Publication: The Good, the Bad, and the Defective: Exploring the Role of Defective Interfering Particles in Influenza Infection
Files
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Defective Interfering Particles (DIPs) are viruses whose genome has been damaged to a point where they are unable to replicate on their own, however are able to replicate with the help of a non-damaged virus (WT virus).[23] There is mounting evidence that DIPs play a crucial and ubiquitous role during the course of infection for some RNA viruses, which has lead to renewed interest in their interactions with standard viral particles - especially with respect to influenza.[23][4] We examine the ecology between the Influenza A DIPs and standard Influenza A viruses in vitro, through theoretical modeling of influenza replication. We find a simple two parameter model for the competition between standard influenza viruses and influenza DIPs. When this model is fitted to experimental data, it provides evidence that influenza DIPs with a moderate replication advantage are selected for during in vitro passaging experiments.