Abstract
The evolution of influenza viruses is fundamentally shaped by within-host processes. However, the within-host evolutionary dynamics of influenza viruses remain incompletely understood, in part because most studies have focused on within-host virus diversity of infections in otherwise healthy adults based on single timepoint data. Here, we analysed the within-host evolution of 82 longitudinally-sampled individuals, mostly young children, infected with A/H3N2 or A/H1N1pdm09 viruses between 2007 and 2009. For A/H1N1pdm09 infections during the 2009 pandemic, nonsynonymous changes were common early in infection but decreased or remained constant throughout infection. For A/H3N2 viruses, early infection was dominated by purifying selection. However, as infections progressed, nonsynonymous variants increased in frequencies even though within-host virus titres decreased, leading to the maintenance of virus diversity via mutation-selection balance. Our findings suggest that this maintenance of genetic diversity in these children combined with their longer duration of infection may provide important opportunities for within-host virus evolution.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
Minor changes to title and abstract; authors and affiliations, as well as BioProject number updated.