Publication | Open Access
Within-host parasite cooperation and the evolution of virulence
87
Citations
38
References
2011
Year
Parasite InteractionsEpidemiological DynamicInfectious Disease ModellingInfectious Disease EcologyPathogen TransmissionIntermediate HostParasitologyHost-pathogen InteractionsMultiple GenotypesHost-parasite RelationshipWithin-host Parasite CooperationParasite DensityEpidemiologyPathogenicityEvolutionary BiologyPathogenesisPublic GoodsSymbiosisMedicine
Infections by multiple genotypes are common in nature and are known to select for higher levels of virulence for some parasites. When parasites produce public goods (PGs) within the host, such co-infections have been predicted to select for lower levels of virulence. However, this prediction is based on simplifying assumptions regarding epidemiological feedbacks on the multiplicity of infections (MOI). Here, we analyse the case of parasites producing a PG (for example, siderophore-producing bacteria) using a nested model that ties together within-host and epidemiological processes. We find that the prediction that co-infection should select for less virulent strains for PG-producing parasites is only valid if both parasite transmission and virulence are linear functions of parasite density. If there is a trade-off relationship such that virulence increases more rapidly than transmission, or if virulence also depends on the total amount of PGs produced, then more complex relationships between virulence and the MOI are predicted. Our results reveal that explicitly taking into account the distribution of parasite strains among hosts could help better understand the selective pressures faced by parasites at the population level.
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