Biological and biomedical implications of the co-evolution of pathogens and their hosts
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Date
12/2002Author
Woolhouse, Mark EJ
Webster, Joanne P
Domingo, Esteban
Charlesworth, Brian
Levin, Bruce R
Metadata
Abstract
Co-evolution between host and pathogen is, in principle, a powerful determinant of the biology and
genetics of infection and disease. Yet co-evolution has proven difficult to demonstrate rigorously in
practice, and co-evolutionary thinking is only just beginning to inform medical or veterinary research in
any meaningful way, even though it can have a major influence on how genetic variation in biomedically
important traits is interpreted. Improving our understanding of the biomedical significance of co-evolution
will require changing the way in which we look for it, complementing the phenomenological
approach traditionally favored by evolutionary biologists with the exploitation of the extensive data
becoming available on the molecular biology and molecular genetics of host–pathogen interactions.