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A theoretical analysis of how strain-specific viruses can control microbial species diversity.


ABSTRACT: Pelagic prokaryote communities are often dominated by the SAR11 clade. The recent discovery of viruses infecting this clade led to the suggestion that such dominance could not be explained by assuming SAR11 to be a defense specialist and that the explanation therefore should be sought in its competitive abilities. The issue is complicated by the fact that prokaryotes may develop strains differing in their balance between competition and viral defense, a situation not really captured by present idealized models that operate only with virus-controlled "host groups." We here develop a theoretical framework where abundance within species emerges as the sum over virus-controlled strains and show that high abundance then is likely to occur for species able to use defense mechanisms with a low trade-off between competition and defense, rather than by extreme investment in one strategy or the other. The J-shaped activity-abundance community distribution derived from this analysis explains the high proportion low-active prokaryotes as a consequence of extreme defense as an alternative to explanations based on dormancy or death due to nutrient starvation.

SUBMITTER: Thingstad TF 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4040589 | biostudies-literature | 2014 May

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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A theoretical analysis of how strain-specific viruses can control microbial species diversity.

Thingstad T Frede TF   Våge Selina S   Storesund Julia E JE   Sandaa Ruth-Anne RA   Giske Jarl J  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20140513 21


Pelagic prokaryote communities are often dominated by the SAR11 clade. The recent discovery of viruses infecting this clade led to the suggestion that such dominance could not be explained by assuming SAR11 to be a defense specialist and that the explanation therefore should be sought in its competitive abilities. The issue is complicated by the fact that prokaryotes may develop strains differing in their balance between competition and viral defense, a situation not really captured by present i  ...[more]

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