Childs Lauren M, Prosper Olivia F
Department of Mathematics, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA, United States of America.
Department of Mathematics, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 May 22;12(5):e0177941. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0177941. eCollection 2017.
Plasmodium falciparum, the most virulent human malaria parasite, undergoes asexual reproduction within the human host, but reproduces sexually within its vector host, the Anopheles mosquito. Consequently, the mosquito stage of the parasite life cycle provides an opportunity to create genetically novel parasites in multiply-infected mosquitoes, potentially increasing parasite population diversity. Despite the important implications for disease transmission and malaria control, a quantitative mapping of how parasite diversity entering a mosquito relates to diversity of the parasite exiting, has not been undertaken. To examine the role that vector biology plays in modulating parasite diversity, we develop a two-part model framework that estimates the diversity as a consequence of different bottlenecks and expansion events occurring during the vector-stage of the parasite life cycle. For the underlying framework, we develop the first stochastic model of within-vector P. falciparum parasite dynamics and go on to simulate the dynamics of two parasite subpopulations, emulating multiply infected mosquitoes. We show that incorporating stochasticity is essential to capture the extensive variation in parasite dynamics, particularly in the presence of multiple parasites. In particular, unlike deterministic models, which always predict the most fit parasites to produce the most sporozoites, we find that occasionally only parasites with lower fitness survive to the sporozoite stage. This has important implications for onward transmission. The second part of our framework includes a model of sequence diversity generation resulting from recombination and reassortment between parasites within a mosquito. Our two-part model framework shows that bottlenecks entering the oocyst stage decrease parasite diversity from what is present in the initial gametocyte population in a mosquito's blood meal. However, diversity increases with the possibility for recombination and proliferation in the formation of sporozoites. Furthermore, when we begin with two parasite subpopulations in the initial gametocyte population, the probability of transmitting more than two unique parasites from mosquito to human is over 50% for a wide range of initial gametocyte densities.
恶性疟原虫是最具毒性的人类疟原虫,在人类宿主体内进行无性繁殖,但在其媒介宿主按蚊体内进行有性繁殖。因此,寄生虫生命周期中的蚊子阶段为在多重感染的蚊子中产生基因新颖的寄生虫提供了机会,这可能会增加寄生虫种群的多样性。尽管这对疾病传播和疟疾控制具有重要意义,但尚未对进入蚊子体内的寄生虫多样性与离开蚊子时的寄生虫多样性之间的关系进行定量映射。为了研究媒介生物学在调节寄生虫多样性中所起的作用,我们开发了一个两部分的模型框架,该框架估计了寄生虫生命周期中蚊子阶段发生的不同瓶颈和扩展事件所导致的多样性。对于基础框架,我们开发了第一个疟原虫在媒介体内动态的随机模型,并继续模拟两个寄生虫亚群的动态,模拟多重感染的蚊子。我们表明,纳入随机性对于捕捉寄生虫动态的广泛变化至关重要,特别是在存在多种寄生虫的情况下。特别是,与总是预测最适合的寄生虫产生最多子孢子的确定性模型不同,我们发现偶尔只有适应性较低的寄生虫才能存活到子孢子阶段。这对后续传播具有重要意义。我们框架的第二部分包括一个由蚊子体内寄生虫之间的重组和重配产生序列多样性的模型。我们的两部分模型框架表明,进入卵囊阶段的瓶颈会使寄生虫多样性低于蚊子血餐中初始配子体群体中的多样性。然而,随着子孢子形成过程中重组和增殖可能性的增加,多样性会增加。此外,当我们在初始配子体群体中开始有两个寄生虫亚群时,对于广泛的初始配子体密度,从蚊子传播到人类的独特寄生虫超过两种的概率超过50%。