Literature DB >> 25141148

Pathogen growth in insect hosts: inferring the importance of different mechanisms using stochastic models and response-time data.

David A Kennedy1, Vanja Dukic, Greg Dwyer.   

Abstract

Pathogen population dynamics within individual hosts can alter disease epidemics and pathogen evolution, but our understanding of the mechanisms driving within-host dynamics is weak. Mathematical models have provided useful insights, but existing models have only rarely been subjected to rigorous tests, and their reliability is therefore open to question. Most models assume that initial pathogen population sizes are so large that stochastic effects due to small population sizes, so-called demographic stochasticity, are negligible, but whether this assumption is reasonable is unknown. Most models also assume that the dynamic effects of a host's immune system strongly affect pathogen incubation times or "response times," but whether such effects are important in real host-pathogen interactions is likewise unknown. Here we use data for a baculovirus of the gypsy moth to test models of within-host pathogen growth. By using Bayesian statistical techniques and formal model-selection procedures, we are able to show that the response time of the gypsy moth virus is strongly affected by both demographic stochasticity and a dynamic response of the host immune system. Our results imply that not all response-time variability can be explained by host and pathogen variability, and that immune system responses to infection may have important effects on population-level disease dynamics.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25141148     DOI: 10.1086/677308

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


  7 in total

1.  Effects of pathogen exposure on life-history variation in the gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar).

Authors:  D J Páez; A E Fleming-Davies; G Dwyer
Journal:  J Evol Biol       Date:  2015-08-08       Impact factor: 2.411

2.  Virus epidemics, plant-controlled population bottlenecks and the durability of plant resistance.

Authors:  Elsa Rousseau; Mélanie Bonneault; Frédéric Fabre; Benoît Moury; Ludovic Mailleret; Frédéric Grognard
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2019-06-24       Impact factor: 6.237

3.  Small Bottleneck Size in a Highly Multipartite Virus during a Complete Infection Cycle.

Authors:  Romain Gallet; Frédéric Fabre; Gaël Thébaud; Mircea T Sofonea; Anne Sicard; Stéphane Blanc; Yannis Michalakis
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2018-06-29       Impact factor: 5.103

4.  Effects of multiple sources of genetic drift on pathogen variation within hosts.

Authors:  David A Kennedy; Greg Dwyer
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2018-03-28       Impact factor: 8.029

5.  Evaluating the Within-Host Dynamics of Ranavirus Infection with Mechanistic Disease Models and Experimental Data.

Authors:  Joseph R Mihaljevic; Amy L Greer; Jesse L Brunner
Journal:  Viruses       Date:  2019-04-27       Impact factor: 5.048

6.  Understanding the Evolutionary Ecology of host--pathogen Interactions Provides Insights into the Outcomes of Insect Pest Biocontrol.

Authors:  David Paez; Arietta Fleming-Davies
Journal:  Viruses       Date:  2020-01-25       Impact factor: 5.048

7.  Generation of Variability in Chrysodeixis includens Nucleopolyhedrovirus (ChinNPV): The Role of a Single Variant.

Authors:  Eduardo Aguirre; Inés Beperet; Trevor Williams; Primitivo Caballero
Journal:  Viruses       Date:  2021-09-22       Impact factor: 5.048

  7 in total

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