Department of Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2010 Jul 23;5(7):e11745. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0011745.
The flaviviruses causing tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) persist at low but consistent levels in tick populations, despite short infectious periods in their mammalian hosts and transmission periods constrained by distinctly seasonal tick life cycles. In addition to systemic and vertical transmission, cofeeding transmission has been proposed as an important route for the persistence of TBE-causing viruses. Because cofeeding transmission requires ticks to feed simultaneously, the timing of tick activity may be critical to pathogen persistence. Existing models of tick-borne diseases do not incorporate all transmission routes and tick seasonality. Our aim is to evaluate the influence of seasonality on the relative importance of different transmission routes by using a comprehensive mathematical model.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We developed a stage-structured population model that includes tick seasonality and evaluated the relative importance of the transmission routes for pathogens with short infectious periods, in particular Powassan virus (POWV) and the related "deer tick virus," emergent encephalitis-causing flaviviruses in North America. We used the next generation matrix method to calculate the basic reproductive ratio and performed elasticity analyses. We confirmed that cofeeding transmission is critically important for such pathogens to persist in seasonal tick populations over the reasonable range of parameter values. At higher but still plausible rates of vertical transmission, our model suggests that vertical transmission can strongly enhance pathogen prevalence when it operates in combination with cofeeding transmission.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our results demonstrate that the consistent prevalence of POWV observed in tick populations could be maintained by a combination of low vertical, intermediate cofeeding and high systemic transmission rates. When vertical transmission is weak, nymphal ticks support integral parts of the transmission cycle that are critical for maintaining the pathogen. We also extended the model to pathogens that cause chronic infections in hosts and found that cofeeding transmission could contribute to elevating prevalence even in these systems. Therefore, the common assumption that cofeeding transmission is not relevant in models of chronic host infection, such as Lyme disease, could lead to underestimating pathogen prevalence.
引起蜱传脑炎(TBE)的黄病毒在蜱种群中持续存在,但水平较低且保持稳定,尽管其在哺乳动物宿主中的感染期很短,且传播期受到明显季节性蜱生命周期的限制。除了系统和垂直传播外,共食传播已被提议为导致 TBE 的病毒持续存在的重要途径。因为共食传播需要蜱同时进食,所以蜱的活动时间可能对病原体的持续存在至关重要。现有的蜱传疾病模型并未纳入所有传播途径和蜱的季节性。我们的目的是使用综合数学模型来评估季节性对不同传播途径相对重要性的影响。
方法/主要发现:我们开发了一个具有阶段结构的种群模型,该模型包括蜱的季节性,并评估了具有短感染期的病原体的不同传播途径的相对重要性,特别是 Powassan 病毒(POWV)和相关的“鹿蜱病毒”,这些病毒是北美的新兴脑炎引起的黄病毒。我们使用下一代矩阵方法计算基本繁殖数,并进行了弹性分析。我们证实,共食传播对于此类病原体在季节性蜱种群中持续存在是至关重要的,这在合理的参数值范围内。在更高但仍合理的垂直传播率下,我们的模型表明,当垂直传播与共食传播结合时,它可以强烈增强病原体的流行率。
结论/意义:我们的研究结果表明,蜱种群中持续存在的 POWV 可以通过低垂直、中等共食和高系统传播率的组合来维持。当垂直传播较弱时,若幼虫蜱支持对维持病原体至关重要的传播周期的组成部分,则可能支持该传播周期。我们还将模型扩展到引起宿主慢性感染的病原体,并发现共食传播即使在这些系统中也可以导致流行率升高。因此,共食传播在慢性宿主感染模型(如莱姆病)中不重要的常见假设可能导致对病原体流行率的低估。