1. Microbe Profile: Bacteriophage ϕ6: a model for segmented RNA viruses and the evolutionary consequences of viral ‘sex’
- Author
-
Turner, Paul E and Chao, Lin
- Subjects
Microbiology ,Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Biological Sciences ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Genetics ,Infectious Diseases ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Infection ,Bacteriophage phi 6 ,Evolution ,Molecular ,RNA Viruses ,Host-Pathogen Interactions ,Virus Replication ,Mutation ,adaptation ,bacteria ,evolution ,experimental evolution ,Pseudomonas ,phage - Abstract
Bacteriophage ϕ6 is a segmented dsRNA virus with a lipid envelope, which are unusual traits in bacterial viruses but common in eukaryotic viruses. This uniqueness allowed ϕ6 and its Pseudomonad hosts to serve as a molecular model for RNA genetics, mutation, replication, packaging, and reassortment in both bacterial and eukaryotic viruses. However, an additional uniqueness of ϕ6, created by its high mutation rate, was its use as an experimental system to study key questions such as the evolution of sex (segment reassortment), host-pathogen interactions, mutational load, rates of adaptation, genetic and phenotypic complexity, and game theory.
- Published
- 2024