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The Viruses They are a Changin: On The Eco-evolutionary Dynamics of Virus-Host Interactions
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SoP Biophysics Seminar Series: Dr. Joshua Weitz, Georgia Tech, School of Biology
Viruses are ubiquitous in the environment, with densities often ten-fold higher than that of their microbial hosts. Viruses can function like microbial predators, regulating the amount and diversity of hosts present in a community. However, efforts to understand the dynamics of complex virus-microbe communities are still in their infancy. Here, I present examples of the interplay between evolutionary and ecological dynamics arising due to virus-microbe interactions. In the first example, I show how rapid changes in the frequency of bacterial strains that differ in their susceptibility to infection can imprint a novel ecological signature - so-called cryptic dynamics. Then, in a second example, I show how rapid changes in the frequencies of hosts and viruses that differ in their cross-infectivity can reverse the canonical predictions of Lotka-Volterra (and similar) dynamics, leading to dynamics in which it appears that hosts eat viruses. In both examples, I synthesize insights from theory and models with results from laboratory experiments. However, applying such insights to the environment requires addressing an ongoing challenge: how to characterize who infects whom when many ubiquitous microbes and associated viruses are not yet culturable. I close with a discussion of recent innovations that can help shed light on the interactions of viruses and microbes using culture-independent techniques.
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- Workflow Status:Published
- Created By:Alison Morain
- Created:10/20/2014
- Modified By:Fletcher Moore
- Modified:10/07/2016
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