Abstract

The basic reproduction ratio, R0, is a fundamental concept in epidemiology. It is defined as the total number of secondary infections brought on by a single primary infection, in a totally susceptible population. The value of R0 indicates whether a starting epidemic reaches a considerable part of the population and causes a lot of damage, or whether it remains restricted to a relatively small number of individuals. To calculate R0 one has to evaluate an integral that ranges over the duration of the infection of the host. This duration is, of course, limited by remaining host longevity. So, R0 depends on remaining host longevity and in this paper we show that for long-lived hosts this aspect may not be ignored for long-lasting infections. We investigate in particular how this epidemiological measure of pathogen fitness depends on host longevity. For our analyses we adopt and combine a generic within- and between-host model from the literature. To find the optimal strategy for a pathogen from an evolutionary point of view, we focus on the indicator R_0^{{opt}}, i.e., the optimum of R0 as a function of its replication and mutation rates. These are the within-host parameters that the pathogen has at its disposal to optimize its strategy. We show that R_0^{{opt}} is highly influenced by remaining host longevity in combination with the contact rate between hosts in a susceptible population. In addition, these two parameters determine whether a killer-like or a milker-like strategy is optimal for a given pathogen. In the killer-like strategy the pathogen has a high rate of reproduction within the host in a short time span causing a relatively short disease, whereas in the milker-like strategy the pathogen multiplies relatively slowly, producing a continuous small amount of offspring over time with a small effect on host health. The present research allows for the determination of a bifurcation line in the plane of host longevity versus contact rate that forms the boundary between the milker-like and killer-like regions. This plot shows that for short remaining host longevities the killer-like strategy is optimal, whereas for very long remaining host longevities the milker-like strategy is advantageous. For in-between values of host longevity, the contact rate determines which of both strategies is optimal.

Highlights

  • Successful parasites engage in a dynamic co-evolutionary interaction with their host population

  • R0 depends on remaining host longevity and in this paper we show that for long-lived hosts this aspect may not be ignored for long-lasting infections

  • To find the optimal strategy for a pathogen from an evolutionary point of view, we focus on the indicator Ro0pt, i.e., the optimum of R0 as a function of its replication and mutation rates

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Summary

Introduction

Successful parasites engage in a dynamic co-evolutionary interaction with their host population. As such, they do not eradicate their hosts. Instead, they live in some kind of stable hostility, resulting in an arms race between parasite and host (Haraguchi and Sasaki 1996). The main tools pathogens have at their disposal are antigenic diversification and variation in replication rates. These two mechanisms are essential to the pathogen’s continued struggle to evade the host’s immune system that is adapting to control the proliferation of infectious organisms (Deitsch et al 2009)

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