A within-host infection model to explore tolerance and resistance

Author:

Lafont Pierre D. M.,Lauzeral Christine,Parthuisot Nathalie,Faucher Christian,Duneau DavidORCID,Ferdy Jean-Baptiste

Abstract

AbstractHow are some individuals surviving infections while others die? The answer lies in how infected individuals invest into controlling pathogen proliferation and mitigating damage, two strategies respectively called resistance and disease tolerance. Pathogen within-host dynamics (WHD), influenced by resistance, and its connection to host survival, determined by tolerance, decide the infection outcome. To grasp these intricate effects of resistance and tolerance, we used a deterministic theoretical model where pathogens interact with the immune system of a host. The model describes the positive and negative regulation of the immune response, consider the way damage accumulate during the infection and predicts WHD. When chronic, infections stabilize at a Set-Point Pathogen Load (SPPL). Our model predicts that this situation can be transient, the SPPL being then a predictor of life span which depends on initial condition (e.g. inoculum). When stable, the SPPL is rather diagnostic of non lethal chronic infections. In lethal infections, hosts die at a Pathogen Load Upon Death (PLUD) which is almost independent from the initial conditions. As the SPPL, the PLUD is affected by both resistance and tolerance but we demonstrate that it can be used in conjunction with mortality measurement to distinguish the effect of disease tolerance from that of resistance. We validate empirically this new approach, using Drosophila, melanogaster and the pathogen Providencia rettgeri.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Virulence decomposition for bifurcating infections;Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences;2023-05-10

2. A Toll pathway effector protects Drosophila specifically from distinct toxins secreted by a fungus or a bacterium;Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences;2023-03-14

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