“…As a test case, we focus on pyoverdine, a siderophore secreted by the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa to scavenge iron from the host environment (Visca et al, 2007). Table 1 provides an overview of the workflow of our meta-analysis, where we combined the outcomes of 81 individual virulence experiments from 24 studies (Meyer et al, 1996; Takase et al, 2000; Xiong et al, 2000; Gallagher and Manoil, 2001; Ochsner et al, 2002; Silo-Suh et al, 2002; Salunkhe et al, 2005; Harrison et al, 2006; Attila et al, 2008; Papaioannou et al, 2009; Zaborin et al, 2009; Carter et al, 2010; Nadal Jimenez et al, 2010; Oliver, 2011; Romanowski et al, 2011; Feinbaum et al, 2012; Okuda et al, 2012; Imperi et al, 2013; Kirienko et al, 2013; Ross-Gillespie et al, 2014; Dubern et al, 2015; Lin et al, 2015; Lopez-Medina et al, 2015; Minandri et al, 2016, see also Tables S1, S2 in the Supplemental Material). Using a weighted meta-analysis approach, we were able to investigate the evidence for pyoverdine's contribution to virulence across eight host species, including vertebrates, invertebrates and plants, five tissue infection models and various P. aeruginosa genotypes.…”