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The Social Life of Viruses

Rafael Sanjuán

2021Annual Review of Virology55 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Despite their simplicity, viruses exhibit certain types of social interactions. Situations in which a given virus achieves higher fitness in combination with other members of the viral population have been described at the level of transmission, replication, suppression of host immune responses, and host killing, enabling the evolution of viral cooperation. Although cellular coinfection with multiple viral particles is the typical playground for these interactions, cooperation between viruses infecting different cells is also established through cellular and viral-encoded communication systems. In general, the stability of cooperation is compromised by cheater genotypes, as best exemplified by defective interfering particles. As predicted by social evolution theory, cheater invasion can be avoided when cooperators interact preferentially with other cooperators, a situation that is promoted in spatially structured populations. Processes such as transmission bottlenecks, organ compartmentalization, localized spread of infection foci, superinfection exclusion, and even discrete intracellular replication centers promote multilevel spatial structuring in viruses.

Topics & Concepts

BiologySuperinfectionCompartmentalization (fire protection)CoinfectionViral replicationViral evolutionTransmission (telecommunications)VirologyPopulationVirusEvolutionary biologyGeneticsGenomeGeneBiochemistryEngineeringSociologyDemographyEnzymeElectrical engineeringEvolution and Genetic DynamicsEvolutionary Game Theory and CooperationMathematical and Theoretical Epidemiology and Ecology Models
The Social Life of Viruses | Litcius