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Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

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Page 1: Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

Evolution of Parasites and Diseases

• The Red Queen to Alice:

• It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

Page 2: Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

Dynamical Models for Parasites and Diseases

• SIR Models (Microparasites)

• SI Models (HIV)

Figure 12.28

Page 3: Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

Alternative Models for Parasites and Diseases

Figure 12.30: Rabies and FoxesFigure 12.32: Macroparasites

Page 4: Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

Many Dynamical Interactions Possible

Path

og

en P

rod

uct

ivit

y

Figure 12.29

Dep

ress

ion

Page 5: Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

Not everyone needs vaccination

Pc = 1 – 1/R0

Figure 12.23Basic Reproductive Rate (infected hosts)

Cri

tica

l V

avvin

ati

on

Perc

en

tag

e

Page 6: Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

Parasites are everywhere and strike fast

Figure 12.16

Page 7: Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

Parasites spread faster in dense hosts

Figure 12.6

Page 8: Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

Parasites are usually aggregated

Figure 12.10

Negative binomial Distributions

Gut nematode of foxes Human head lice

Page 9: Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

Parasites obey distribution ”laws”

Figure 12.11% infected hosts

Nu

mb

er

of

para

site

s p

er

host

Page 10: Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

Parasites incur a fitness cost

Figure 12.19 Arrival breedinggrounds of pied fly catcher

Adult males

Yearling malesYearling males

Adult males

Page 11: Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

Resistance and Immunity are costly

Figure 12.20Number of buds of susceptible and resistant lettuce

Page 12: Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

Virulence is subject to natural selection

Figure 12.34Myxoma virus in rabbits

Is intermediate virulence optimal?

Page 13: Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

Basic Microparasite Models (Comp. p. 88)

dX/dt = a(X + Y + Z) – bX - XY + Z (8)

dY/dt = XY – ( + b + ) Y (9)

dZ/dt = Y – (b +) Z (10)

dN/dt = (a – b)N - Y = rN - Y (11)

+

Exercise 1a

Page 14: Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

Basic Microparasite Models (Comp. p. 88)

For a disease to spread, we need

dY/dt = XY – ( + b + ) Y > 0 (9)

NT = ( + b + )/ (18)

X > ( + b + ) X > ( + b + )/

During invasion Y = Z = 0 X = N

dN/dt = dX/dt NT = 0 (a - b)N = 0

Exercise 1 b+c

Page 15: Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

Duration of immunity (1/)

NT has been variable through human evolution

Page 16: Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

HIV-AIDS

dN/dt = N{ ( - ) – ( + (1 - )) (Y/N)} (1)

dY/dt = Y{ (c - - ) - c (Y/N)} (2)

No Immune Class (Z) so that X = N - Y

Page 17: Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

HIV-AIDS: The first equation

dN/dt = N{ ( - ) – ( + (1 - )) (Y/N)} (1)

Equivalent to:dN/dt = (X + Y) - (X + Y) - Y

= per capita birth rate = fraction infected children surviving= natural mortality rate = HIV induced mortality rate

Page 18: Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

HIV-AIDS: The second equation

dY/dt = Y{ (c - - ) - c (Y/N)} (2)

= per capita birth rate = fraction infected children surviving= natural mortality rate = HIV induced mortality rate

Equivalent to:dY/dt = XY (c/N) – ( + ) Y

= transmission rateC = average rate of aquiring partnersC/N = proportion of population being a sexual partner

Page 19: Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

HIV-AIDS

dN/dt = N{ ( - ) – ( + (1 - )) (Y/N)} (1)

dY/dt = Y{ (c - - ) - c (Y/N)} (2)

(1)+ (2) on page 104 are completely equivalent with (8) + (9) on page 88 if infected children (vertical transmission) and sexual transmission are taken into account

Page 20: Evolution of Parasites and Diseases The Red Queen to Alice: It takes all the running you can do to stay in the same place

Issues to be discussed

• What are the population-dynamical and evolutionary characterizes of flu and HIV?

• Why does flu ”cycle” (outbreak epidemics) and HIV not?

• Why is AIDS so devastating?• How well did the predictions of the 1988

HIV model hold up?• Will AIDS medicine help in Africa?