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Multipartite viruses replicate through a puzzling evolutionary strategy. Their genome is segmented into two or more parts, and encapsidated in separate particles that appear to propagate independently. Completing the replication cycle, however, requires the full genome, so that a systemic infection of a host requires the concurrent presence of several particles. This represents an apparent evolutionary drawback of multipartitism, while its advantages remain unclear. A transition from monopartite to multipartite viral forms has been described in vitro under conditions of high multiplicity of infection, suggesting that cooperation between defective mutants is a plausible evolutionary pathway towards multipartitism. However, it is unknown how the putative advantages that multipartitism might enjoy at the microscopic level affect its epidemiology, or if an explicit advantange is needed to explain its ecological persistence. To disentangle which mechanisms might contribute to the rise and fixation of multipartitism, we investigate the interaction between viral spreading dynamics and host population structure. We set up a compartmental model of the spread of a virus in its different forms and explore its epidemiology using both analytical and numerical techniques. We uncover that the impact of host contact structure on spreading dynamics entails a rich phenomenology of ecological relationships that includes cooperation, competition, and commensality. We find that multipartitism might rise to fixation even in the absence of explicit microscopic advantages. Multipartitism allows the virus to colonize environments that could not be invaded by the monopartite form, facilitated by homogeneous contacts among hosts. We conjecture that these features might have led to an increase in the diversity and prevalence of multipartite viral forms concomitantly with the expansion of agricultural practices.
27 pages, 4 figures, 1 table
Physics - Physics and Society, QH301-705.5, FOS: Physical sciences, Physics and Society (physics.soc-ph), Virus Replication, Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience, Modelling and Simulation, Prevalence, Genetics, Animals, Humans, Biology (General), Quantitative Biology - Populations and Evolution, Symbiosis, Molecular Biology, Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics, Ecology, Populations and Evolution (q-bio.PE), Models, Theoretical, Biological Evolution, Computational Theory and Mathematics, Virus Diseases, FOS: Biological sciences, Host-Pathogen Interactions, Research Article
Physics - Physics and Society, QH301-705.5, FOS: Physical sciences, Physics and Society (physics.soc-ph), Virus Replication, Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience, Modelling and Simulation, Prevalence, Genetics, Animals, Humans, Biology (General), Quantitative Biology - Populations and Evolution, Symbiosis, Molecular Biology, Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics, Ecology, Populations and Evolution (q-bio.PE), Models, Theoretical, Biological Evolution, Computational Theory and Mathematics, Virus Diseases, FOS: Biological sciences, Host-Pathogen Interactions, Research Article
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