Abstract

The genetic diversity of pathogens, and interactions between genotypes, can strongly influence pathogen phenotypes such as transmissibility and virulence. For vector-borne pathogens, both mammalian hosts and arthropod vectors may limit pathogen genotypic diversity (number of unique genotypes circulating in an area) by preventing infection or transmission of particular genotypes. Mammalian hosts often act as “ecological filters” for pathogen diversity, where novel variants are frequently eliminated because of stochastic events or fitness costs. However, whether vectors can serve a similar role in limiting pathogen diversity is less clear. Here we show using Francisella novicida and a natural tick vector of Francisella spp. (Dermacentor andersoni), that the tick vector acted as a stronger ecological filter for pathogen diversity compared to the mammalian host. When both mice and ticks were exposed to mixtures of F. novicida genotypes, significantly fewer genotypes co-colonized ticks compared to mice. In both ticks and mice, increased genotypic diversity negatively affected the recovery of available genotypes. Competition among genotypes contributed to the reduction of diversity during infection of the tick midgut, as genotypes not recovered from tick midguts during mixed genotype infections were recovered from tick midguts during individual genotype infection. Mediated by stochastic and selective forces, pathogen genotype diversity was markedly reduced in the tick. We incorporated our experimental results into a model to demonstrate how vector population dynamics, especially vector-to-host ratio, strongly affected pathogen genotypic diversity in a population over time. Understanding pathogen genotypic population dynamics will aid in identification of the variables that most strongly affect pathogen transmission and disease ecology.

Highlights

  • Genetic diversity within a single microbial species can lead to infection of hosts with mixtures of pathogen genotypes

  • We found that ticks served as greater ecological filters for genotypic diversity compared to mice

  • This loss in genotypic diversity was due to both stochastic and selective forces. Based on these data and a model, we determined that high numbers of ticks in an environment support high genotypic diversity, while genotypic diversity will be lost rapidly in environments with low tick numbers. These results provide evidence that vector population dynamics, vector-to-host ratios, and competition among pathogen genotypes play critical roles in the maintenance of pathogen genotypic diversity

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Summary

Introduction

Genetic diversity within a single microbial species can lead to infection of hosts with mixtures of pathogen genotypes. The degree of genotypic diversity, defined here as the number of unique genotypes within a population, has been associated with pathogen transmission rates and virulence [6]–[9]. Greater numbers of circulating Plasmodium faliciparum genotypes were positively correlated with increased virulence or a greater probability of transmission [6],[8]. Competition experiments among Dengue virus serotypes resulted in the more virulent serotype being selected at the expense of less virulent serotypes during both human and mosquito infection [7]. During the early years of West Nile virus circulation in New York, transmission intensity was associated with increases in viral genetic diversity [9]

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