Expression of parasite genetic variation changes over the course of infection: implications of within-host dynamics for the evolution of virulence.

PubWeight™: 0.78‹?›

🔗 View Article (PMID 25761710)

Published in Proc Biol Sci on April 07, 2015

Authors

Melanie Clerc1, Dieter Ebert2, Matthew D Hall3

Author Affiliations

1: Institute of Evolutionary Biology, University of Edinburgh, Ashworth Labs, Charlotte Auerbach Road, Edinburgh EH9 3FL, UK Zoological Institute, University of Basel, Vesalgasse 1, Basel 4051, Switzerland m.clerc@sms.ed.ac.uk.
2: Zoological Institute, University of Basel, Vesalgasse 1, Basel 4051, Switzerland.
3: Zoological Institute, University of Basel, Vesalgasse 1, Basel 4051, Switzerland School of Biological Sciences, Monash University, Melbourne 3800, Australia.

Articles cited by this

Population biology of infectious diseases: Part I. Nature (1979) 9.66

Coevolution of hosts and parasites. Parasitology (1982) 7.55

Genetic variation in a host-parasite association: potential for coevolution and frequency-dependent selection. Evolution (2001) 3.66

Analysis of the inheritance, selection and evolution of growth trajectories. Genetics (1990) 2.60

Within-host competition in genetically diverse malaria infections: parasite virulence and competitive success. Evolution (2006) 2.02

Host-parasite and genotype-by-environment interactions: temperature modifies potential for selection by a sterilizing pathogen. Evolution (2005) 1.84

The evolution of virulence when parasites cause host castration and gigantism. Am Nat (2004) 1.72

Linking within- and between-host dynamics in the evolutionary epidemiology of infectious diseases. Trends Ecol Evol (2008) 1.71

Cloning of the unculturable parasite Pasteuria ramosa and its Daphnia host reveals extreme genotype-genotype interactions. Ecol Lett (2010) 1.57

Playing by different rules: the evolution of virulence in sterilizing pathogens. Am Nat (2002) 1.40

Mosquito mortality and the evolution of malaria virulence. Evolution (2003) 1.37

Host-parasite coevolution: Insights from the Daphnia-parasite model system. Curr Opin Microbiol (2008) 1.33

Parasite-host fitness trade-offs change with parasite identity: genotype-specific interactions in a plant-pathogen system. Evolution (2005) 1.29

Host-parasite interactions for virulence and resistance in a malaria model system. J Evol Biol (2006) 1.26

Virulence reaction norms across a food gradient. Proc Biol Sci (2004) 1.25

The cause of parasitic infection in natural populations of Daphnia (Crustacea: Cladocera): the role of host genetics. Proc Biol Sci (2000) 1.21

Temperature-dependent costs of parasitism and maintenance of polymorphism under genotype-by-environment interactions. J Evol Biol (2008) 1.21

Parasitic castration: the evolution and ecology of body snatchers. Trends Parasitol (2009) 1.17

Rodent malaria parasites suffer from the presence of conspecific clones in three-clone Plasmodium chabaudi infections. Parasitology (2003) 1.14

Evidence for strong host clone-parasite species interactions in the Daphnia microparasite system. Evolution (2003) 1.11

Dining on disease: how interactions between infection and environment affect predation risk. Ecology (2006) 1.06

Antagonistic coevolution with parasites maintains host genetic diversity: an experimental test. Proc Biol Sci (2010) 1.05

Disentangling the influence of parasite genotype, host genotype and maternal environment on different stages of bacterial infection in Daphnia magna. Proc Biol Sci (2012) 1.03

Predators and patterns of within-host growth can mediate both among-host competition and evolution of transmission potential of parasites. Am Nat (2014) 0.93

Parasite reproductive strategy and evolution of castration of hosts by parasites. Science (1975) 0.92

Bridging scales in the evolution of infectious disease life histories: application. Evolution (2011) 0.90

Parasite variation and the evolution of virulence in a Daphnia-microparasite system. Parasitology (2007) 0.89

Bridging scales in the evolution of infectious disease life histories: theory. Evolution (2011) 0.88

Who benefits from reduced reproduction in parasitized hosts? An experimental test using the Pasteuria ramosa-Daphnia magna system. Parasitology (2011) 0.88

Predator-spreaders: predation can enhance parasite success in a planktonic host-parasite system. Ecology (2009) 0.87

Identifying energy constraints to parasite resistance. J Evol Biol (2011) 0.87

Parasitic castration of plants by fungi. Trends Ecol Evol (1991) 0.86

Cost of co-infection controlled by infectious dose combinations and food availability. Oecologia (2009) 0.84

A novel approach to parasite population genetics: experimental infection reveals geographic differentiation, recombination and host-mediated population structure in Pasteuria ramosa, a bacterial parasite of Daphnia. Mol Ecol (2012) 0.84

Articles by these authors

Host-parasite Red Queen dynamics with phase-locked rare genotypes. Sci Adv (2016) 0.80