The evolution of many microbes and pathogens, including circulating viruses such as seasonal influenza, is driven by immune pressure from the host population. In turn, the immune systems of infected populations get updated, chasing viruses even further away. Quantitatively understanding how these dynamics result in observed patterns of rapid pathogen and immune adaptation is instrumental to epidemiological and evolutionary forecasting. Here we present a mathematical theory of co-evolution between immune systems and viruses in a finite-dimensional antigenic space, which describes the cross-reactivity of viral strains and immune systems primed by previous infections. We show the emergence of an antigenic wave that is pushed forward and canali...
The recurrence of influenza A epidemics has originally been explained by a "continuous antigenic dri...
Influenza viruses undergo continual antigenic evolution allowing mutant viruses to evade host immuni...
The recurrence of influenza A epidemics has originally been explained by a ‘‘continuous antigenic dr...
The evolution of many microbes and pathogens, including circulating viruses such as seasonal influen...
To escape immune recognition in previously infected hosts, viruses evolve genetically in immunologic...
To escape immune recognition in previously infected hosts, viruses evolve genetically in immunologic...
Rapidly evolving pathogens like influenza viruses can persist by changing their antigenic properties...
International audienceViruses evolve in the background of host immune systems that exert selective p...
Abstract Background Since its emergence in 1968, infl...
We use a mathematical model to study the evolution of influenza A during the epidemic dynamics of a ...
The evolutionary dynamics of human Influenza A virus presents a challenging theoretical problem. An ...
<div><p>The vertebrate adaptive immune system provides a flexible and diverse set of molecules to ne...
Host-pathogen interactions, especially those involving RNA viruses and bacteria, are often character...
The accumulation of cross-immunity in the host population is an important factor driving the antigen...
The recurrence of influenza A epidemics has originally been explained by a "continuous antigenic dri...
The recurrence of influenza A epidemics has originally been explained by a "continuous antigenic dri...
Influenza viruses undergo continual antigenic evolution allowing mutant viruses to evade host immuni...
The recurrence of influenza A epidemics has originally been explained by a ‘‘continuous antigenic dr...
The evolution of many microbes and pathogens, including circulating viruses such as seasonal influen...
To escape immune recognition in previously infected hosts, viruses evolve genetically in immunologic...
To escape immune recognition in previously infected hosts, viruses evolve genetically in immunologic...
Rapidly evolving pathogens like influenza viruses can persist by changing their antigenic properties...
International audienceViruses evolve in the background of host immune systems that exert selective p...
Abstract Background Since its emergence in 1968, infl...
We use a mathematical model to study the evolution of influenza A during the epidemic dynamics of a ...
The evolutionary dynamics of human Influenza A virus presents a challenging theoretical problem. An ...
<div><p>The vertebrate adaptive immune system provides a flexible and diverse set of molecules to ne...
Host-pathogen interactions, especially those involving RNA viruses and bacteria, are often character...
The accumulation of cross-immunity in the host population is an important factor driving the antigen...
The recurrence of influenza A epidemics has originally been explained by a "continuous antigenic dri...
The recurrence of influenza A epidemics has originally been explained by a "continuous antigenic dri...
Influenza viruses undergo continual antigenic evolution allowing mutant viruses to evade host immuni...
The recurrence of influenza A epidemics has originally been explained by a ‘‘continuous antigenic dr...