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Effects of epistasis and recombination between vaccine-escape and virulence alleles on the dynamics go pathogen adaptation

By David MacLeod

Appears in collection : 2022 - T1 - WS3 - Mathematical models in ecology and evolution

Pathogen adaptation to public health interventions, such as vaccination, may take tortuous routes and involve multiple mutations at different locations in the pathogen genome, acting on distinct phenotypic traits. Yet how these multilocus adaptations jointly evolve is poorly understood. Here we consider the joint evolution of two adaptations : pathogen escape from the vaccine-induced immune response, and adjustments to pathogen virulence affecting transmission or clearance. We elucidate the role played by epistasis and recombination, with an emphasis on the different protective effects of vaccination. We show that vaccines blocking infection, reducing transmission and/or increasing clearance generate positive epistasis between the vaccine-escape and virulence alleles, favouring strains that carry both mutations, whereas vaccines reducing virulence mortality generate negative epistasis, favouring strains that carry either mutation, but not both. High rates of recombination can affect these predictions. If epistasis is positive, frequent recombination can prevent the transient build-up of more virulent escape strains. If epistasis is negative, frequent recombination between loci can create an evolutionary bistability, favouring whichever adaptation is more accessible.

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Citation data

  • DOI 10.57987/IHP.2022.T1.WS3.023
  • Cite this video MacLeod, David (25/03/2022). Effects of epistasis and recombination between vaccine-escape and virulence alleles on the dynamics go pathogen adaptation. IHP. Audiovisual resource. DOI: 10.57987/IHP.2022.T1.WS3.023
  • URL https://dx.doi.org/10.57987/IHP.2022.T1.WS3.023

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