McKenzie F E, Bossert W H
Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology and Division of Applied Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
J Theor Biol. 1998 Aug 7;193(3):419-28. doi: 10.1006/jtbi.1998.0710.
We use a simple model of the blood-stage infection dynamics of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum to consider the adaptive significance of different rates of conversion from its pathogenic, asexual stages to its transmissible, sexual forms. We find that maximize transmissivity in single-strain infections are generally greater than the highest rates reported for in vitro cultures and are several times those for which the behavior of the model is consistent with clinical profiles of infection dynamics. When two strains that share a common immune agent coinfect a host through simultaneous inoculation or sequential superinfection, however, a strain with a lower, clinically-consistent value of the conversion rate inhibits the transmissivity of one with the higher value optimal for single-strain infection. Hence we suggest that "apparent" competition by way of a common immune response might be responsible for selection of the former.
我们使用一个简单的恶性疟原虫血液阶段感染动力学模型,来探讨疟原虫从致病的无性阶段转变为可传播的有性形式的不同转化率的适应性意义。我们发现,单菌株感染中的最大传播率通常高于体外培养报道的最高转化率,并且是模型行为与感染动力学临床特征相符的转化率的几倍。然而,当两种共享共同免疫因子的菌株通过同时接种或序贯重复感染共同感染宿主时,转化率较低且与临床相符的菌株会抑制单菌株感染中具有较高最优值的菌株的传播率。因此,我们认为通过共同免疫反应产生的“表观”竞争可能是前者被选择的原因。