Abstract
How virulence evolves after a virus jumps to a new host species is central to disease emergence. Our current understanding of virulence evolution is based on insights drawn from two perspectives that have developed largely independently: long-standing evolutionary theory based on limited real data examples that often lack a genomic basis, and experimental studies of virulence-determining mutations using cell culture or animal models. A more comprehensive understanding of virulence mutations and their evolution can be achieved by bridging the gap between these two research pathways through the phylogenomic analysis of virus genome sequence data as a guide to experimental study.
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CITATION STYLE
Geoghegan, J. L., & Holmes, E. C. (2018, December 1). The phylogenomics of evolving virus virulence. Nature Reviews Genetics. Nature Publishing Group. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41576-018-0055-5
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