Parasite resource manipulation drives bimodal variation in infection duration

Author:

van Leeuwen Anieke12ORCID,Budischak Sarah A.23ORCID,Graham Andrea L.2ORCID,Cressler Clayton E.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, Department of Coastal Systems, and Utrecht University, PO Box 59, 1790 AB Den Burg, Texel, The Netherlands

2. Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA

3. W.M. Keck Science Department, Claremont McKenna, Pitzer and Scripps Colleges, Claremont, CA, USA

4. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE, USA

Abstract

Over a billion people on earth are infected with helminth parasites and show remarkable variation in parasite burden and chronicity. These parasite distributions are captured well by classic statistics, such as the negative binomial distribution. But the within-host processes underlying this variation are not well understood. In this study, we explain variation in macroparasite infection outcomes on the basis of resource flows within hosts. Resource flows realize the interactions between parasites and host immunity and metabolism. When host metabolism is modulated by parasites, we find a positive feedback of parasites on their own resources. While this positive feedback results in parasites improving their resource availability at high burdens, giving rise to chronic infections, it also results in a threshold biomass required for parasites to establish in the host, giving rise to acute infections when biomass fails to clear the threshold. Our finding of chronic and acute outcomes in bistability contrasts with classic theory, yet is congruent with the variation in helminth burdens observed in human and wildlife populations.

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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