Gandon Sylvain, Day Troy
Génétique et Evolution des Maladies Infectieuses, UMR CNRS/IRD 2724, IRD, 911 Avenue Agropolis, 34394 Montpellier Cedex 5, France.
J R Soc Interface. 2007 Oct 22;4(16):803-17. doi: 10.1098/rsif.2006.0207.
Vaccination leads to dramatic perturbations of the environment of parasite populations and this can have both demographic and evolutionary consequences. We present a theoretical framework for modelling the short- and long-term epidemiological and evolutionary consequences of vaccination. This framework integrates previous theoretical studies of vaccine-induced parasite evolution, and it allows one to make some useful qualitative predictions regarding the outcome of the competition between different types of vaccine-favoured variants. It can also be used to make quantitative predictions about the speed of such evolutionary processes. This work may help define the relevant parameters that need to be measured in specific parasite populations in order to evaluate the potential evolutionary consequences of vaccination. In particular, we argue that more work should be done evaluating the nature and magnitude of parasite fitness costs associated with adaptation to vaccinated hosts.
疫苗接种会导致寄生虫种群环境发生巨大扰动,这可能产生人口统计学和进化方面的后果。我们提出了一个理论框架,用于模拟疫苗接种的短期和长期流行病学及进化后果。该框架整合了先前关于疫苗诱导寄生虫进化的理论研究,能够让人对不同类型疫苗偏好变体之间的竞争结果做出一些有用的定性预测。它还可用于对这类进化过程的速度进行定量预测。这项工作可能有助于确定在特定寄生虫种群中需要测量的相关参数,以便评估疫苗接种的潜在进化后果。特别是,我们认为应该开展更多工作来评估与适应接种疫苗宿主相关的寄生虫适应性代价的性质和程度。