Making sense of the virome in light of evolution and ecology

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Abstract

Understanding the patterns and drivers of viral prevalence and abundance is of key importance for understanding pathogen emergence. Over the last decade, metagenomic sequencing has exponentially expanded our knowledge of the diversity and evolution of viruses associated with all domains of life. However, as most of these 'virome' studies are primarily descriptive, our understanding of the predictors of virus prevalence, abundance and diversity, and their variation in space and time, remains limited. For example, we do not yet understand the relative importance of ecological predictors (e.g. seasonality and habitat) versus evolutionary predictors (e.g. host and virus phylogenies) in driving virus prevalence and diversity. Few studies are set up to reveal the factors that predict the virome composition of individual hosts, populations or species. In addition, most studies of virus ecology represent a snapshot of single species viromes at a single point in time and space. Fortunately, recent studies have begun to use metagenomic data to directly test hypotheses about the evolutionary and ecological factors which drive virus prevalence, sharing and diversity. By synthesizing evidence across studies, we present some over-arching ecological and evolutionary patterns in virome composition, and illustrate the need for additional work to quantify the drivers of virus prevalence and diversity.

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Wallace, M. A., Wille, M., Geoghegan, J., Imrie, R. M., Holmes, E. C., Harrison, X. A., & Longdon, B. (2025, April 2). Making sense of the virome in light of evolution and ecology. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. Royal Society Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2025.0389

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