Bacterial resistance response and resource availability mediate viral coexistence

Author:

Butt Lisa1,Meyer Justin R2,Lindsay Richard J1,Beardmore Robert E1,Gudelj Ivana1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Biosciences and Living Systems Institute, University of Exeter , Exeter , United Kingdom

2. Biological Sciences, Section in Ecology, Behaviour and Evolution, University of California , San Diego, CA , United States

Abstract

Abstract Viruses that infect bacteria, known as bacteriophages or phages, are the most prevalent entities on Earth. Their genetic diversity in nature is well documented, and members of divergent lineages can be found sharing the same ecological niche. This viral diversity can be influenced by a number of factors, including productivity, spatial structuring of the environment, and host-range trade-offs. Rapid evolution is also known to promote diversity by buffering ecological systems from extinction. There is, however, little known about the impact of coevolution on the maintenance of viral diversity within a microbial community. To address this, we developed a 4 species experimental system where two bacterial hosts, a generalist and a specialist phage, coevolved in a spatially homogenous environment over time. We observed the persistence of both viruses if the resource availability was sufficiently high. This coexistence occurred in the absence of any detectable host-range trade-offs that are costly for generalists and thus known to promote viral diversity. However, the coexistence was lost if two bacteria were not permitted to evolve alongside the phages or if two phages coevolved with a single bacterial host. Our findings indicate that a host’s resistance response in mixed-species communities plays a significant role in maintaining viral diversity in the environment.

Funder

BBSRC

EPSRC

DEB

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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