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Applying population-genetic models in theoretical evolutionary epidemiology
Authors:Day Troy  Gandon Sylvain
Institution:Departments of Mathematics, Statistics and Biology, Jeffery Hall, Queen's University, Kingston, ON K7L 3N6, Canada;
Génétique et Evolution des Maladies Infectieuses, UMR CNRS/IRD 2724, IRD, 911 avenue Agropolis, 34394 Montpellier Cedex 5, France
Abstract:Much of the existing theory for the evolutionary biology of infectious diseases uses an invasion analysis approach. In this Ideas and Perspectives article, we suggest that techniques from theoretical population genetics can also be profitably used to study the evolutionary epidemiology of infectious diseases. We highlight four ways in which population-genetic models provide benefits beyond those provided by most invasion analyses: (i) they can make predictions about the rate of pathogen evolution; (ii) they explicitly draw out the mechanistic way in which the epidemiological dynamics feed into evolutionary change, and thereby provide new insights into pathogen evolution; (iii) they can make predictions about the evolutionary consequences of non-equilibrium epidemiological dynamics; (iv) they can readily incorporate the effects of multiple host dynamics, and thereby account for phenomena such as immunological history and/or host co-evolution.
Keywords:Antigenic evolution  drug resistance  epidemiology  infectious diseases  parasite  pathogen  virulence
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