“…Globally distributed blooms of E. huxleyi, which spañ 100,000 km 2 (Brown and Yoder, 1994;Brown, 1995;Tyrell and Merico, 2004), are often terminated by infection of lytic, double-stranded DNA containing coccolithoviruses (EhVs) (Bratbak et al, 1993;Schroeder et al, 2003;Vardi et al, 2012). Infection triggers cell lysis and the release of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and PIC-laden coccoliths in surface waters along with the production of transparent expolymeric particles (TEP; Passow et al, 2001;Passow, 2002;Lehahn et al, 2014), which facilitate particle aggregation, high zooplankton grazing and greater downward vertical fluxes of both POC and PIC from the upper mixed layer (Laber et al, 2018;Sheyn et al, 2018;Nissimov et al, 2018). Emiliania huxleyi-EhV interactions are mechanistically regulated by a lipid-based, chemical arms race, with three structurally distinct membrane glycosphingolipids (GSLs)host GSLs (hGSLs), virus GSLs (vGSLs) and sialic acid GSLs (sGSLs)at the core of this interaction, each serving a unique diagnostic indicator of different aspects of the infection process Bidle, 2015).…”