Biek Roman, Henderson J Caroline, Waller Lance A, Rupprecht Charles E, Real Leslie A
Department of Biology and Center for Disease Ecology, Emory University, 1510 Clifton Road, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2007 May 8;104(19):7993-8. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0700741104. Epub 2007 Apr 30.
Emerging pathogens potentially undergo rapid evolution while expanding in population size and geographic range during the course of invasion, yet it is generally difficult to demonstrate how these processes interact. Our analysis of a 30-yr data set covering a large-scale rabies virus outbreak among North American raccoons reveals the long lasting effect of the initial infection wave in determining how viral populations are genetically structured in space. We further find that coalescent-based estimates derived from the genetic data yielded an amazingly accurate reconstruction of the known spatial and demographic dynamics of the virus over time. Our study demonstrates the combined evolutionary and population dynamic processes characterizing the spread of pathogen after its introduction into a fully susceptible host population. Furthermore, the results provide important insights regarding the spatial scale of rabies persistence and validate the use of coalescent approaches for uncovering even relatively complex population histories. Such approaches will be of increasing relevance for understanding the epidemiology of emerging zoonotic diseases in a landscape context.
新兴病原体在入侵过程中,随着种群数量和地理范围的扩大,可能会经历快速进化,但通常很难证明这些过程是如何相互作用的。我们对一个涵盖北美浣熊大规模狂犬病病毒爆发的30年数据集进行分析,结果表明,初始感染波在决定病毒种群如何在空间上进行遗传结构划分方面具有持久影响。我们进一步发现,从遗传数据得出的基于溯祖理论的估计,惊人地准确重建了该病毒随时间变化的已知空间和种群动态。我们的研究展示了病原体引入完全易感宿主种群后传播过程中所特有的进化和种群动态过程的结合。此外,研究结果为狂犬病持续存在的空间尺度提供了重要见解,并验证了使用溯祖理论方法来揭示甚至相对复杂的种群历史的有效性。这类方法对于在景观背景下理解新兴人畜共患病的流行病学将变得越来越重要。