Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA.
Program in Biophysical Sciences, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA.
Trends Microbiol. 2021 Dec;29(12):1072-1082. doi: 10.1016/j.tim.2021.05.009. Epub 2021 Jul 1.
In a pattern called immune imprinting, individuals gain the strongest immune protection against the influenza strains encountered earliest in life. In many recent examples, differences in early infection history can explain birth year-associated differences in susceptibility (cohort effects). Susceptibility shapes strain fitness, but without a clear conceptual model linking host susceptibility to the identity and order of past infections general conclusions on the evolutionary and epidemic implications of cohort effects are not possible. Failure to differentiate between cohort effects caused by differences in the set, rather than the order (path), of past infections is a current source of confusion. We review and refine hypotheses for path-dependent cohort effects, which include imprinting. We highlight strategies to measure their underlying causes and emergent consequences.
在一种称为免疫印迹的模式中,个体获得对生命早期遇到的流感株最强的免疫保护。在许多最近的例子中,早期感染史的差异可以解释出生年份相关的易感性差异(队列效应)。易感性塑造了菌株的适应性,但如果没有一个明确的概念模型将宿主易感性与过去感染的身份和顺序联系起来,就不可能得出关于队列效应的进化和流行意义的一般结论。未能区分由过去感染的集合而非顺序(路径)差异引起的队列效应是当前混淆的一个来源。我们回顾和完善了与路径相关的队列效应的假设,包括印迹。我们强调了衡量其潜在原因和出现后果的策略。