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The role of the ratio of vector and host densities in the evolution of transmission modes in vector-borne diseases. The example of sylvatic Trypanosoma cruzi

机译:媒介与宿主密度之比在媒介传播疾病传播方式演变中的作用。克氏锥虫的例子

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Pathogens may use different routes of transmission to maximize their spread among host populations. Theoretical and empirical work conducted on directly transmitted diseases suggest that horizontal (i.e., through host contacts) and vertical (i.e., from mother to offspring) transmission modes trade off, on the ground that highly virulent pathogens, which produce larger parasite loads, are more efficiently transmitted horizontally, and that less virulent pathogens, which impair host fitness less significantly, are better transmitted vertically. Other factors than virulence such as host density could also select for different transmission modes, but they have barely been studied. In vector-borne diseases, pathogen transmission rate is strongly affected by host-vector relative densities and by processes of saturation in contacts between hosts and vectors. The parasite Trypanosoma cruzi which is transmitted by triatomine bugs to several vertebrate hosts is responsible for Chagas' disease in Latin America. It is also widespread in sylvatic cycles in the southeastern U.S. in which it typically induces no mortality costs to its customary hosts. Besides classical transmission via vector bites, alternative ways to generate infections in hosts such as vertical and oral transmission (via the consumption of vectors by hosts) have been reported in these cycles. The two major T. cruzi strains occurring in the U.S. seem to exhibit differential efficiencies at vertical and classical horizontal transmissions. We investigated whether the vector-host ratio affects the outcome of the competition between the two parasite strains using an epidemiological two-strain model considering all possible transmission routes for sylvatic T. cruzi. We were able to show that the vector-host ratio influences the evolution of transmission modes providing that oral transmission is included in the model as a possible transmission mode, that oral and classical transmissions saturate at different vector-host ratios and that the vector-host ratio is between the two saturation thresholds. Even if data on parasite strategies and demography of hosts and vectors in the field are crucially lacking to test to what extent the conditions needed for the vector-host ratio to influence evolution of transmission modes are plausible, our results open new perspectives for understanding the specialization of the two major T. cruzi strains occurring in the U.S. Our work also provides an original theoretical framework to investigate the evolution of alternative transmission modes in vector-borne diseases.
机译:病原体可以使用不同的传播途径来最大程度地扩大其在宿主种群中的传播。对直接传播疾病进行的理论和实证研究表明,水平传播(即通过宿主接触)和垂直传播(即从母体到后代)的传播方式之间存在权衡关系,因为高毒力的病原体会产生更大的寄生虫负荷。有效地水平传播,而对宿主适应性影响较小的低毒力病原体则可以更好地垂直传播。除毒力外,其他因素(例如宿主密度)也可以选择不同的传播方式,但尚未对其进行研究。在媒介传播的疾病中,病原体的传播速度受宿主媒介相对密度以及宿主与媒介之间接触饱和过程的强烈影响。寄生虫锥虫锥虫(Tripanosoma cruzi)是由三atomine虫传播到几个脊椎动物寄主的,在拉丁美洲是南美锥虫病的病因。它在美国东南部的sylvatic周期中也很普遍,在该周期中,它通常不会给惯常的寄主造成死亡。除了通过媒介叮咬的经典传播外,在这些周期中还报道了在宿主中产生感染的其他方法,例如垂直传播和口服传播(通过宿主消耗媒介)。在美国出现的两种主要的克氏锥虫菌株似乎在垂直和经典水平传播中表现出不同的效率。我们使用流行病学两株模型研究了寄主克氏锥虫的所有可能传播途径,研究了载体-宿主比率是否影响两种寄生虫菌株之间竞争的结果。我们能够证明向量-宿主比率会影响传输模式的演变,前提是模型中包括口头传输作为一种可能的传输模式,口头和经典传输会以不同的向量-宿主比饱和,并且向量-宿主比率在两个饱和阈值之间。即使根本上缺乏关于寄生虫策略以及宿主和媒介物人口统计学的数据来测试向量-宿主比率影响传播模式演变所需的条件在何种程度上合理,我们的结果也为理解专业化开辟了新视野。在美国出现的两种主要的克鲁斯锥虫菌株。我们的工作还提供了一个原始的理论框架,以研究媒介传播疾病中替代传播方式的演变。

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