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Why did the  Wolbachia  transinfection cross the road? drift, deterministic dynamics, and disease control
Author(s) -
Turelli Michael,
Barton Nicholas H.
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
evolution letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2056-3744
DOI - 10.1002/evl3.270
Subject(s) - wolbachia , cytoplasmic incompatibility , biological dispersal , bistability , population , biology , allee effect , fixation (population genetics) , evolutionary biology , statistical physics , ecology , genetics , physics , demography , host (biology) , quantum mechanics , sociology , gene
Maternally inherited Wolbachia transinfections are being introduced into natural mosquito populations to reduce the transmission of dengue, Zika, and other arboviruses. Wolbachia ‐induced cytoplasmic incompatibility provides a frequency‐dependent reproductive advantage to infected females that can spread transinfections within and among populations. However, because transinfections generally reduce host fitness, they tend to spread within populations only after their frequency exceeds a critical threshold. This produces bistability with stable equilibrium frequencies at both 0 and 1, analogous to the bistability produced by underdominance between alleles or karyotypes and by population dynamics under Allee effects. Here, we analyze how stochastic frequency variation produced by finite population size can facilitate the local spread of variants with bistable dynamics into areas where invasion is unexpected from deterministic models. Our exemplar is the establishment of w Mel Wolbachia in the Aedes aegypti population of Pyramid Estates (PE), a small community in far north Queensland, Australia. In 2011, w Mel was stably introduced into Gordonvale, separated from PE by barriers to A. aegypti dispersal. After nearly 6 years during which w Mel was observed only at low frequencies in PE, corresponding to an apparent equilibrium between immigration and selection, w Mel rose to fixation by 2018. Using analytic approximations and statistical analyses, we demonstrate that the observed fixation of w Mel at PE is consistent with both stochastic transition past an unstable threshold frequency and deterministic transformation produced by steady immigration at a rate just above the threshold required for deterministic invasion. The indeterminacy results from a delicate balance of parameters needed to produce the delayed transition observed. Our analyses suggest that once Wolbachia transinfections are established locally through systematic introductions, stochastic “threshold crossing” is likely to only minimally enhance spatial spread, providing a local ratchet that slightly—but systematically—aids area‐wide transformation of disease‐vector populations in heterogeneous landscapes.

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