, which may involve socio-economic, environmental, and ecological components (Jones et al., 2008) . As in the case of COVID-19, a common cause of EID is the cross-species transmission of pathogens, which can lead to sustained onwards transmission. This successful pathogen emergence may occur through two different processes that vary in the level of pathogen adaptation following the colonization: host range expansion and host shift. Expansion of host range occurs when the jump increases the number of host species that the pathogen is able to infect without changing pathogen's original gene pool (Thines, 2019) . In turn, host shift takes place when the jump increases genetic differentiation in the pathogen, leading to specialization on the novel host Choi and Thines, 2015; Thines, 2019) . In the case of SARS-CoV-2, the recognition of the virus receptor (angiotensin-converting enzyme 2, ACE2) is a feature shared with its relative viruses (e.g. SARS-CoV and the bat virus SL-CoV WIV16) that allowed the jump to humans (Yang et al., 2016; Lu et al., 2020) . Furthermore, an amino acid residue substitutions in SARS-CoV-2 spike protein increases binding affinity to human ACE2 , what may indicate specialization on human host. Pathogen host shifts are often observed in humans, in which 60.3% of EID are zoonoses, changing mainly from wild animal reservoirs (Jones et al., 2008) . Some examples include the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) pandemic caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), which jumped into humans from non-human primates (Sharp and Hahn, 2011; Faria et al., 2014) , and Ebola, whose virus shifted from fruit bats to humans (Leroy et al., 2005) . One of the biggest current challenges to epidemiologists is to address the factors that guarantee the success of crossspecies transmissions, leading to host shifts. By addressing the mechanisms of host shift, it would be possible to understand what causes spillover infections (i.e. events with no or short onward transmission) and what leads to sustained infections, when the pathogen enters, replicates itself within and is transmitted between members of the new host species Engelstädter and Fortuna, 2019) .This would allow scientists to anticipate potential epidemics places, reducing the economic, environmental and social burden. Predicting the spatiotemporal occurrence of a host shift is still challenging, as it may be linked to a multitude of variables ranging from host and pathogen geographic dispersion to changes in host phenotype and genetics (Woolhouse et al., 2005) . Assessing the factors favoring host shifts and identifying potential susceptible taxa is crucial to novel emerging pathogen research as well as to mitigate their impacts (Woolhouse et al., 2005; Burbrink et al., 2017) . Here we discuss how experimental approaches can help our comprehension of mechanisms favoring host shifts. We highlight the usefulness of the interactions between Drosophila species and viruses as a study model and review recent advances and current methods being pursued. We claim that understanding the basic biology of host shifts is essential to prevent and deal with infectious diseases such as COVID-19. Studied for more than a century, Drosophila melanogaster has become the most studied organism in many fields of biology. Most of its success as a model organism is due to its rapid generation time, small size, easy stock maintenance, and unrivaled availability of genetic and genomic tools (Powell, 1997) . Another advantage of this model in many fields, including studies of host-virus interactions, is its high degree of evolutionary conservation with other animals (Hoffmann, 2003; Lemaitre and Hoffmann, 2007; Panayidou et al., 2014; Xu and Cherry, 2014) . Many defense mechanisms against viruses in Drosophila are conserved in vertebrates, such as Toll, Imd, and Jak-Stat pathways (Lemaitre et al., 1996; Merkling and Van Rij, 2015; Marques and Imler, 2016) . However, a disadvantage of this system is that some immune pathways are restricted to some taxa and are not directly comparable to Drosophila. For example, Drosophila lacks an adaptive immune system, an important response to several pathogens that ensures immunological memory in vertebrates (Flajnik and Kasahara, 2010) . There are well established protocols for experimental work on Drosophila-virus interactions (Merkling and Van Rij, 2015; Yang et al., 2019) and recent research has covered diverse aspects of host-virus biology. Studies have looked at the genetic architecture of resistance to virus infection, including the identification of many major effect genes that affect resistance and their mechanisms of antiviral action (Magwire et al., 2012; Cogni et al., 2016; Cao et al., 2017) . Some works have performed experimental tests of host-shifts in a controlled phylogenetic design (Longdon et al., 2011 . Drosophila has also been used as a model to understand the replication mechanisms of human viruses such as SARS-CoV (Hughes et al., 2012) . Additionally, research on the diversity of insect viruses, and the mechanisms that control virus infections, have the potential to discover new adaptations that can inspire the development of novel antiviral strategies by the pharmaceutical industry (Olmo et al., 2019) . Cross-infection experiments -when pathogens from a natural reservoir are intentionally injected into new host species -are used to simulate host shifts and have been described as fruitful practices to understand mechanisms underlying host-pathogen interactions (Figure 1 ). Although the enormous theoretical efforts done to uncover which factors lead to sustained or to short chain infections (Chabas et al., 2018; Bonneaud et al., 2019; Dallas et al., 2019; Engelstädter and Fortuna, 2019 ), we lack system-related information not observable in nature, such as the frequency of cross-species pathogen transmissions, and the likelihood of infection given the exposure of the host (Mollentze et al., 2020) . Data of this nature are only obtained through experimental studies. In order to better evaluate the array of possible data resulting from cross-infection experiments, it is important to categorize the components of the interaction. Infection dynamics depends on host effects (e.g. susceptibility and defense mechanisms), pathogen effects (e.g. replication ability and virulence), and interaction effects, which is related to the synergy between host and pathogen inherent features (Mollentze et al., 2020) . Host susceptibility can be dismantled in a set of attributes specific to the species and/or the individual, such as genetics, immunity, microbiome, age and sex (Casadevall and Pirofski, 2017) . Conversely, during an infection, hosts may use a combination of two different mechanisms to defend against pathogens, resistance and tolerance (Ayres and Schneider, 2012) . Resistance is when there is an activation of host's immune system to control pathogen's replication, and tolerance, when the host is able to avoid a decrease in its own fitness without necessarily altering the parasite load (Schneider and Ayres, 2008; Ayres and Schneider, 2012; Medzhitov et al., 2012; Vale et al., 2016) . The susceptibility of potential hosts varies greatly within and between taxa, and a key factor predicting it is the phylogenetic relatedness among potential hosts (De Vienne et al., 2013; Longdon et al., 2014; Engelstädter and Fortuna, 2019) . This phylogenetic influence may occur through phylogenetic distance effect or phylogenetic clade effect ( Figure 1 ; Longdon et al., 2014 Longdon et al., , 2015 . Phylogenetic distance effects suggest that a pathogen infection success decreases as the phylogenetic distance from the natural host increases . In such case, taxa phylogenetically closer to the natural host are more likely to be infected (Corey and Waite, 2007; De Vienne et al., 2009) . For instance, Longdon et al. (2011) examined the variation in persistence and replication of three sigma viruses, isolated from different species of Drosophila, in 51 Drosophilidae novel hosts. They demonstrated that the viruses' replication ability was negatively related to the phylogenetic distance from the donor host. Considering that in novel infections the virus requires adaptations to use the cellular machinery of the new host, and supposing such structural changes increase with evolutionary divergence time, shifts to phylogenetically more distant hosts will demand more adaptations. Hence, being less able to replicate themselves, those three sigma viruses presented lower viral titers in species phylogenetically distant from their natural host (Longdon et al., 2011) . Phylogenetic clade effects predict that pathogen infection success varies between different host clades, but is similar within them -i.e. a particular clade of hosts may have related susceptibility to the pathogen, independent of its Experiments on host-shifts 3 phylogenetic distance from the natural host . This occurs when particular clades share some features that made them particularly resistant or susceptible to the pathogen . For example, in a cross infection experiment using Drosophila C virus (DCV) and 48 species of Drosophila, Longdon et al. (2015) did not observe distance effect on viral load, but a pattern in which titers were clustering together across the host phylogeny. They hypothesized that physiological, immunity or molecular host features driving the virus infection success could be distributed heterogeneously among clades, generating "patches" of hosts with high susceptibility throughout the phylogeny. Regarding the pathogen, virulence is a crucial trait to consider in host shift studies. Virulence is the cost in fitness a pathogen causes to its host due to infection (Read, 1994; Vale et al., 2016 Vale et al., , 2018 , and it may vary following a host shift, presenting high levels in particular species and leading to outbreaks and epidemics (Woolhouse et al., 2005; Jones et al., 2008) . Initially, virulence was thought to be a direct consequence of parasite replication, being linked to the idea that the host-parasite interaction evolves towards avirulence, i.e. the pathogen does not cause a cost in fitness for the host anymore (Alizon et al., 2009) . However, host susceptibility features, e.g. resistance or tolerance, may affect how virulent a pathogen could be, decoupling virulence and pathogen load measures (Gandon and Michalakis, 2000; Gandon, 2002) . Recent studies have looked at the interaction between host susceptibility and pathogen virulence. An elucidative example is the meta-analysis of cross-species tests that was developed by Mollentze et al. (2020) . They analyzed the progression of rabies virus inoculations from bats and carnivores in other mammal species. This research showed that virus incubation period was longer in receptive hosts with higher body temperature. Interestingly, host body temperature for those groups analyzed were not correlated with phylogenetic distance, but tended to cluster across the phylogeny. They argue that mismatches between hosts physiological features and their evolutionary history may be influencing the infection progression and the success of cross-species transmissions. As each host-pathogen association has its specificities and particular interaction results, it is imperative to compare, in a systematic manner, the effects of different infections on the fitness of both host and pathogen. This approach contributes to unravel factors driving the variation of host susceptibility, and pathogen's virulence and replication capacity. We are using this approach by isolating common viruses in field populations that vary in virulence, and manually injecting them into new hosts (as in Longdon et al., 2011 Longdon et al., , 2015 . In the mid-and long-terms (hyphen and plural), such empirical data are useful to generate parameter distributions to model factors favoring host shifts, and to identify general rules promoting the emergence of infection diseases. Viruses do not occur in isolation inside their hosts. After the cross-species transmission, the virus needs to interact with the natural viral community already present in the novel host. Prevalence of viruses in insects is far from negligible, and can reach more than 80% for a given virus, depending on the sampled locality (Webster et al., 2015) . In a host-shift context, high prevalence of an endemic virus in the new host can directly affect the fitness of the virus that switched hosts (Figure 2) . The co-occurrence of viruses may result in three Nova-Ocampo, 2015) . Second, if the presence of one virus compromises the host immune systems, the replication of the other virus may be favored (Kuwata et al., 2015) . Third, there may be an apparent absence of fitness consequences (viral accommodation) (Salas-Benito and De Nova-Ocampo, 2015). Considering the specificities of the natural viral community inside potential hosts, it is essential to understand how the dynamics between different viruses affects the occurrence of host shifts. The presence of a given virus can negatively affect a second infection if both depend on the same host resources, i.e. endemic viruses restrict cellular resources availability for the novel infecting virus. For instance, cell experiments with dual infections had shown that insect-specific viruses can inhibit the growth of Zika, dengue and La Crosse virus (Schultz et al., 2018) . In Aedes aegypti mosquitos co-infected with two dengue viruses strains -DENV-1 and DENV-4 -, there was a competitive displacement of DENV1 by DENV-4, and only DENV-4 was detected in mosquito salivary gland, improving its transmission potential in a cooccurring event (Vazeille et al., 2016) . This can have consequences on virus strains displacement in dengue epidemics (L'Azou et al., 2014) . Therefore, this coinfection approach also provides insights for the arbovirus's transmission and prevalence, which currently impacts human health. Regarding human respiratory viruses, there are epidemiological data supporting viral interference (e.g. Linde et al., 2009) . A well-documented example is the interference between influenza viruses. Infection with influenza virus A(H1N1)pdm09 prevents subsequent infection with a different influenza type, causing temporary immunity following the first infection (Kelly et al., 2010; Laurie et al., 2015) . Even though COVID data are preliminary, an equivalent viral interference may occurs, since SARS-CoV-2 patients are infrequently coinfected with other respiratory viruses (Blasco et al., 2020; Nowak et al., 2020) . An alternative scenario to competition is when a virus can benefit from natural infections. For example, when Culex tritaeniorhynchus cell line is previously infected by Culex flavivirus, subsequent infection with dengue virus enhances dengue viral titer in late stages of infection (Kuwata et al., 2015) . This outcome is probably due to Culex flavivirus action on host antiviral defense. By expressing viral suppressor of RNAi, the virus decreases immune response and favors new infections or higher replication rates (Berry et al., 2009; Palmer et al., 2018) . A third scenario is when virus fitness is not affected by cooccurring viruses. For instance, coinfection of A. aegypti cells with Zika and chikungunya viruses did not affect replication of the two viruses (Goertz et al., 2017) . This lack of interference between both viruses may be explained by the different subcellular fractions occupied by these viruses during their replication (Goertz et al., 2017) . Overall, interactions between viruses can lead to different outcomes in fitness of the new infecting virus, affecting the chances of a host-shift. Surprisingly, these possible interaction effects of cooccurring viruses have not been tested in Drosophila melanogaster (Palmer et al., 2018) . We propose an experimental approach with laboratory-controlled superinfections, in which individual flies are previously infected with a sub lethal dose of a virus, and afterwards infected with a second virus. The replication rate and virulence of the second virus indicate what would be expected in a host-shift in which the host has a high natural prevalence of a virus. Not only can virus co-occurrence affect the result of a host-shift, but interactions with other organisms can also do so (Figure 2) . A classic example is the presence of the bacterial endosymbiont Wolbachia which plays a multitude of effects on host fitness, such as protection against viral infection. Wolbachia is an alphaproteobacterium that lives within the cytoplasm of arthropod cells, and is maternally transmitted to the offspring. Until the recent past, it was viewed primarily as a parasite that manipulates host reproduction, most commonly by inducing cytoplasmic incompatibility (Bourtzis et al., 1996) . Cytoplasmic incompatibility allows Wolbachia to invade populations by causing embryonic mortality when uninfected females mate with infected males, thus conferring a selective advantage to infected females (Turelli and Hoffmann, 1991; Werren et al., 2008) . More recently, basic research on Drosophila-virus interactions has discovered that Wolbachia can protect Drosophila species against infection by RNA viruses (Hedges et al., 2008; Teixeira et al., 2008) . The applied potential of this finding to control arboviruses was soon noticed in the scientific community. Combined with Wolbachia's ability to invade populations due to cytoplasmic incompatibility, this provides a way to modify natural mosquito populations, turning them resistant to viral infections. Wolbachia has been transferred from Drosophila to the mosquito Aedes aegypti, where it limits the replication of arboviruses (Moreira et al., 2009) . When Wolbachia infected mosquitoes were released into the wild, the bacterium spread through the mosquito populations by cytoplasmic incompatibility (Hoffmann et al., 2011; Walker et al., 2011) . Large field trials have shown that this approach can decrease dengue prevalence in human populations (Indriani et al., 2020; Ryan et al., 2020) . A great advantage of this method to control arboviruses is that Wolbachia can block the replication of not only dengue virus, but also chikungunya, yellow fever, Zika and West Nile viruses (Moreira et al., 2009; Glaser and Meola, 2010; van den Hurk et al., 2012; Aliota et al., 2016) . The long-term success of this strategy depends on the knowledge of basic ecological and evolutionary aspects of virus blocking by Wolbachia. For example, there is great variation among Wolbachia lineages isolated from different Drosophila species in their ability to control virus infection (Martinez et al., 2014) . We are expanding this study by investigating virus protection ability on a diverse set of Wolbachia lineages and testing if protection works with different viruses. Another important aspect that has not been completely understood yet is if Wolbachia protects against virus infection in wild populations of Drosophila. There is some evidence that this may not be the case. It seems that there was no association between virus incidence and Wolbachia presence in natural D. melanogaster populations (Webster et al., 2016; Experiments on host-shifts 5 2018), but these studies may have low statistical power due to limited sample size. We plan to investigate this further to test if virus blocking in the natural Drosophila host occurs in wild populations or if it is only a laboratory phenomenon. If virus protection occurs in natural populations, it may have important ecological and evolutionary implications, such as changing the selective pressure on host resistance genes (Martinez et al., 2016; Faria et al., 2018) . Finally, phylogenetic experiments on host-shift as described above, can be repeated with species that naturally host Wolbachia, to test how the presence of this endosymbiont may affect replication of the new virus on different host species (Figure 2 ). Another essential piece of information to understand host shifts is the knowledge of virus natural host range and frequency of cross-species transmissions in wild populations. This can be obtained by comprehensive surveys of virus diversity in related hosts ( Figure 3 ). Historically, virus diversity was only studied on disease-causing viruses in human and economically important species. Recently, however, the use of metagenomics in diverse taxonomic groups has revolutionized our view of the RNA virosphere as much more phylogenetically and genomically diverse than previously though (Shi et al., 2016; Obbard, 2018; Zhang et al., 2018 Zhang et al., , 2019 . These new studies have uncovered the relative importance of virus-host codivergence versus host-shifts, and showed that host-shifts are common and most of the times not associated with diseases in the new host (Zhang et al., 2019) . In Drosophila, a seminal paper in 2015 (Webster et al., 2015) used metagenomics in wild D. melanogaster populations and identified more than 20 new viruses. They also used the presence of virus-derived 21 nucleotide (nt) small RNAs, a characteristic response of the RNAi antiviral defenses in Drosophila (Wang et al., 2006) , to confirm that the virus sequences found were active virus infections. They found that viruses are common in wild populations, and also in laboratory stock lines and cell culture (by using publicly available RNA datasets). Webster et al. (2016) used a similar approach in six Drosophila species common in the UK and found 25 novel viruses. Interestingly, they found that few viruses are generalists, being able to infect different host species, and that many viruses shared among closely related species within the D. obscura group were less likely shared among more distantly related hosts. These results indicate a high diversity and incidence of viruses in natural populations and that most viruses are host specialists. We are studying virus diversity in native drosophilid communities collected in the Atlantic Forest of Brazil. By using metagenomics in wild collected flies, we plan to discover new viruses and compare the virus diversity with the few previously studied Drosophila species (Webster et al., 2015 (Webster et al., , 2016 . The Atlantic Forest drosophilid communities are highly diverse and contain species from different radiations forming a mix of common species that are close or distant related phylogenetically (Döge et al., 2008) . This is the ideal situation to investigate host range and level of specialization of the different viruses and to contrast scenarios of codivergence or host shifts. This survey will likely give interesting virus candidates to be isolated and subsequently used in the experimental approaches described above. Host shifts are complex phenomena affected by a multitude of factors and are the main cause of emerging infectious diseases such as COVID-19. Therefore, making predictions about the emergence of novel infections is extremely hard once factors driving this process are not entirely understood. In addition, we lack specific data essential for such forecast. We are applying diverse approaches using the interaction between Drosophila species and viruses, including cross-infection experiments in a phylogenetic controlled context, experiments testing the effects of virus cooccurrence and virus blocking by the bacteria Wolbachia, and surveys of virus diversity in natural populations using next-generation sequencing technologies. We argue that these practices provide a better understanding of the basic biology of host shifts, contributing to the identification of general rules favoring the emergence of infectious diseases in the long term. 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RC conceived the manuscript structure with inputs from ACP and CSB. ACP, CSB and RC wrote the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final version. License information: This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (type CC-BY), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original article is properly cited.