AI Article Synopsis

  • Viruses play a vital role in both marine and freshwater ecosystems by contributing to microbial mortality, which helps shape microbial communities and biogeochemical cycles.
  • A virus reduction technique allows researchers to accurately measure how viruses are released from microbial populations by reducing the abundance of free viruses while keeping the microbial community stable.
  • By incubating these microbes without free viruses, researchers can quantify how quickly viruses re-emerge, using methods like epifluorescence microscopy or quantitative PCR, to estimate viral effects on microbial death rates.

Article Abstract

Viruses are pervasive components of marine and freshwater systems, and are known to be significant agents of microbial mortality. Developing quantitative estimates of this process is critical as we can then develop better models of microbial community structure and function as well as advance our understanding of how viruses work to alter aquatic biogeochemical cycles. The virus reduction technique allows researchers to estimate the rate at which virus particles are released from the endemic microbial community. In brief, the abundance of free (extracellular) viruses is reduced in a sample while the microbial community is maintained at near ambient concentration. The microbial community is then incubated in the absence of free viruses and the rate at which viruses re-occur in the sample (through the lysis of already infected members of the community) can be quantified by epifluorescence microscopy or, in the case of specific viruses, quantitative PCR. These rates can then be used to estimate the rate of microbial mortality due to virus-mediated cell lysis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3157872PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3791/2196DOI Listing

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