Literature DB >> 33606682

An antigenic diversification threshold for falciparum malaria transmission at high endemicity.

Qixin He1, Mercedes Pascual1,2.   

Abstract

In malaria and several other important infectious diseases, high prevalence occurs concomitantly with incomplete immunity. This apparent paradox poses major challenges to malaria elimination in highly endemic regions, where asymptomatic Plasmodium falciparum infections are present across all age classes creating a large reservoir that maintains transmission. This reservoir is in turn enabled by extreme antigenic diversity of the parasite and turnover of new variants. We present here the concept of a threshold in local pathogen diversification that defines a sharp transition in transmission intensity below which new antigen-encoding genes generated by either recombination or migration cannot establish. Transmission still occurs below this threshold, but diversity of these genes can neither accumulate nor recover from interventions that further reduce it. An analytical expectation for this threshold is derived and compared to numerical results from a stochastic individual-based model of malaria transmission that incorporates the major antigen-encoding multigene family known as var. This threshold corresponds to an "innovation" number we call Rdiv; it is different from, and complementary to, the one defined by the classic basic reproductive number of infectious diseases, R0, which does not readily is better apply under large and dynamic strain diversity. This new threshold concept can be exploited for effective malaria control and applied more broadly to other pathogens with large multilocus antigenic diversity.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 33606682      PMCID: PMC7928509          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1008729

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol        ISSN: 1553-734X            Impact factor:   4.475


  46 in total

1.  Genetic variability maintained by mutation and overdominant selection in finite populations.

Authors:  T Maruyama; M Nei
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  1981-06       Impact factor: 4.562

Review 2.  Shared themes of antigenic variation and virulence in bacterial, protozoal, and fungal infections.

Authors:  K W Deitsch; E R Moxon; T E Wellems
Journal:  Microbiol Mol Biol Rev       Date:  1997-09       Impact factor: 11.056

Review 3.  Common strategies for antigenic variation by bacterial, fungal and protozoan pathogens.

Authors:  Kirk W Deitsch; Sheila A Lukehart; James R Stringer
Journal:  Nat Rev Microbiol       Date:  2009-06-08       Impact factor: 60.633

Review 4.  Malaria Parasites in the Asymptomatic: Looking for the Hay in the Haystack.

Authors:  Beatriz Galatas; Quique Bassat; Alfredo Mayor
Journal:  Trends Parasitol       Date:  2015-12-19

5.  Antigenic variation in Plasmodium falciparum malaria involves a highly structured switching pattern.

Authors:  Mario Recker; Caroline O Buckee; Andrew Serazin; Sue Kyes; Robert Pinches; Zóe Christodoulou; Amy L Springer; Sunetra Gupta; Chris I Newbold
Journal:  PLoS Pathog       Date:  2011-03-03       Impact factor: 6.823

6.  Dissecting the determinants of malaria chronicity: why within-host models struggle to reproduce infection dynamics.

Authors:  Lauren M Childs; Caroline O Buckee
Journal:  J R Soc Interface       Date:  2015-03-06       Impact factor: 4.118

7.  Stochastic processes constrain the within and between host evolution of influenza virus.

Authors:  John T McCrone; Robert J Woods; Emily T Martin; Ryan E Malosh; Arnold S Monto; Adam S Lauring
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2018-05-03       Impact factor: 8.140

8.  Networks of genetic similarity reveal non-neutral processes shape strain structure in Plasmodium falciparum.

Authors:  Qixin He; Shai Pilosof; Kathryn E Tiedje; Shazia Ruybal-Pesántez; Yael Artzy-Randrup; Edward B Baskerville; Karen P Day; Mercedes Pascual
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2018-05-08       Impact factor: 14.919

9.  Competition for hosts modulates vast antigenic diversity to generate persistent strain structure in Plasmodium falciparum.

Authors:  Shai Pilosof; Qixin He; Kathryn E Tiedje; Shazia Ruybal-Pesántez; Karen P Day; Mercedes Pascual
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2019-06-24       Impact factor: 8.029

10.  Mosquito Passage Dramatically Changes var Gene Expression in Controlled Human Plasmodium falciparum Infections.

Authors:  Anna Bachmann; Michaela Petter; Ralf Krumkamp; Meral Esen; Jana Held; Judith A M Scholz; Tao Li; B Kim Lee Sim; Stephen L Hoffman; Peter G Kremsner; Benjamin Mordmüller; Michael F Duffy; Egbert Tannich
Journal:  PLoS Pathog       Date:  2016-04-12       Impact factor: 6.823

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  1 in total

1.  Frequency-Dependent Competition Between Strains Imparts Persistence to Perturbations in a Model of Plasmodium falciparum Malaria Transmission.

Authors:  Qixin He; Shai Pilosof; Kathryn E Tiedje; Karen P Day; Mercedes Pascual
Journal:  Front Ecol Evol       Date:  2021-05-26
  1 in total

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