The Evolutionary Drivers and Correlates of Viral Host Jumps
Overview
Affiliations
Most emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases stem from viruses that naturally circulate in non-human vertebrates. When these viruses cross over into humans, they can cause disease outbreaks, epidemics and pandemics. While zoonotic host jumps have been extensively studied from an ecological perspective, little attention has gone into characterizing the evolutionary drivers and correlates underlying these events. To address this gap, we harnessed the entirety of publicly available viral genomic data, employing a comprehensive suite of network and phylogenetic analyses to investigate the evolutionary mechanisms underpinning recent viral host jumps. Surprisingly, we find that humans are as much a source as a sink for viral spillover events, insofar as we infer more viral host jumps from humans to other animals than from animals to humans. Moreover, we demonstrate heightened evolution in viral lineages that involve putative host jumps. We further observe that the extent of adaptation associated with a host jump is lower for viruses with broader host ranges. Finally, we show that the genomic targets of natural selection associated with host jumps vary across different viral families, with either structural or auxiliary genes being the prime targets of selection. Collectively, our results illuminate some of the evolutionary drivers underlying viral host jumps that may contribute to mitigating viral threats across species boundaries.
Dynamics of natural selection preceding human viral epidemics and pandemics.
Havens J, Kosakovsky Pond S, Zehr J, Pekar J, Parker E, Worobey M bioRxiv. 2025; .
PMID: 40060453 PMC: 11888428. DOI: 10.1101/2025.02.26.640439.
Nat Ecol Evol. 2025; 9(1):1-2.
PMID: 39794530 DOI: 10.1038/s41559-024-02629-9.
Towards a 'people and nature' paradigm for biodiversity and infectious disease.
Gibb R, Redding D, Friant S, Jones K Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2025; 380(1917):20230259.
PMID: 39780600 PMC: 11712283. DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2023.0259.
Cooling perspectives on the risk of pathogenic viruses from thawing permafrost.
Mackelprang R, Barbato R, Ramey A, Schutte U, Waldrop M mSystems. 2025; 10(2):e0004224.
PMID: 39772968 PMC: 11834396. DOI: 10.1128/msystems.00042-24.
Receptor-binding proteins from animal viruses are broadly compatible with human cell entry factors.
Dufloo J, Andreu-Moreno I, Moreno-Garcia J, Valero-Rello A, Sanjuan R Nat Microbiol. 2025; 10(2):405-419.
PMID: 39747691 PMC: 11790484. DOI: 10.1038/s41564-024-01879-4.