Suppr超能文献

具有不同自由生活寄生虫存活与毒力关系的病原体种群的流行病学特征。

The Epidemiological Signature of Pathogen Populations That Vary in the Relationship between Free-Living Parasite Survival and Virulence.

机构信息

Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520, USA.

Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, USA.

出版信息

Viruses. 2020 Sep 22;12(9):1055. doi: 10.3390/v12091055.

Abstract

The relationship between parasite virulence and transmission is a pillar of evolutionary theory that has implications for public health. Part of this canon involves the idea that virulence and free-living survival (a key component of transmission) may have different relationships in different host-parasite systems. Most examinations of the evolution of virulence-transmission relationships-Theoretical or empirical in nature-Tend to focus on the evolution of virulence, with transmission being a secondary consideration. Even within transmission studies, the focus on free-living survival is a smaller subset, though recent studies have examined its importance in the ecology of infectious diseases. Few studies have examined the epidemic-scale consequences of variation in survival across different virulence-survival relationships. In this study, we utilize a mathematical model motivated by aspects of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) natural history to investigate how evolutionary changes in survival may influence several aspects of disease dynamics at the epidemiological scale. Across virulence-survival relationships (where these traits are either positively or negatively correlated), we found that small changes (5% above and below the nominal value) in survival can have a meaningful effect on certain outbreak features, including , and on the size of the infectious peak in the population. These results highlight the importance of properly understanding the mechanistic relationship between virulence and parasite survival, as the evolution of increased survival across different relationships with virulence may have considerably different epidemiological signatures.

摘要

寄生虫毒力和传播之间的关系是进化理论的一个支柱,对公共卫生具有重要意义。这一理论的一部分涉及到这样一种观点,即毒力和自由生活的生存能力(传播的一个关键组成部分)在不同的宿主-寄生虫系统中可能具有不同的关系。大多数关于毒力-传播关系进化的研究——无论是理论上的还是经验上的——往往侧重于毒力的进化,而传播则是次要考虑因素。即使在传播研究中,对自由生活生存能力的关注也是一个较小的子集,尽管最近的研究已经研究了它在传染病生态学中的重要性。很少有研究探讨不同毒力-生存关系下生存能力变异在流行规模上的后果。在这项研究中,我们利用了一个受严重急性呼吸系统综合征冠状病毒 2(SARS-CoV-2)自然史某些方面启发的数学模型,研究了生存能力的进化变化如何可能影响流行病学规模上疾病动力学的几个方面。在毒力-生存关系中(这些特征要么呈正相关,要么呈负相关),我们发现生存能力的微小变化(名义值上下 5%)可能对某些爆发特征产生有意义的影响,包括基本再生数 R0、疾病持续时间和人口中感染高峰的大小。这些结果强调了正确理解毒力和寄生虫生存能力之间的机制关系的重要性,因为不同毒力关系中生存能力的提高进化可能具有截然不同的流行病学特征。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验