Mathematical Biology Seminar
Rustom Antia
Department of Biology, Emory University
Wednesday Nov. 8, 2006
3:05pm in LCB 215 "What determines the virulence of
malaria?
(Bringing mathematical models of the within-host dynamics of malaria
into risky
contact with experimental data.)"
Abstract:
Why is malaria virulent? Despite causing over a million deaths a year
the
mechanisms by which the malaria parasite causes disease are still
poorly
understood. A central problem has been to understand what determines
the
level of virulence during the initial phase of acute primary
infections
when pathology due to the loss of red blood cells is greatest. There
are
many hypotheses: the conventional view is that the fastest replicating
parasites have the highest virulence; alternatives are that parasites
that
infect the youngest red blood cells (reticulocytes), or that elicit
relatively weak immune responses, are most virulent. Here we present
the
new hypothesis that virulence is proportional to the fraction of red
blood
cells that the malaria parasites can infect. We discriminate between
this
and the earlier hypotheses by developing a mathematical model of acute
malaria infections and confronting it with experimental data from the
rodent malaria Plasmodium chabaudi. We show that our model can explain
the
dynamics of single-strain infections. We further test the model by
showing
that without modification it closely reproduces the dynamics of
competing
strains in mixed infections. Importantly, our results allow us to
explain
why the earlier hypotheses fail. Our results suggest that the
virulence of
acute malaria infections is determined almost exclusively by how wide
an
age range of red blood cells malaria strains can infect.
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