Master of Science in Biomedical Sciences (MSBS), University of Toledo, 2008, College of Graduate Studies
RNA viruses, such as HIV, influenza, and hepatitis viruses, are major sources ofhuman infection and disease. Although vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) is not a major
human pathogen, it serves as an excellent model for RNA virus evolution. In this work, I
used VSV to test two predictions of ecological theory that are relevant to speciation. The
first prediction is that viruses replicating in homogeneous environments will become
specialists as a result of fitness tradeoffs or costs due to differences in fitness landscapes,
while viruses that replicate in heterogeneous environments will become generalists.
Results show one example of fitness trade-off and two examples of costs associated with
fitness landscapes. In contrast to previous works and predictions from ecological theory,
results did not show frequent fitness trade-offs. The second prediction is that phenotypic
variance in generalist populations will be higher than phenotypic variance in specialist
populations. Once again, the prediction was incorrect, and there was no correlation
between the history or behavior of a population and it level of variation. However,
populations adapting under high-MOI conditions did result in a substantial increase in
variance, probably due to the ability of complementation to preserve variation.
Committee: Isabel Novella PhD (Committee Chair); R. Mark Wooten PhD (Committee Member); Nancy H. Collins PhD (Committee Member)
Subjects: Virology