The three Ts of virulence evolution during zoonotic emergence

There is increasing interest in the role that evolution may play in current and future pandemics, but there is often also considerable confusion about the actual evolutionary predictions. This may be, in part, due to a historical separation of evolutionary and medical fields, but there is a large, s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences Biological sciences, 2021-08, Vol.288 (1956), p.20210900-20210900, Article 20210900
Hauptverfasser: Visher, Elisa, Evensen, Claire, Guth, Sarah, Lai, Edith, Norfolk, Marina, Rozins, Carly, Sokolov, Nina A., Sui, Melissa, Boots, Michael
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container_end_page 20210900
container_issue 1956
container_start_page 20210900
container_title Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences
container_volume 288
creator Visher, Elisa
Evensen, Claire
Guth, Sarah
Lai, Edith
Norfolk, Marina
Rozins, Carly
Sokolov, Nina A.
Sui, Melissa
Boots, Michael
description There is increasing interest in the role that evolution may play in current and future pandemics, but there is often also considerable confusion about the actual evolutionary predictions. This may be, in part, due to a historical separation of evolutionary and medical fields, but there is a large, somewhat nuanced body of evidence-supported theory on the evolution of infectious disease. In this review, we synthesize this evolutionary theory in order to provide a framework for clearer understanding of the key principles. Specifically, we discuss the selection acting on zoonotic pathogens' transmission rates and virulence at spillover and during emergence. We explain how the direction and strength of selection during epidemics of emerging zoonotic disease can be understood by a three Ts framework: trade-offs, transmission, and time scales. Virulence and transmission rate may trade-off, but transmission rate is likely to be favoured by selection early in emergence, particularly if maladapted zoonotic pathogens have 'no-cost' transmission rate improving mutations available to them. Additionally, the optimal virulence and transmission rates can shift with the time scale of the epidemic. Predicting pathogen evolution, therefore, depends on understanding both the trade-offs of transmission-improving mutations and the time scales of selection.
doi_str_mv 10.1098/rspb.2021.0900
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subjects Biological Evolution
Biology
Communicable Diseases - epidemiology
Ecology
Environmental Sciences & Ecology
Epidemics
Evolutionary Biology
Humans
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics
Review
Science & Technology
Virulence
title The three Ts of virulence evolution during zoonotic emergence
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