and compete in nature, and are the commonest bacterial and fungal pathogens in some clinical settings, such as the cystic fibrosis lung. Virus infections of fungi occur naturally. Effects on fungal physiology need delineation. A common reference strain, long studied in two (of many) laboratories, was found infected with the AfuPmV-1 virus. One isolate was cured of virus, producing a virus-free strain. Virus from the infected strain was purified and used to re-infect three subcultures of the virus-free fungus, producing six fungal strains, otherwise isogenic. They were studied in intermicrobial competition with culture filtrates inhibited forming or preformed biofilm from infected strains to a greater extent, also seen when volatiles were assayed on . Purified iron-chelating molecules, known inhibitors of biofilm, reproduced these differences. Iron, a stimulus of , enhanced the virus-free fungus, compared to infected. All infected fungal strains behaved similarly in assays. We show an important consequence of virus infection, a weakening in intermicrobial competition. Viral infection may affect the outcome of bacterial-fungal competition in nature and patients. We suggest that this occurs via alteration in fungal stress responses, the mechanism best delineated here is a result of virus-induced altered iron metabolism.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8073786PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v13040686DOI Listing

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