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Dissecting transmission to understand parasite evolution

Luís M. Silva, Kayla C. King, Jacob C. Koella

2025PLoS Pathogens11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Parasite transmission is a complex, multi-stage process that significantly impacts host-parasite dynamics. Transmission plays a key role in epidemiology and virulence evolution, where it is expected to trade off with virulence. However, the extent to which classical models on virulence-transmission relationships apply in the real world is unclear. This insight piece proposes a novel framework that breaks transmission into three distinct stages: within-host infectiousness, an intermediate between-host stage (biotic or abiotic), and new host infection. Each stage is influenced by intrinsic and extrinsic factors to the parasite, which together will determine its transmission success. Analyzing the transmission stages separately and how they affect each other might enhance our understanding of which host-, parasite- or environmental-driven factors might shape parasite evolution and inform us about new effectors to act on when designing disease control strategies.

Topics & Concepts

VirulenceTransmission (telecommunications)Parasite hostingAbiotic componentHost (biology)BiologyEffectorEvolutionary biologyEcologyGeneticsImmunologyComputer scienceGeneTelecommunicationsWorld Wide WebEvolution and Genetic DynamicsInsect symbiosis and bacterial influencesMathematical and Theoretical Epidemiology and Ecology Models
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