PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Invasion ability and disease dynamics of environmentally growing opportunistic pathogens under outside-host competition.

  • Ilona Merikanto,
  • Jouni T Laakso,
  • Veijo Kaitala

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0113436
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 11
p. e113436

Abstract

Read online

Most theories of the evolution of virulence concentrate on obligatory host-pathogen relationship. Yet, many pathogens replicate in the environment outside-host where they compete with non-pathogenic forms. Thus, replication and competition in the outside-host environment may have profound influence on the evolution of virulence and disease dynamics. These environmentally growing opportunistic pathogens are also a logical step towards obligatory pathogenicity. Efficient treatment methods against these diseases, such as columnaris disease in fishes, are lacking because of their opportunist nature. We present a novel epidemiological model in which replication and competition in the outside-host environment influences the invasion ability of a novel pathogen. We also analyze the long-term host-pathogen dynamics. Model parameterization is based on the columnaris disease, a bacterial fresh water fish disease that causes major losses in fish farms worldwide. Our model demonstrates that strong competition in the outside-host environment can prevent the invasion of a new environmentally growing opportunist pathogen and long-term disease outbreaks.