4.6 Article

Quantifying Transmission Investment in Malaria Parasites

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PLOS COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY
卷 12, 期 2, 页码 -

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PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004718

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资金

  1. National Institute of General Medical Sciences, NIH [R01GM089932]
  2. RAPIDD program of the Science & Technology Directorate, Department of Homeland Security
  3. Fogarty International Center, National Institutes of Health
  4. Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
  5. National Science Foundation [DEB-1354819]
  6. Human Frontiers Science Program [RGP0046/2013]
  7. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  8. Direct For Biological Sciences
  9. Division Of Environmental Biology [1354819] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Many microparasites infect new hosts with specialized life stages, requiring a subset of the parasite population to forgo proliferation and develop into transmission forms. Transmission stage production influences infectivity, host exploitation, and the impact of medical interventions like drug treatment. Predicting how parasites will respond to public health efforts on both epidemiological and evolutionary timescales requires understanding transmission strategies. These strategies can rarely be observed directly and must typically be inferred from infection dynamics. Using malaria as a case study, we test previously described methods for inferring transmission stage investment against simulated data generated with a model of within-host infection dynamics, where the true transmission investment is known. We show that existing methods are inadequate and potentially very misleading. The key difficulty lies in separating transmission stages produced by different generations of parasites. We develop a new approach that performs much better on simulated data. Applying this approach to real data from mice infected with a single Plasmodium chabaudi strain, we estimate that transmission investment varies from zero to 20%, with evidence for variable investment over time in some hosts, but not others. These patterns suggest that, even in experimental infections where host genetics and other environmental factors are controlled, parasites may exhibit remarkably different patterns of transmission investment.

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