Evolution of parasite virulence when host responses cause disease

Author:

Day Troy12,Graham Andrea L3,Read Andrew F3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Jeffery Hall, Queen's UniversityKingston, Canada K7L 3N6

2. Department of Biology, Jeffery Hall, Queen's UniversityKingston, Canada K7L 3N6

3. Institutes of Evolutionary Biology and Immunology and Infection Research, School of Biological Sciences, University of EdinburghWest Mains Road, Edinburgh EH9 3JT, UK

Abstract

The trade-off hypothesis of virulence evolution rests on the assumption that infection-induced mortality is a consequence of host exploitation by parasites. This hypothesis lies at the heart of many empirical and theoretical studies of virulence evolution, despite growing evidence that infection-induced mortality is very often a by-product of host immune responses. We extend the theoretical framework of the trade-off hypothesis to incorporate such immunopathology and explore how this detrimental aspect of host defence mechanisms affects the evolution of pathogen exploitation and hence infection-induced mortality. We argue that there are qualitatively different ways in which immunopathology can arise and suggest ways in which empirical studies can tease apart these effects. We show that immunopathology can cause infection-induced mortality to increase or decrease as a result of pathogen evolution, depending on how it covaries with pathogen exploitation strategies and with parasite killing by hosts. Immunopathology is thus an important determinant of whether public and animal health programmes will drive evolution in a clinically beneficial or detrimental direction. Immunopathology complicates our understanding of disease evolution, but can nevertheless be readily accounted for within the framework of the trade-off hypothesis.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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