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Contrasting within- and between-host immune selection shapes Neisseria Opa repertoires

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2014

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Nature Publishing Group
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Watkins, Eleanor R., Yonatan H. Grad, Sunetra Gupta, and Caroline O. Buckee. 2014. “Contrasting within- and between-host immune selection shapes Neisseria Opa repertoires.” Scientific Reports 4 (1): 6554. doi:10.1038/srep06554. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep06554.

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Abstract

Pathogen evolution is influenced strongly by the host immune response. Previous studies of the effects of herd immunity on the population structure of directly transmitted, short-lived pathogens have primarily focused on the impact of competition for hosts. In contrast, for long-lived infections like HIV, theoretical work has focused on the mechanisms promoting antigenic variation within the host. In reality, successful transmission requires that pathogens balance both within- and between-host immune selection. The Opa adhesins in the bacterial Neisseria genus provide a unique system to study the evolution of the same antigens across two major pathogens: while N. meningitidis is an airborne, respiratory pathogen colonising the nasopharynx relatively transiently, N. gonorrhoeae can cause sexually transmitted, long-lived infections. We use a simple mathematical model and genomic data to show that trade-offs between immune selection pressures within- and between-hosts can explain the contrasting Opa repertoires observed in meningococci and gonococci.

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