Even deadly prions may be widespread in nature if they spread by infection faster than they kill off their hosts. The yeast prions [PSI+] and [URE3] (amyloids of Sup35p and Ure2p) were not found in 70 wild strains, while [PIN+] (amyloid of Rnq1p) was found in ∼16% of the same population. Yeast prion infection occurs only by mating, balancing the detrimental effects of carrying the prion. We estimated the frequency of outcross mating as about 1% of mitotic doublings from the known detriment of carrying the 2-μm DNA plasmid (∼1%) and its frequency in wild populations (38/70). We also estimated the fraction of total matings that are outcross matings (∼23-46%) from the fraction of heterozygosity at the highly polymorphic RNQ1 locus (∼46% [PIN+] of S. cerevisiae are parallel in-register β-sheet amyloids of Sup35p, Ure2p, and Rnq1p, respectively (7-10); the [Het-s] prion of P. anserina is a β-helical amyloid of the HET-s protein (11). Sup35p is a subunit of the translation termination factor (12, 13), Ure2p is a regulator of nitrogen catabolism (14), and Rnq1p has no known function (15).The mammalian prions are uniformly lethal but nonetheless are found in wild animals. For example, chronic wasting disease of deer and elk is found in ∼10% of wild deer in parts of Wyoming, Colorado, Illinois, and Wisconsin (16). Evidently, infectious spread outpaces the lethal effects on the animals. The [Het-s] prion of P. anserina is involved in heterokaryon incompatibility, a normal function of that species, and, as a result, ∼80% of wild strains with the appropriate chromosomal genotype carry the [Het-s] (20), a result confirmed by others (21) and which we interpreted as meaning that they are substantially detrimental. Nonetheless, others argue that these prions are beneficial, promoting survival by allowing cells to resist stress (22, 23), although the reported effects were not reproducible with the same strains (24). It is reported further that certain stress conditions increase the frequency of[PSI+] when assayed using a synthetic Sup35p with an elevated prion-forming tendency (25). Here we test these conditions for an effect on prion formation by the wild-type Sup35p.Our argument, that the rare occurrence of an infectious agent in nature implies pathologic effects on the host, relies on outcross mating being a fairly frequent event. Yeast prions spread only by mating (there is no extracellular prion species in the replication cycle), and if outcross mating is extremely rare, then yeast prions could be rare even if their effects on the host were neutral. Yeast spores germinate with mating type either a or α, and a and α spores from the same tetrad may mate (intratetrad or brothersister). The mating-type switching system (homothallism) results in the clone from a single germinated spore becoming a mixture of a and α cells which can mate with each other. These two kinds of "selfing" are unlikely to spread any virus, plasmid, or prion, because probably both mating partners will lack the element, or both will have it. Alternat...