Recently, we have realized that viruses numerically dominate all life. Although viruses are known to affect host survival in populations, this has not been previously evaluated in the context of host group selection. Group selection per se is not a currently accepted idea and its apparent occurrence is explained by statistical gene frequency models of kin selection. Viruses were not considered in such models. Prevalent views associate viruses and disease. Yet many viruses establish species-specific persistent, inapparent infections that are stable on an evolutionary time scale. Such persistent infections can have large effects on relative reproductive fitness of competing host populations. In this essay, I present arguments on how persisten...
For decades, scientists have been fascinated by the ease with which viruses, seemingly simple life f...
Traditionally, evolutionary theory has attempted to predict the success of traits through their effe...
Life-history theory predicts that traits for survival and reproduction cannot be simultaneous maximi...
Recently, we have realized that viruses numerically dominate all life. Although viruses are known to...
Persistent infection is a situation of metastability in which the pathogen and the host coexist. A c...
RER is funded by the Wellcome Trust, UK (Grant 101788/Z/13/Z) and DEG by US National Institutes of H...
International audiencePersistent infection is a situation of metastability in which the pathogen and...
The giant DNA viruses are highly prevalent and have a particular affinity for the lytic infection of...
Viral quasispecies are closely related (but nonidentical) mutant and recombinant viral genomes subje...
Viruses and other pathogens can diverge in their evolved host-use strategies, due to exposure to dif...
Journal ArticleMany diseases persist at a relatively low prevalence, seemingly close to extinction. ...
Recent discoveries of contemporary genotypes of hepatitis B virus and parvovirus B19 in ancient huma...
Abstract How pathogens affect their hosts is a key question in infectious disease ecology, and it ca...
We consider two viral strains competing against each other within individual hosts (at cellular leve...
Viral quasispecies are closely related (but nonidentical) mutant and recombinant viral genomes subje...
For decades, scientists have been fascinated by the ease with which viruses, seemingly simple life f...
Traditionally, evolutionary theory has attempted to predict the success of traits through their effe...
Life-history theory predicts that traits for survival and reproduction cannot be simultaneous maximi...
Recently, we have realized that viruses numerically dominate all life. Although viruses are known to...
Persistent infection is a situation of metastability in which the pathogen and the host coexist. A c...
RER is funded by the Wellcome Trust, UK (Grant 101788/Z/13/Z) and DEG by US National Institutes of H...
International audiencePersistent infection is a situation of metastability in which the pathogen and...
The giant DNA viruses are highly prevalent and have a particular affinity for the lytic infection of...
Viral quasispecies are closely related (but nonidentical) mutant and recombinant viral genomes subje...
Viruses and other pathogens can diverge in their evolved host-use strategies, due to exposure to dif...
Journal ArticleMany diseases persist at a relatively low prevalence, seemingly close to extinction. ...
Recent discoveries of contemporary genotypes of hepatitis B virus and parvovirus B19 in ancient huma...
Abstract How pathogens affect their hosts is a key question in infectious disease ecology, and it ca...
We consider two viral strains competing against each other within individual hosts (at cellular leve...
Viral quasispecies are closely related (but nonidentical) mutant and recombinant viral genomes subje...
For decades, scientists have been fascinated by the ease with which viruses, seemingly simple life f...
Traditionally, evolutionary theory has attempted to predict the success of traits through their effe...
Life-history theory predicts that traits for survival and reproduction cannot be simultaneous maximi...