학술논문

Inferring phage–bacteria infection networks from time-series data
Document Type
article
Source
Royal Society Open Science, Vol 3, Iss 11 (2016)
Subject
viral ecology
nonlinear dynamics
microbial ecology
complex communities
inference
Science
Language
English
ISSN
2054-5703
Abstract
In communities with bacterial viruses (phage) and bacteria, the phage–bacteria infection network establishes which virus types infect which host types. The structure of the infection network is a key element in understanding community dynamics. Yet, this infection network is often difficult to ascertain. Introduced over 60 years ago, the plaque assay remains the gold standard for establishing who infects whom in a community. This culture-based approach does not scale to environmental samples with increased levels of phage and bacterial diversity, much of which is currently unculturable. Here, we propose an alternative method of inferring phage–bacteria infection networks. This method uses time-series data of fluctuating population densities to estimate the complete interaction network without having to test each phage–bacteria pair individually. We use in silico experiments to analyse the factors affecting the quality of network reconstruction and find robust regimes where accurate reconstructions are possible. In addition, we present a multi-experiment approach where time series from different experiments are combined to improve estimates of the infection network. This approach also mitigates against the possibility of evolutionary changes to relevant phenotypes during the time course of measurement.