Abstract
AbstractBacteriophage (viruses that exclusively infect bacteria) exhibit a continuum of infection mechanisms, including lysis and lysogeny in interactions with bacterial hosts. Recent work has demonstrated the near-term advantages of lysogeny over lysis in conditions of low host availability. Hence, temperate phage which can switch between lytic and lysogenic strategies — both stochastically and responsively — are hypothesized to have an evolutionary advantage in a broad range of conditions. To examine generalized drivers of viral strategies over the near- and long-term, we explore the eco-evolutionary dynamics of temperate viruses in periodic environments with varying levels of host availability and viral mortality. We use a nonlinear system of ordinary differential equation to simulate periodically-forced dynamics that separate a ‘within-epoch’ phase and a ‘between-epoch’ phase, in which a (potentially unequal) fraction of virus particles and lysogens survive. Using this ecological model and invasion analysis, we show and quantify how conflicts can arise between strategies in the near-term that may favor lysis and strategies in the long-term that may favor lysogeny. In doing so, we identify a wide range of conditions in which temperate strategies can outperform obligately lytic or lysogenic strategies. Finally, we demonstrate that temperate strategies can mitigate against the potential local extinction of viruses in stochastically fluctuating environments, providing further evidence of the eco-evolutionary benefits of being temperate.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
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