Viruses can spread collectively using different types of structures such as extracellular vesicles, virion aggregates, polyploid capsids, occlusion bodies, and even cells that accumulate virions at their surface, such as bacteria and dendritic cells. Despite the mounting evidence for collective spread, its implications for viral fitness and diversity remain poorly understood. It has been postulated that, by increasing the cellular multiplicity of infection, collective spread could enable mutually beneficial interactions among different viral genetic variants. One such interaction is genetic complementation, whereby deleterious mutations carried by different genomes are compensated. Here, we used simulations to evaluate whether complementati...
The masking of deleterious mutations by complementation and the reassortment of virus segments (viru...
RNA viruses exist as genetically diverse populations displaying a range of virulence degrees. The ev...
In contrast to many other virus infections, primary cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection does not fully p...
Viruses frequently spread among cells or hosts in groups, with multiple viral genomes inside the sam...
Some viruses are released from cells as pools of membrane-associated virions. By increasing the mult...
In many viral infections, a large number of different genetic variants can coexist within a host, le...
Despite their simplicity, viruses exhibit certain types of social interactions. Situations in which ...
Co-infection may be beneficial in large populations of viruses because it permits sexual exchange be...
Recent insights have revealed that viruses use a highly diverse set of strategies to release multipl...
The ability of viruses to infect their hosts depends on rapid dissemination following transmission. ...
© 2019 Valdano et al.Multipartite viruses replicate through a puzzling evolutionary strategy. Their ...
Horizontal gene transfer and recombination occur across many groups of viruses and play key roles in...
Multipartite viruses replicate through a puzzling evolutionary strategy. Their genome is segmented i...
Mutational (genetic) robustness is phenotypic constancy in the face of mutational changes to the gen...
Several factors play a role during the replication and transmission of RNA viruses. First, as a cons...
The masking of deleterious mutations by complementation and the reassortment of virus segments (viru...
RNA viruses exist as genetically diverse populations displaying a range of virulence degrees. The ev...
In contrast to many other virus infections, primary cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection does not fully p...
Viruses frequently spread among cells or hosts in groups, with multiple viral genomes inside the sam...
Some viruses are released from cells as pools of membrane-associated virions. By increasing the mult...
In many viral infections, a large number of different genetic variants can coexist within a host, le...
Despite their simplicity, viruses exhibit certain types of social interactions. Situations in which ...
Co-infection may be beneficial in large populations of viruses because it permits sexual exchange be...
Recent insights have revealed that viruses use a highly diverse set of strategies to release multipl...
The ability of viruses to infect their hosts depends on rapid dissemination following transmission. ...
© 2019 Valdano et al.Multipartite viruses replicate through a puzzling evolutionary strategy. Their ...
Horizontal gene transfer and recombination occur across many groups of viruses and play key roles in...
Multipartite viruses replicate through a puzzling evolutionary strategy. Their genome is segmented i...
Mutational (genetic) robustness is phenotypic constancy in the face of mutational changes to the gen...
Several factors play a role during the replication and transmission of RNA viruses. First, as a cons...
The masking of deleterious mutations by complementation and the reassortment of virus segments (viru...
RNA viruses exist as genetically diverse populations displaying a range of virulence degrees. The ev...
In contrast to many other virus infections, primary cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection does not fully p...