Excerpts from a study on how deforestation altered one
pathogen's 'behavior.'

http://usinfo.state.gov/gi/Archive/2004/Aug/04-552969.html
It's a medical mystery: Exactly how do emerging
viruses such as SARS, HIV and hantavirus suddenly
burst forth, seemingly from nowhere, to start
infecting people and causing lethal diseases,
sometimes in epidemic proportions?

In research that shines light on this worrisome
phenomenon, a team of scientific sleuths based at the
University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston (UTMB)
has examined and tested viruses from two
late-20th-century outbreaks of Venezuelan equine
encephalitis (VEE)�a deadly illness that can cause
brain inflammation in horses and people�and compared
them with a very similar virus that doesn't tend to
infect horses or people. The outbreaks occurred in
1993 and 1996 in deforested regions of the Mexican
states of Chiapas and Oaxaca. In at least this case,
the solution to the mystery is, as Sherlock Holmes
might put it, "Evolutionary, my dear Watson."

The scientists cite evidence suggesting that by
replacing forests with ranchland along a
500-mile-long, 20- to 50-mile-wide swath of Mexico's
and Guatemala's Pacific coastal plains, people put
extreme evolutionary pressure on the strain of the VEE
virus formerly prevalent there. This VEE virus
previously was believed to be spread by a particular
sub-species of mosquito known as Culex (Melanoconion)
taeniopus as that feeds mainly on and infects rodents
and other small mammals but that is not thought to be
effective at transmitting the virus to horses or
people to cause epidemics...

...the researchers suggest that as deforestation wiped
out the Culex sub-species, a single genetic mutation
in the virus allowed it to move into a brand new
niche. The mutation increased its ability to infect
and be transmitted by an entirely different species of
mosquitoes, called Ochlerotatus taeniorhynchus�which
prefers for its blood-meal to feed on horses and other
large mammals.

The virus-altering mutation was described as a single
change, or substitution, in an amino-acid building
block of the envelope glycoprotein. The envelope
glycoprotein is the primary part of a virus that worms
its way into the cells of host species via the host
cells' receptors. In addition to facilitating the
virus's infection of a new vector species (as insects
and other organisms that transmit diseases are
called), the researchers found that this amino acid
substitution also had the effect of abruptly making
the virus much more infectious and easily transmitted
by this mosquito to horses and people.

No samples exist today of the VEE virus strain that
once circulated between mosquitoes and small mammals
in forests and swamps along the Chiapas and Oaxaca
coastal plains. But the researchers had access to
samples of a similar VEE virus widespread in the
nearby coastal Guatemalan community of La Avellana
between 1968 and 1980. By making a DNA copy of that
Guatemalan virus genome, the scientists were able to
prompt mutations in the lab that resulted in amino
acid changes in the envelope glycoprotein. Just one of
those changes in the Guatemalan virus, it turned out,
controlled the infectivity of the virus for the
mosquito species Ochlerotatus taeniorhynchus...

...VEE, like SARS, HIV and hantaviruses, is an RNA
virus, meaning that its genetic material is encoded in
a single-strand RNA molecule rather than the
double-stranded structure characteristic of the DNA
double helix. "RNA viruses have the capacity to mutate
so frequently that they are able to respond very
readily to new environmental opportunities we provide
them or selective pressures we put on them," Weaver
said. The result is a kind of microbiological arms
race in which the microbes keep pace with, or some
times surge ahead of, attempts to control them.

"Many microbiologists would agree that nature is a
more dangerous producer of new microbial threats than
any bioterrorist ever will be," Weaver concludes...


Well, certainly a more prolific one.  Should one of
the truly nasty viruses like Marburg or Ebola ever
become (or be made) as infective as influenza, we
would be in nearly as bad a state as Europe during the
various Black Death plagues.  Of course, becoming
'vectorized' (IOW transmissible by mosquitoes) would
be grim too.  I wonder what impact environmental
change has had on malaria transmission and genetics.

Debbi
Law Of Unintended Consequences Maru 


                
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