Fitness is a parameter that quantitatively measures adaptation of a virus to a given environment. We have previously reported exponential fitness gains of large populations of vesicular stomatitis virus replicating in a constant environment (I. S. Novella et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 92:5841–5844, 1995). In this paper, we report that during long-term passage of such large viral populations, fitness values reached a high-fitness plateau during which stochastic fitness variations were observed. This effect appears likely to be due to bottleneck effects on very high fitness populations.
CITATION STYLE
Novella, I. S., Quer, J., Domingo, E., & Holland, J. J. (1999). Exponential Fitness Gains of RNA Virus Populations Are Limited by Bottleneck Effects. Journal of Virology, 73(2), 1668–1671. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.73.2.1668-1671.1999
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