Title: What drives antigenic drift in a single influenza season?
1What drives antigenic drift in a single influenza
season?
Maciej F. BoniStanford University, Department of
Biological SciencesCo-authors Julia R. Gog,
Viggo Andreasen, Marcus W. Feldman
DIMACS Workshop on the Epidemiology and Evolution
of Influenza Rutgers University, January 26, 2006
2Flu epidemics and antigenic drift
weekly illnesses/10,000 inhabitants (NL)
20
( focus will be on HA1 )
1996
1997
1998
de Jong et al (2000)
3HA1 polymorphism local datasets
- Coiras et al, Arch. Vir. (2001)
- Schweiger et al, Med. Microbiol. Immunol. (2002)
- Pyhälä et al, J. Med. Virol. (2004)
mean within-season distance 2.8 aa (6nt) max
within-season distance 8 aa (25nt)
4Neutral Epidemic Model
5Neutral Epidemic Model
6Strain frequencies are Poisson-distributed
Frequency of strain k
Mean number of mutations per virus moves forward
in time according to a molecular clock.
7Modeling antigenic drift and immunity
the epidemic-originating strain
-2
-1
0
1
2
3
4
8Modeling antigenic drift and immunity
the epidemic-originating strain
-2
-1
0
1
2
3
4
Distance between immunizing strain and
challenging strain determines level of
cross-immunity. We model this as an infectivity
reduction and say it wanes exponentially with
distance
9Non-neutral model
- Amino-acid replacements in influenza surface
proteins confer a fitness benefit via increased
transmissibility - Hosts have some immunity structure from
vaccination or previous infections - ( need both )
10Keeping track of hosts
q0 completely immune ( to I0 )
q30 completely naive
11Keeping track of variables
12Equations
13Equations
14Equations
fitness of strain k
15Population genetics
Define mean antigenic drift in virus population
as
This is the Price Equation, thus, the basic
influenza population dynamics can be viewed in a
standard population genetic framework.
16Under neutrality
17I(t)
18Define the excess antigenic drift as
How do you know when the epidemic ends?
19I(t)
20In general, how do the parameters affect the
model results?
21Partial correlations
immunity
immune-escape/mutation
22Partial correlations
immunity
immune-escape/mutation
23Host immunity drives antigenic drift
24Public health implications
- Vaccination strategies under-vaccination or
imperfect vaccination may cause much excess
antigenic drift. - Pandemic implications need to consider the
effects of vaccination during the 2nd year after
a pandemic, and their effects on the 3rd year
after a pandemic.
25Thanks
- Viggo Andreasen
- University of Roskile, Department of Mathematics
and Physics - Julia Gog
- Cambridge University, Department of Zoology
- Marc Feldman
- Stanford University, Department of Biological
Sciences - Freddy Christiansen
- University of Aarhus, Department of Biology
- Mike Macpherson
- Stanford University, Department of Biological
Sciences
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