Short course taught by Sarah Cobey and Trevor Bedford for SISMID 2017.
This module provides an introduction to modeling antigenically diverse pathogen populations. The first part of the course will introduce multistrain compartmental models and potential mechanisms of competition. These simple models will be contrasted with models with more complex assumptions (e.g., multiple forms of immunity and spatial structure). We will review how to statistically fit multistrain models to longitudinal data from individuals and time series data from populations. The second part of the course will show how, using the coalescent as a neutral expectation, evolutionary pressures can be quantified using sequence data. We will detail bioinformatic methods to build phylogenies, quantify selective pressures and estimate pathogen population structure. Methods to measure pathogen phenotypic similarity and antigenic evolution, such as antigenic cartography, will be introduced. Assumes material from Module 2 (Mathematical Models of Infectious Diseases). Material from Module 14 (Evolutionary Dynamics and Molecular Epidemiology of Viruses) would be helpful, but not required.
- Antigenically (and otherwise) variable pathogens
- Exercise: Assigning study groups and picking pathogens
- The biological basis of antigenic diversity: innate, cellular, and humoral responses
- Exercise: Review main immune interactions for chosen pathogens
- Serological binding and neutralization data
- Antigenic cartography
- Exercise: Antigenic map
- Original antigenic sin
- Exercise: Review serological data for chosen pathogens
- Statistical, compartmental, and agent-based models
- The many forms of competition
- Analytic solutions
- Numerical integration
- Exercise: Dynamics of a multistrain SIR system
- Maximum likelihood
- When to trust a model
- Tips & tricks: insights from natural experiments
- State-space reconstruction
- Exercise: Reviewing timeseries data for chosen pathogens
- Introduction to Kingman's coalescent
- Effective population size and demographic inference
- Exercise: Skyline plots
- Effects of selection on tree topology
- Introduction to phylogenetic inference
- Exercise: Parsimony reconstruction
- Maximum likelihood and Bayesian methods
- Exercise: Bayes' rule
- Introduction to Wright-Fisher model
- Wright-Fisher with mutation and genetic drift
- Exercise: Effects of mutation and population size on population dynamics
- Wright-Fisher with mutation, genetic drift and selection
- Exercise: Effects of positive and negative selection on population dynamics
- Tests of selection
- Exercise: Reviewing genetic data for chosen pathogens
- Mechanistic models
- Nonlinear forecasting
- Fitness model projections
- Exercise: Group presentations on specific pathogens
- VDJ recombination and somatic hypermutation
- Clonal dynamics and repertoire diversity
- Unsolved problems and vaccine design
All contents including slides, course materials and code are copyright 2015-2017 Sarah Cobey and Trevor Bedford. All slides / course materials (files ending in .html
and .md
) are licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 and all code (files ending in .py
and .ipynb
) is licensed under an MIT License.