McKenzie F Ellis, Wong Roger C, Bossert William H
Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, and Division of Applied Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA, E-mail:
Simulation. 1999;73(4):213-217. doi: 10.1177/003754979907300403.
We extend our basic discrete-event model of Plasmodium falciparum malaria to encompass circumstances in which multiple phenotypic variants of the parasite circulate within interacting human and mosquito populations, and we compare a version in which variants behave independently to one in which they interact through shared host immune responses. Relative to the standard hypothesis of statistical independence, frequencies of mixed-phenotype infection in humans were as expected in the independent-immunity version and much less than expected in the cross-immunity version; in both versions, however, such frequencies in mosquitoes were much greater than expected.
我们扩展了恶性疟原虫疟疾的基本离散事件模型,以涵盖寄生虫的多种表型变体在相互作用的人类和蚊子群体中传播的情况,并比较了一个变体独立行为的版本和一个它们通过共享宿主免疫反应相互作用的版本。相对于统计独立性的标准假设,在独立免疫版本中,人类混合表型感染的频率符合预期,而在交叉免疫版本中则远低于预期;然而,在两个版本中,蚊子中的此类频率均远高于预期。