Long-range transport and universality classes in in vitro viral infection spread

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Published 31 March 2006 2006 EDP Sciences
, , Citation S. C. Manrubia et al 2006 EPL 74 547 DOI 10.1209/epl/i2005-10560-9

0295-5075/74/3/547

Abstract

Dispersal mechanisms play a main role in the dynamics of infection spread. Recent experimental results with in vitro infections of foot-and-mouth disease virus reveal that the time needed for the virus to kill a cellular monolayer depends qualitatively on the number of viral particles required to initiate infection in a susceptible cell. A two-dimensional susceptible-infected-removed (SIR) model based on the experimental setting agrees with the observations only when viral particles are subject to long-range transport. Numerical and analytical results show that this long-range transport plays a role when a single particle causes infection, while it is inefficient when complementation between two or more particles is necessary.

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10.1209/epl/i2005-10560-9