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Does immunodominance maintain the diversity of the common cold?. William Koppelman University of Utah Master’s Oral Examination. Outline. Biological background Mathematical model Analysis/Simulations Results Conclusions. Biological Background. Rhinovirus characteristics Mutation
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Does immunodominance maintain the diversity of the common cold? William Koppelman University of Utah Master’s Oral Examination
Outline • Biological background • Mathematical model • Analysis/Simulations • Results • Conclusions
Biological Background • Rhinovirus characteristics • Mutation • Cross-reactivity • Immunodominance
Human Rhinovirus (HRV) • Co-circulation of over 100 strains • Cause ~50% of common colds • Limited to high level primates • Adults average 2-3 colds per year • Able to survive outside host for up to 3 days
HRV cont. • Sufficient dose is 1-30 particles of the virus • Attaches to ICAM-1 receptor of nasal cells • Replication of the virus and rupture of the host cell leads to infection of other nasal cells • Incubation period of 8-12 hours
HRV Mutation • RNA virus (typically have high mutation rates • Predicted to have 0.67 mutations per genome per replication • ~21 replications/infection ~14 mutations per infection • Suggested that new serotype created in 2 to 4 years from mutation (Stott & Walker, 1969)
HRV Cross-Reactivity • Cross-reactivity is the ability of B and T cells to react with an epitope on the antigen that they are not designated for. • A single HRV serotype is, on average, related to 3.75 other serotypes (Cooney et al., 1975). • Therefore, related serotypes may elicit similar immune responses.
HRV Immunodominance • A process in which the immune response focuses on only a few of the many potential epitopes. • Original antigenic sin is a process in which the sequence a host encounters antigenic variants influences the specificity of the immune response.
Mathematical Model • Discrete • Stochastic • Multiple Strain • SIRS dynamics
Model Components • HRV strains exist in a 2-D genetic space. • Domain is a 10 x 10 grid with periodic boundaries • Each 1 x 1 square represents a strain (i.e. 100 strains)
Model Components cont. • Mutation is a distance in the genetic domain. • Strains differ by ~10% or 800 sites • From derived mutation rate => ~50 infections to produce new serotype • Therefore, a mutation distance of 1/50 per infection is reasonable for the domain.
Model Components cont. • Serotypes will cross-react with related serotypes • This corresponds to an area around a particular strain in the genetic domain • Equivalent to a circle (radius Xim) not including the original serotype
Model Components cont. • Immunodominance will affect the transmission of HRV • The function of transmission will be related to the amount of variance from strains previously seen by the immune system • Step function is simplest, realistic form
Model components cont. • Sub-population of environmental surfaces obey SIS dynamics • Stochastic elements • Random contact (uniform) • Random mutation (normal) • Random recovery time (log-normal) • Random birth death (uniform) • Transmitting antigen compared against host’s immunity history
Analysis of continuous equivalent • Continuous time, single strain, SIR model with births/deaths (constant pop.) • Assuming the birth rate is much smaller than the recovery rate then i* is the equilibrium prevalence
Endemic analysis • Strain remains endemic if R0>1 • Using estimated parameters from discrete model • Human birth rate is O(10-4)
Sub-population analysis • Model with hosts following SIR dynamics and surfaces following SIS dynamics • System has two equilibria with the trivial solution never being unstable
Results • In order to consider mechanisms influencing serotype diversity, the virus must be endemic in hosts • Different functions of transmission should lead to endemic by increasing virus dynamics within cross-reactivity distance.
Conclusions • Virus must be endemic to analyze diversity • Serotype interactions are crucial to virus remaining endemic • Once endemic, the diversity of serotypes will evolve through serotype interactions • Serotype interactions are governed by immunodominance
Thanks • Dr. Adler • Drs. Keener & Coley • Dr. Guy • Brynja Kohler • John Zobitz • Dr. Sherry