Annual Review of Marine Science, volume 17, issue 1, pages 561-576

How Viruses Shape Microbial Plankton Microdiversity

Francisco Rodriguez-Valera 1
Christopher Bellas 2
1
 
1Evolutionary Genomics Group, Departamento de Producción Vegetal y Microbiología, Universidad Miguel Hernández, San Juan de Alicante, Spain; email: frvalera@umh.es
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2025-01-16
scimago Q1
SJR4.891
CiteScore33.6
Impact factor14.3
ISSN19411405, 19410611
Abstract

One major conundrum of modern microbiology is the large pangenome (gene pool) present in microbes, which is much larger than those found in complex organisms such as humans. Here, we argue that this diversity of gene pools carried by different strains is maintained largely due to the control exercised by viral predation. Viruses maintain a high strain diversity through time that we describe as constant-diversity equilibrium, preventing the hoarding of resources by specific clones. Thus, viruses facilitate the release and degradation of dissolved organic matter in the ocean, which may lead to better ecosystem functioning by linking top-down to bottom-up control. By maintaining this equilibrium, viruses act as a key element of the adaptation of marine microbes to their environment and likely evolve as a single evolutionary unit.

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