Endemicity and prevalence of multipartite viruses under heterogeneous between-host transmission
Eugenio Valdano, Susanna Manrubia, Sergio G\'omez, Alex Arenas

TL;DR
This study models how multipartite viruses spread within host populations, revealing that host contact structure can promote their persistence and diversification even without microscopic advantages.
Contribution
It introduces a compartmental epidemiological model showing that host contact patterns can drive the rise and fixation of multipartite viruses independently of microscopic benefits.
Findings
Multipartitism can fixate without microscopic advantages.
Host contact structure influences viral ecological relationships.
Multipartite viruses can invade environments inaccessible to monopartite forms.
Abstract
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…
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