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Viral fitness: definitions, measurement, and current insights

October 15, 2012

Viral fitness is an active area of research, with recent work involving an expanded number of human, non-human vertebrate, invertebrate, plant, and bacterial viruses. Many publications deal with RNA viruses associated with major disease emergence events, such as HIV-1, influenza virus, and Dengue virus. Study topics include drug resistance, immune escape, viral emergence, host jumps, mutation effects, quasispecies diversity, and mathematical models of viral fitness. Important recent trends include increasing use of in vivo systems to assess vertebrate virus fitness, and a broadening of research beyond replicative fitness to also investigate transmission fitness and epidemiologic fitness. This is essential for a more integrated understanding of overall viral fitness, with implications for disease management in the future.

Publication Year 2012
Title Viral fitness: definitions, measurement, and current insights
DOI 10.1016/j.coviro.2012.07.007
Authors Andrew R. Wargo, Gael Kurath
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Current Opinion in Virology
Index ID 70044231
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Western Fisheries Research Center