Growth rate, transmission mode and virulence in human pathogens

The harm that pathogens cause to hosts during infection, termed virulence, varies across species from negligible to a high likelihood of rapid death. Classic theory for the evolution of virulence is based on a trade-off between pathogen growth, transmission and host survival, which predicts that hig...

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Main Authors: Leggett, H, Cornwallis, C, Buckling, A, West, S
格式: Journal article
出版: Royal Society 2017
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author Leggett, H
Cornwallis, C
Buckling, A
West, S
author_facet Leggett, H
Cornwallis, C
Buckling, A
West, S
author_sort Leggett, H
collection OXFORD
description The harm that pathogens cause to hosts during infection, termed virulence, varies across species from negligible to a high likelihood of rapid death. Classic theory for the evolution of virulence is based on a trade-off between pathogen growth, transmission and host survival, which predicts that higher within-host growth causes increased transmission and higher virulence. However, using data from 61 human pathogens, we found the opposite correlation to the expected positive correlation between pathogen growth rate and virulence. We found that (i) slower growing pathogens are significantly more virulent than faster growing pathogens, (ii) inhaled pathogens and pathogens that infect via skin wounds are significantly more virulent than pathogens that are ingested, but (iii) there is no correlation between symptoms of infection that aid transmission (such as diarrhoea and coughing) and virulence. Overall, our results emphasize how virulence can be influenced by mechanistic life-history details, especially transmission mode, that determine how parasites infect and exploit their hosts.
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spelling oxford-uuid:97ad7ea6-464e-418a-a1fb-84ae0bd37bc32022-03-27T00:01:45ZGrowth rate, transmission mode and virulence in human pathogensJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:97ad7ea6-464e-418a-a1fb-84ae0bd37bc3Symplectic Elements at OxfordRoyal Society2017Leggett, HCornwallis, CBuckling, AWest, SThe harm that pathogens cause to hosts during infection, termed virulence, varies across species from negligible to a high likelihood of rapid death. Classic theory for the evolution of virulence is based on a trade-off between pathogen growth, transmission and host survival, which predicts that higher within-host growth causes increased transmission and higher virulence. However, using data from 61 human pathogens, we found the opposite correlation to the expected positive correlation between pathogen growth rate and virulence. We found that (i) slower growing pathogens are significantly more virulent than faster growing pathogens, (ii) inhaled pathogens and pathogens that infect via skin wounds are significantly more virulent than pathogens that are ingested, but (iii) there is no correlation between symptoms of infection that aid transmission (such as diarrhoea and coughing) and virulence. Overall, our results emphasize how virulence can be influenced by mechanistic life-history details, especially transmission mode, that determine how parasites infect and exploit their hosts.
spellingShingle Leggett, H
Cornwallis, C
Buckling, A
West, S
Growth rate, transmission mode and virulence in human pathogens
title Growth rate, transmission mode and virulence in human pathogens
title_full Growth rate, transmission mode and virulence in human pathogens
title_fullStr Growth rate, transmission mode and virulence in human pathogens
title_full_unstemmed Growth rate, transmission mode and virulence in human pathogens
title_short Growth rate, transmission mode and virulence in human pathogens
title_sort growth rate transmission mode and virulence in human pathogens
work_keys_str_mv AT leggetth growthratetransmissionmodeandvirulenceinhumanpathogens
AT cornwallisc growthratetransmissionmodeandvirulenceinhumanpathogens
AT bucklinga growthratetransmissionmodeandvirulenceinhumanpathogens
AT wests growthratetransmissionmodeandvirulenceinhumanpathogens