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The effect of parasite dose on disease severity in the rodent malaria Plasmodium chabaudi

Cite this dataset

Read, Andrew; Colegrave, Nick; Chan, Brian; Tims, Rebecca (2020). The effect of parasite dose on disease severity in the rodent malaria Plasmodium chabaudi [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.stqjq2c1k

Abstract

Experiments were designed to look at the relationship between infective dose and disease severity using two clones of Plasmodium chabaudi that differ in virulence. We asked whether there were dose–severity relationships, whether clone differences in virulence were maintained over a range of doses, and whether disease severity could be accounted for by parasite dynamics. Groups of mice were infected with parasite doses differing by an order of magnitude, ranging from 100 to 1×108 parasites. Infective dose affected the probability of death, but only with the more virulent clone. Dose also affected morbidity. For both clones, higher doses induced greater anaemia. Larger doses caused greater weight loss, but only for infections with the more virulent clone. Here, for a given dose, mice lost a fixed amount of weight, irrespective of their initial weight. Larger doses induced earlier mortality and morbidity than did lower dose treatments. Finally, dose affected parasite dynamics, with earlier and higher peak parasite densities in larger dose infections. All these effects were small relative to clone differences in disease severity, which were apparent across the range of doses. Dose effects were manifested through the timing and/or magnitude of peak parasite densities, broadly supporting the idea that dose affects disease severity by altering the time the host has to control parasite densities and ameliorate the effects of parasites. We discuss the possible efficacy of intervention strategies aimed at reducing human disease severity by reducing infective parasite dose.

Methods

Rodent malaria data on asexual parasite densities, weight and red blood cell densities throughout course of infection, for mice infected with different doses of parasites, for two parasite clones. The experiment was repeated in a second experimental block. Full methods are given in Timms, B., Colegrave, N., Chan, B.H.K., & Read, A.F. 2001. The effect of parasite dose on severity of disease in the rodent malaria Plasmodium chabaudi. Parasitology. 123: 1-11

Usage notes

See Timms, B., Colegrave, N., Chan, B.H.K., & Read, A.F. 2001. The effect of parasite dose on severity of disease in the rodent malaria Plasmodium chabaudi. Parasitology. 123: 1-11.

File names: b1, b2 = blocks 1 and 2. Anaemia = coulter count data; slides = parasitemias and parasite densities; weights=body weight

Funding

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council