» Articles » PMID: 11831655

Parasite Transmission Modes and the Evolution of Virulence

Overview
Journal Evolution
Specialty Biology
Date 2002 Feb 8
PMID 11831655
Citations 39
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

A mathematical model is presented that explores the relationship between transmission patterns and the evolution of virulence for horizontally transmitted parasites when only a single parasite strain can infect each host. The model is constructed by decomposing parasite transmission into two processes, the rate of contact between hosts and the probability of transmission per contact. These transmission rate components, as well as the total parasite mortality rate, are allowed to vary over the course of an infection. A general evolutionarily stable condition is presented that partitions the effects of virulence on parasite fitness into three components: fecundity benefits, mortality costs, and morbidity costs. This extension of previous theory allows us to explore the evolutionary consequences of a variety of transmission patterns. I then focus attention on a special case in which the parasite density remains approximately constant during an infection, and I demonstrate two important ways in which transmission modes can affect virulence evolution: by imposing different morbidity costs on the parasite and by altering the scheduling of parasite reproduction during an infection. Both are illustrated with examples, including one that examines the hypothesis that vector-borne parasites should be more virulent than non-vector-borne parasites (Ewald 1994). The validity of this hypothesis depends upon the way in which these two effects interact, and it need not hold in general.

Citing Articles

Virulence Evolution via Pleiotropy in Vector-Borne Plant Pathogens.

Woodruff E, Hardy N Ecol Evol. 2024; 14(12):e70741.

PMID: 39687580 PMC: 11646936. DOI: 10.1002/ece3.70741.


The evolution of post-infection mortality.

Saad-Roy C, White A, Boots M Proc Biol Sci. 2024; 291(2035):20241854.

PMID: 39561798 PMC: 11576100. DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2024.1854.


Evolution of exploitation and replication of giant viruses and virophages.

Del Arco A, Fischer M, Becks L Virus Evol. 2024; 10(1):veae021.

PMID: 38562952 PMC: 10984621. DOI: 10.1093/ve/veae021.


Pharmaceutical pollution alters the cost of bacterial infection and its relationship to pathogen load.

Aulsebrook L, Wong B, Hall M Proc Biol Sci. 2024; 291(2014):20231273.

PMID: 38196353 PMC: 10777164. DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2023.1273.


Double trouble: trypanosomatids with two hosts have lower infection prevalence than single host trypanosomatids.

Al-Ghafli H, Barribeau S Evol Med Public Health. 2023; 11(1):202-218.

PMID: 37404250 PMC: 10317189. DOI: 10.1093/emph/eoad014.