The definitive version is available at www.blackwell-synergy.comHumans and animals often become coinfected with pathogen strains that differ in virulence. The ensuing interaction between these strains can, in theory, be a major determinant of the direction of selection on virulence genes in pathogen populations. Many mathematical analyses of this assume that virulent pathogen lineages have a competitive advantage within coinfected hosts and thus predict that pathogens will evolve to become more virulent where genetically diverse infections are common. Although the implications of these studies are relevant to both fundamental biology and medical science, direct empirical tests for relationships between virulence and competitive ability are ...
Drug resistance is one of the most medically relevant forms of pathogen evolution. To date, vaccines...
Ecological interactions between microparasite populations in the same host are an important source o...
What stops parasites becoming ever more virulent? Conventional wisdom and most parasite-centred mode...
Humans and animals often become coinfected with pathogen strains that differ in virulence. The ensui...
Competitive interactions between coinfecting genotypes of the same pathogen can impose selection on ...
In endemic areas with high transmission intensities, malaria infections are very often composed of m...
<div><p>In endemic areas with high transmission intensities, malaria infections are very often compo...
Conspecific competition occurs in a multitude of organisms, particularly in parasites, where several...
Within-host competition among parasite genotypes affects epidemiology as well as the evolution of vi...
In endemic areas with high transmission intensities, malaria infections are very often composed of m...
From an evolutionary perspective, natural selection is expected to maximize transmission to new host...
AbstractBackgroundMalaria parasites within an individual infection often consist of multiple strains...
BACKGROUND: Malaria parasites within an individual infection often consist of multiple strains (clon...
In an effort to understand what limits the virulence of malaria parasites, we infected inbred mice o...
<div><p>Malarial infections are often genetically diverse, leading to competitive interactions betwe...
Drug resistance is one of the most medically relevant forms of pathogen evolution. To date, vaccines...
Ecological interactions between microparasite populations in the same host are an important source o...
What stops parasites becoming ever more virulent? Conventional wisdom and most parasite-centred mode...
Humans and animals often become coinfected with pathogen strains that differ in virulence. The ensui...
Competitive interactions between coinfecting genotypes of the same pathogen can impose selection on ...
In endemic areas with high transmission intensities, malaria infections are very often composed of m...
<div><p>In endemic areas with high transmission intensities, malaria infections are very often compo...
Conspecific competition occurs in a multitude of organisms, particularly in parasites, where several...
Within-host competition among parasite genotypes affects epidemiology as well as the evolution of vi...
In endemic areas with high transmission intensities, malaria infections are very often composed of m...
From an evolutionary perspective, natural selection is expected to maximize transmission to new host...
AbstractBackgroundMalaria parasites within an individual infection often consist of multiple strains...
BACKGROUND: Malaria parasites within an individual infection often consist of multiple strains (clon...
In an effort to understand what limits the virulence of malaria parasites, we infected inbred mice o...
<div><p>Malarial infections are often genetically diverse, leading to competitive interactions betwe...
Drug resistance is one of the most medically relevant forms of pathogen evolution. To date, vaccines...
Ecological interactions between microparasite populations in the same host are an important source o...
What stops parasites becoming ever more virulent? Conventional wisdom and most parasite-centred mode...