Intragenus competition between coccolithoviruses: an insight on how a select few can come to dominate many
Viruses are a major cause of coccolithophore bloom demise in both temperate and sub‐temperate oceanic regions. Most infection studies on coccolithoviruses have been conducted with a single virus strain, and the effect of intragenus competition by closely related coccolithoviruses has been ignored. H...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Environmental microbiology 2016, Vol.18 (1), p.133-145 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Viruses are a major cause of coccolithophore bloom demise in both temperate and sub‐temperate oceanic regions. Most infection studies on coccolithoviruses have been conducted with a single virus strain, and the effect of intragenus competition by closely related coccolithoviruses has been ignored. Here we conducted combined infection experiments, infecting Emiliania huxleyi CCMP 2090 with two coccolithoviruses: EhV‐86 and EhV‐207 both simultaneously and independently. EhV‐207 displayed a shorter lytic cycle and increased production potential than EhV‐86 and was remarkably superior under competitive conditions. Although the viruses displayed identical adsorption kinetics in the first 2 h post infection, EhV‐207 gained a numerical advantage as early as 8 h post infection. Quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) revealed that when infecting in combination, EhV‐207 was not affected by the presence of EhV‐86, whereas EhV‐86 was quickly out‐competed, and a significant reduction in free and cell‐associated EhV‐86 was seen as early as 2 days after the initial infection. The observation of such clear phenotypic differences between genetically distinct, yet similar, coccolithovirus strains, by flow cytometry and quantitative real‐time PCR allowed tentative links to the burgeoning genomic, transcriptomic and metabolic data to be made and the factors driving their selection, in particular to the de novo coccolithovirus‐encoded sphingolipid biosynthesis pathway. This work illustrates that, even within a family, not all viruses are created equally, and the potential exists for relatively small genetic changes to infer disproportionately large competitive advantages for one coccolithovirus over another, ultimately leading to a few viruses dominating the many. |
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ISSN: | 1462-2912 1462-2920 |
DOI: | 10.1111/1462-2920.12902 |