4.3 Article Book Chapter

Matters of Size: Genetic Bottlenecks in Virus Infection and Their Potential Impact on Evolution

Journal

ANNUAL REVIEW OF VIROLOGY, VOL 2
Volume 2, Issue -, Pages 161-179

Publisher

ANNUAL REVIEWS
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-virology-100114-055135

Keywords

genetic random drift; genetic variability; horizontal transmission; independent action hypothesis; vertical transmission; virus evolution

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For virus infections of multicellular hosts, narrow genetic bottlenecks during transmission and within-host spread appear to be widespread. These bottlenecks will affect the maintenance of genetic variation in a virus population and the prevalence of mixed-strain infections, thereby ultimately determining the strength with which different random forces act during evolution. Here we consider different approaches for estimating bottleneck sizes and weigh their merits. We then review quantitative estimates of bottleneck size during cellular infection, within-host spread, horizontal transmission, and finally vertical transmission. In most cases we find that bottlenecks do regularly occur, although in many cases they appear to be virion-concentration dependent. Finally, we consider the evolutionary implications of genetic bottlenecks during virus infection. Although on average strong bottlenecks will lead to declines in fitness, we consider a number of scenarios in which bottlenecks could also be advantageous for viruses.

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