WITHIN-HOST PARASITE DYNAMICS, EMERGING TRADE-OFF, AND EVOLUTION OF VIRULENCE WITH IMMUNE SYSTEM
Open Access
- 1 July 2003
- Vol. 57 (7) , 1489-1497
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0014-3820.2003.tb00357.x
Abstract
Virulence is an evolutionary paradox because parasites never benefit from their host's death. The adaptive explanation of virulence is classically based upon the existence of physiological constraints that create a trade-off between parasites' epidemiological traits (virulence, transmissibility, and clearance). Here we develop an epidemiological model where infections are dynamic processes and we demonstrate how these dynamics generate a trade-off between emerging epidemiological parameters. We then study how host's immune strength modifies this trade-off and hence influences virulence evolution. We found that in acute infections, where parasites are engaged in a race with immune cells, immunity restrains more the duration of the infection than its intensity. As a consequence parasites evolve to provoke more virulent but shorter infections in strongly immunized hosts.Keywords
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