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Main Author: Rasoolinejad, Mohammad
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.23112
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author Rasoolinejad, Mohammad
author_facet Rasoolinejad, Mohammad
contents Viruses display striking diversity in structure, transmission mode, immune interaction, and evolutionary behavior. Despite this diversity, viral strategies are not unconstrained. Here we present a unifying framework that treats viral evolution as a problem of constrained optimization governed by physical decay, immune pressure, mutation robustness, and transmission architecture. We model virions as multi-component physical systems subject to irreversible environmental failure and viruses as replicators operating under immune-driven selection and mutation-selection balance. Within this framework, major viral transmission strategies arise as necessary solutions rather than taxonomic accidents. Environmentally transmitted and airborne viruses are predicted to be structurally simple, chemically stable, and reliant on replication volume rather than immune suppression. Structurally complex viruses tolerate rapid environmental decay by encoding immune-modulatory machinery, latency, or persistent replication, at the cost of reduced mutation robustness. Temperature-dependent seasonality emerges naturally from the thermally activated nature of viral decay, without invoking host behavior.
format Preprint
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institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Viral Evolution Under Physical Constraints: Decay, Mutation, and Transmission as a Constrained Optimization Problem
Rasoolinejad, Mohammad
Biological Physics
Viruses display striking diversity in structure, transmission mode, immune interaction, and evolutionary behavior. Despite this diversity, viral strategies are not unconstrained. Here we present a unifying framework that treats viral evolution as a problem of constrained optimization governed by physical decay, immune pressure, mutation robustness, and transmission architecture. We model virions as multi-component physical systems subject to irreversible environmental failure and viruses as replicators operating under immune-driven selection and mutation-selection balance. Within this framework, major viral transmission strategies arise as necessary solutions rather than taxonomic accidents. Environmentally transmitted and airborne viruses are predicted to be structurally simple, chemically stable, and reliant on replication volume rather than immune suppression. Structurally complex viruses tolerate rapid environmental decay by encoding immune-modulatory machinery, latency, or persistent replication, at the cost of reduced mutation robustness. Temperature-dependent seasonality emerges naturally from the thermally activated nature of viral decay, without invoking host behavior.
title Viral Evolution Under Physical Constraints: Decay, Mutation, and Transmission as a Constrained Optimization Problem
topic Biological Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.23112