Evolutionarily stable coevolution between a plastic lytic virus and its microbial host

Choua, Melinda and Heath, Mike R. and Bonachela, Juan A. (2021) Evolutionarily stable coevolution between a plastic lytic virus and its microbial host. Frontiers in Microbiology, 12. 637490. ISSN 1664-302X (https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2021.637490)

[thumbnail of Choua-eta-FiM-2021-Evolutionarily-stable-coevolution-between-a-plastic-lytic-virus-and-its-microbial-host]
Preview
Text. Filename: Choua_eta_FiM_2021_Evolutionarily_stable_coevolution_between_a_plastic_lytic_virus_and_its_microbial_host.pdf
Final Published Version
License: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 logo

Download (1MB)| Preview

Abstract

Hosts influence and are influenced by viral replication. Cell size, for example, is a fundamental trait for microbial hosts that can not only alter the probability of viral adsorption, but also constrain the host physiological processes that the virus relies on to replicate. This intrinsic connection can affect the fitness of both host and virus, and therefore their mutual evolution. Here, we study the coevolution of bacterial hosts and their viruses by considering the dependence of viral performance on the host physiological state (viral plasticity). To this end, we modified a standard host-lytic phage model to include viral plasticity, and compared the co-evolutionary strategies emerging under different scenarios, including cases in which only the virus or the host evolve. For all cases, we also obtained the evolutionary prediction of the traditional version of the model, which assumes a nonplastic virus. Our results reveal that the presence of the virus leads to an increase in host size and growth rate in the long term, which benefits both interacting populations. Our results also show that viral plasticity and evolution influence the classic host quality-quantity trade-off. Poor nutrient environments lead to abundant low-quality hosts, which tends to increase viral infection time. Conversely, richer nutrient environments lead to fewer but high-quality hosts, which decrease viral infection time. Our results can contribute to advancing our understanding of the microbial response to changing environments. For instance, both cell size and viral-induced mortality are essential factors that determine the structure and dynamics of the marine microbial community, and therefore our study can improve predictions of how marine ecosystems respond to climate change. Our study can also help devise more reliable strategies to use phage to, for example, fight bacterial infections.