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The causes and consequences of changes in virulence following pathogen host shifts.


Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Longdon, Ben 
Hadfield, Jarrod D 
Day, Jonathan P 
Smith, Sophia CL 
McGonigle, John E 

Abstract

Emerging infectious diseases are often the result of a host shift, where the pathogen originates from a different host species. Virulence--the harm a pathogen does to its host-can be extremely high following a host shift (for example Ebola, HIV, and SARs), while other host shifts may go undetected as they cause few symptoms in the new host. Here we examine how virulence varies across host species by carrying out a large cross infection experiment using 48 species of Drosophilidae and an RNA virus. Host shifts resulted in dramatic variation in virulence, with benign infections in some species and rapid death in others. The change in virulence was highly predictable from the host phylogeny, with hosts clustering together in distinct clades displaying high or low virulence. High levels of virulence are associated with high viral loads, and this may determine the transmission rate of the virus.

Description

Keywords

Animals, Drosophila, Host Specificity, Phylogeny, RNA Viruses, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, Viral Load, Virulence

Journal Title

PLoS Pathog

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1553-7366
1553-7374

Volume Title

11

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Sponsorship
Natural Environment Research Council (NE/L004232/1)
European Research Council (281668)
BL and FMJ are supported by a NERC grant (NE/L004232/1), a European Research Council grant (281668, DrosophilaInfection), a Junior Research Fellowship from Christ’s College, Cambridge (BL) and a Royal Society University Research Fellowship (FMJ). JDH is supported by a Royal Society University Research Fellowship. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.