When to be temperate: on the fitness benefits of lysis vs. lysogeny

Author:

Li Guanlin12,Cortez Michael H3,Dushoff Jonathan456,Weitz Joshua S27ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Interdisciplinary Graduate Program in Quantitative Biosciences, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332, USA

2. School of Physics, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332, USA

3. Department of Biological Science, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL 32306, USA

4. Department of Biology, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON L8S 4L8, Canada

5. Department of Mathematics and Statistics, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON L8S 4L8, Canada

6. M. G. DeGroote Institute for Infectious Disease Research, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON L8S 4L8, Canada

7. School of Biological Sciences, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332, USA

Abstract

Abstract Bacterial viruses, that is ‘bacteriophage’ or ‘phage’, can infect and lyse their bacterial hosts, releasing new viral progeny. In addition to the lytic pathway, certain bacteriophage (i.e. ‘temperate’ bacteriophage) can also initiate lysogeny, a latent mode of infection in which the viral genome is integrated into and replicated with the bacterial chromosome. Subsequently, the integrated viral genome, that is the ‘prophage’, can induce and restart the lytic pathway. Here, we explore the relationship among infection mode, ecological context, and viral fitness, in essence asking: when should viruses be temperate? To do so, we use network loop analysis to quantify fitness in terms of network paths through the life history of an infectious pathogen that start and end with infected cells. This analysis reveals that temperate strategies, particularly those with direct benefits to cellular fitness, should be favored at low host abundances. This finding applies to a spectrum of mechanistic models of phage–bacteria dynamics spanning both explicit and implicit representations of intra-cellular infection dynamics. However, the same analysis reveals that temperate strategies, in and of themselves, do not provide an advantage when infection imposes a cost to cellular fitness. Hence, we use evolutionary invasion analysis to explore when temperate phage can invade microbial communities with circulating lytic phage. We find that lytic phage can drive down niche competition amongst microbial cells, facilitating the subsequent invasion of latent strategies that increase cellular resistance and/or immunity to infection by lytic viruses—notably this finding holds even when the prophage comes at a direct fitness cost to cellular reproduction. Altogether, our analysis identifies broad ecological conditions that favor latency and provide a principled framework for exploring the impacts of ecological context on both the short- and long-term benefits of being temperate.

Funder

Simons Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Virology,Microbiology

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