Background: In a number of recent experiments with food-and-mouth disease virus, a deleterious mutant, RED, was found to avoid extinction and remain in the population for long periods of time. Since RED characterizes the past evolutionary history of the population, this observation was called quasispecies memory. While the quasispecies theory predicts the existence of these memory genomes, there is a disagreement between the expected and observed mutant frequency values. Therefore, the origin of quasispecies memory is not fully understood. Results: We propose and analyze a simple model of complementation between the wild type virus and a mutant that has an impaired ability of cell entry, the likely cause of fitness differences between w...
SummaryThe accumulation of mutations in RNA viruses is thought to facilitate rapid adaptation to cha...
Quasispecies theory predicts that there is a critical mutation probability above which a viral popul...
Viral quasispecies are distinct but closely related mutants formed by the disparity in viral genomes...
Quasispecies are clouds of genotypes that appear in a population at mutation–selection balance. This...
AbstractNew generation sequencing is greatly expanding the capacity to examine the composition of mu...
Viral quasispecies refers to a population structure that consists of extremely large numbers of vari...
The distribution of mutational fitness effects (DMFE) is crucial to the evolutionary fate of quasisp...
Viral quasispecies refers to a population structure that consists of extremely large numbers of vari...
Quasispecies are clouds of genotypes that appear in a population at mutation-selection balance. This...
Viral quasispecies are closely related (but nonidentical) mutant and recombinant viral genomes subje...
Background: A number of recent papers have cast doubt on the applicability of the quasispecies conce...
[EN] Empirical observations and theoretical studies suggest that viruses may use different replicati...
The duration and fitness dependence of memory in viral quasispecies evolving in cell culture have be...
Two features of viral quasispecies are reviewed: the presence of memory genomes as minority componen...
Quasispecies theory is providing a solid, evolving conceptual framework for insights into virus popu...
SummaryThe accumulation of mutations in RNA viruses is thought to facilitate rapid adaptation to cha...
Quasispecies theory predicts that there is a critical mutation probability above which a viral popul...
Viral quasispecies are distinct but closely related mutants formed by the disparity in viral genomes...
Quasispecies are clouds of genotypes that appear in a population at mutation–selection balance. This...
AbstractNew generation sequencing is greatly expanding the capacity to examine the composition of mu...
Viral quasispecies refers to a population structure that consists of extremely large numbers of vari...
The distribution of mutational fitness effects (DMFE) is crucial to the evolutionary fate of quasisp...
Viral quasispecies refers to a population structure that consists of extremely large numbers of vari...
Quasispecies are clouds of genotypes that appear in a population at mutation-selection balance. This...
Viral quasispecies are closely related (but nonidentical) mutant and recombinant viral genomes subje...
Background: A number of recent papers have cast doubt on the applicability of the quasispecies conce...
[EN] Empirical observations and theoretical studies suggest that viruses may use different replicati...
The duration and fitness dependence of memory in viral quasispecies evolving in cell culture have be...
Two features of viral quasispecies are reviewed: the presence of memory genomes as minority componen...
Quasispecies theory is providing a solid, evolving conceptual framework for insights into virus popu...
SummaryThe accumulation of mutations in RNA viruses is thought to facilitate rapid adaptation to cha...
Quasispecies theory predicts that there is a critical mutation probability above which a viral popul...
Viral quasispecies are distinct but closely related mutants formed by the disparity in viral genomes...