Literature DB >> 18999939

Acute or chronic? Within-host models with immune dynamics, infection outcome, and parasite evolution.

Samuel Alizon1, Minus van Baalen.   

Abstract

There is ample theoretical and experimental evidence that virulence evolution depends on the immune response of the host. In this article, we review a number of recent studies that attempt to explicitly incorporate the dynamics of the immune system (instead of merely representing it by a single black box parameter) in models for the evolution of parasite virulence. A striking observation is that the type of infection (acute or chronic) is invariably considered to be a constraint that model assumptions have to satisfy rather than as a potential outcome of the interaction of the parasite with its host's immune system. We argue that avoiding making assumptions about the type of infection will lead to a better understanding of infectious diseases, even though a number of fundamental and technical problems remain. Dynamical modeling of the immune system opens a wide range of perspectives: for understanding how the immune system eradicates a parasite (which it does for most pathogens but not for all, HIV being a notorious example of a virus that is not completely eliminated), for studying multiple infections through concomitant immunity, for understanding the emergence and evolution of the immune system in animals, and for evolutionary epidemiology in general (e.g., predicting evolutionary consequences of new therapies and public health policies). We conclude by discussing new approaches based on embedded (or nested) models and identify future perspectives for the modeling of infectious diseases.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18999939     DOI: 10.1086/592404

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am Nat        ISSN: 0003-0147            Impact factor:   3.926


  23 in total

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2.  Model of bacterial toxin-dependent pathogenesis explains infective dose.

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3.  How selection forces dictate the variant surface antigens used by malaria parasites.

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4.  Resource-driven changes to host population stability alter the evolution of virulence and transmission.

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Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2018-05-05       Impact factor: 6.237

5.  A theoretical framework for transitioning from patient-level to population-scale epidemiological dynamics: influenza A as a case study.

Authors:  W S Hart; P K Maini; C A Yates; R N Thompson
Journal:  J R Soc Interface       Date:  2020-05-13       Impact factor: 4.118

6.  Parasite resource manipulation drives bimodal variation in infection duration.

Authors:  Anieke van Leeuwen; Sarah A Budischak; Andrea L Graham; Clayton E Cressler
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2019-05-15       Impact factor: 5.349

7.  Can Horton hear the whos? The importance of scale in mosquito-borne disease.

Authors:  C C Lord; B W Alto; S L Anderson; C R Connelly; J F Day; S L Richards; C T Smartt; W J Tabachnick
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8.  Antigenic diversity, transmission mechanisms, and the evolution of pathogens.

Authors:  Alexander Lange; Neil M Ferguson
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2009-10-16       Impact factor: 4.475

9.  Understanding the HIV coreceptor switch from a dynamical perspective.

Authors:  Christel Kamp
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2009-11-30       Impact factor: 3.260

10.  The evolutionary dynamics of a rapidly mutating virus within and between hosts: the case of hepatitis C virus.

Authors:  Fabio Luciani; Samuel Alizon
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2009-11-13       Impact factor: 4.475

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