Source
Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Pembroke Place, Liverpool L3 5QA, UK. hastings@liverpool.ac.uk
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Parasites incur periodic mutations which must ultimately be eliminated to maintain their genetic integrity.
METHODS:
It is hypothesised that these mutations are eliminated not by the conventional mechanisms of competition between parasites in different hosts but primarily by competition between parasites within the same infection.
RESULTS:
This process is enhanced by the production of a large number of parasites within individual infections, and this may significantly contribute to parasitic virulence.
CONCLUSIONS:
Several features of the most virulent human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum can usefully be re-interpreted in this light and lend support to this interpretation. More generally, it constitutes a novel explanation for the evolution of virulence in a wider range of microparasites.