Variation in bacterial pathotype is consistent with the sit-and-wait hypothesis
Eliza Rayner,
Amelie Lavenir,
Gemma G. R. Murray
et al.
Abstract:The sit-and-wait hypothesis predicts that bacteria can become more virulent when they survive and transmit outside of their hosts due to circumventing the costs of host mortality. While this hypothesis is largely supported theoretically and through comparative analysis, experimental validation is limited. Here we test this hypothesis in Streptococcus suis, an opportunistic zoonotic pig pathogen, where a pathogenic ecotype proliferated during the change to intensive pig farming that amplifies opportunities for … Show more
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