Virus-host interactions shape viral dispersal giving rise to distinct classes of travelling waves in spatial expansions
Michael Hunter, Nikhil Krishnan, Tongfei Liu, Wolfram M\"obius and, Diana Fusco

TL;DR
This study investigates how virus-host interactions influence viral spread, revealing that density-dependent dispersal can cause a transition from pulled to pushed wave dynamics, affecting genetic diversity during spatial expansions.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates experimentally and theoretically that density-dependent dispersal in viruses leads to distinct wave classes and impacts evolutionary dynamics.
Findings
Density-dependent diffusion in phage T7 is caused by steric interactions with host bacteria.
Viral incubation period induces a spontaneous density-dependent dispersal effect.
Lysis time significantly influences diversity loss during viral expansion.
Abstract
Reaction-diffusion waves have long been used to describe the growth and spread of populations undergoing a spatial range expansion. Such waves are generally classed as either pulled, where the dynamics are driven by the very tip of the front and stochastic fluctuations are high, or pushed, where cooperation in growth or dispersal results in a bulk-driven wave in which fluctuations are suppressed. These concepts have been well studied experimentally in populations where the cooperation leads to a density-dependent growth rate. By contrast, relatively little is known about experimental populations that exhibit density-dependent dispersal. Using bacteriophage T7 as a test organism, we present novel experimental measurements that demonstrate that the diffusion of phage T7, in a lawn of host E. coli, is hindered by steric interactions with host bacteria cells. The coupling between host…
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