Clinical applications of pathogen phylogenies

Archive ouverte

Hartfield, Matthew | Murall, Carmen Lia | Alizon, Samuel

Edité par CCSD ; Elsevier -

International audience. Innovative sequencing techniques now allow the routine access of whole genomes of pathogens, generating vast amounts of data. Phylogenetic trees are a common method for synthesizing this information. Unfortunately, these trees are often seen only as a visual support to guide researchers, thus neglecting the value of employing phylogenetic techniques to perform hypothesis testing on clinical questions. These include investigating how a pathogen spreads within a patient, or whether the infection severity (often measured by virus load) is controlled by viral genetics. Advances in methodology mean the time is ripe for combining phylogenies with clinical data to better understand and fight infectious diseases.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Introducing the outbreak threshold in epidemiology

Archive ouverte | Hartfield, Matthew | CCSD

International audience. When a pathogen is rare in a host population, there is a chance that it will die out because of stochastic effects instead of causing a major epidemic. Yet no criteria exist to determine when...

Epithelial stratification shapes infection dynamics

Archive ouverte | Murall, Carmen Lia | CCSD

International audience. Infections of stratified epithelia contribute to a large group of common diseases, such as dermatological conditions and sexually transmitted diseases. To investigate how epithelial structure...

Epidemiological feedbacks affect evolutionary emergence of pathogens

Archive ouverte | Hartfield, Matthew | CCSD

International audience

Chargement des enrichissements...