Animal models are frequently used to characterize the within-host dynamics of emerging zoonotic viruses. More recent studies have also deep-sequenced longitudinal viral samples originating from experimental challenges to gain a better understanding of how these viruses may evolve in vivo and between transmission events. These studies have often identified nucleotide variants that can replicate more efficiently within hosts and also transmit more effectively between hosts. Quantifying the degree to which a mutation impacts viral fitness within a host can improve identification of variants that are of particular epidemiological concern and our ability to anticipate viral adaptation at the population level. While methods have been developed to...
Many viruses, particularly RNA viruses, mutate at a very high rate per genome per replication. One p...
Predicting the emergence of new pathogenic strains is a key goal of evolutionary epidemiology. Howev...
Through accumulation of genetic mutations in the neuraminidase gene, the influenza virus can become ...
We present a method to infer the role of selection acting during the within-host evolution of the in...
Several factors play a role during the replication and transmission of RNA viruses. First, as a cons...
We describe a stochastic virus evolutionmodel representing genomic diversification and within-host s...
We present a method to infer the role of selection acting during the within-host evolution of the in...
To escape immune recognition in previously infected hosts, viruses evolve genetically in immunologic...
To escape immune recognition in previously infected hosts, viruses evolve genetically in immunologic...
Viral haplotypes for which the inferred frequency rose above 1% in at least one animal are shown. Li...
Measuring selective pressures shaping the evolution of viral populations is important for preventing...
Mutational load is known to be of importance for the evolution of RNA viruses, the combination of a ...
Intrahost and interhost assessments of viral diversity are often treated as measures of separate and...
Mutational (genetic) robustness is phenotypic constancy in the face of mutational changes to the gen...
We characterise the evolutionary dynamics of influenza infection described by viral sequence data co...
Many viruses, particularly RNA viruses, mutate at a very high rate per genome per replication. One p...
Predicting the emergence of new pathogenic strains is a key goal of evolutionary epidemiology. Howev...
Through accumulation of genetic mutations in the neuraminidase gene, the influenza virus can become ...
We present a method to infer the role of selection acting during the within-host evolution of the in...
Several factors play a role during the replication and transmission of RNA viruses. First, as a cons...
We describe a stochastic virus evolutionmodel representing genomic diversification and within-host s...
We present a method to infer the role of selection acting during the within-host evolution of the in...
To escape immune recognition in previously infected hosts, viruses evolve genetically in immunologic...
To escape immune recognition in previously infected hosts, viruses evolve genetically in immunologic...
Viral haplotypes for which the inferred frequency rose above 1% in at least one animal are shown. Li...
Measuring selective pressures shaping the evolution of viral populations is important for preventing...
Mutational load is known to be of importance for the evolution of RNA viruses, the combination of a ...
Intrahost and interhost assessments of viral diversity are often treated as measures of separate and...
Mutational (genetic) robustness is phenotypic constancy in the face of mutational changes to the gen...
We characterise the evolutionary dynamics of influenza infection described by viral sequence data co...
Many viruses, particularly RNA viruses, mutate at a very high rate per genome per replication. One p...
Predicting the emergence of new pathogenic strains is a key goal of evolutionary epidemiology. Howev...
Through accumulation of genetic mutations in the neuraminidase gene, the influenza virus can become ...