Intragenus competition between coccolithoviruses: an insight on how a select few can come to dominate many
Viruses are a major cause of coccolithophore bloom demise in both temperate and sub-temperate oceanic regions. Most infection studies on coccolithoviruses have been conducted with a single virus strain, and the effect of intragenus competition by closely related coccolithoviruses has been ignored. Here we conducted combined infection experiments, infecting Emiliania huxleyi CCMP 2090 with two coccolithoviruses: EhV-86 and EhV-207 both simultaneously and independently. EhV-207 displayed a shorter lytic cycle and increased production potential than EhV-86 and was remarkably superior under competitive conditions. Although the viruses displayed identical adsorption kinetics in the first 2 h post infection, EhV-207 gained a numerical advantage as early as 8 h post infection. Quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) revealed that when infecting in combination, EhV-207 was not affected by the presence of EhV-86, whereas EhV-86 was quickly out-competed, and a significant reduction in free and cell-associated EhV-86 was seen as early as 2 days after the initial infection. The observation of such clear phenotypic differences between genetically distinct, yet similar, coccolithovirus strains, by flow cytometry and quantitative real-time PCR allowed tentative links to the burgeoning genomic, transcriptomic and metabolic data to be made and the factors driving their selection, in particular to the de novo coccolithovirus-encoded sphingolipid biosynthesis pathway. This work illustrates that, even within a family, not all viruses are created equally, and the potential exists for relatively small genetic changes to infer disproportionately large competitive advantages for one coccolithovirus over another, ultimately leading to a few viruses dominating the many.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Open Access | Not Open Access |
| Additional information | NERC Oceans program ; Plymouth Marine Laboratory's Research Program ; NERC PhD grant [Nissimov, Jozef I.; Allen, Michael J.; Kimmance, Susan A.] Plymouth Marine Lab, Prospect Pl, Plymouth PL1 3DH, Devon, England; [Napier, Johnathan A.] Rothamsted Res, Dept Biol Chem, Harpenden AL5 2JQ, Herts, England; [Nissimov, Jozef I.] Rutgers State Univ, Inst Marine & Coastal Sci, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA |
| Keywords | Microbiology |
| Project | Designing Seeds for Nutrition and Health (DS), *Design Oilseeds (Olga Sayanova) |
| Date Deposited | 05 Dec 2025 09:53 |
| Last Modified | 21 Jan 2026 17:20 |
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