"Ebola virus is thought to circulate in an
unknown animal reservoir and to only rarely
cross over into people. When the virus does
cross over, the effect has been devastating to
those people who are infected. Until recently,
the human disease outbreaks have been short lived, and the virus has had little opportunity
to adapt genetically to the human host," says
Jeremy Luban, a co-author of one of the papers
and Professor at the University of
Massachusetts Medical School. By the end of the Ebola virus disease epidemic
in 2016, more than 28,000 people had been
infected with the virus, and more than 11,000
people died from Ebola virus disease. To
investigate whether the virus might have
changed genetically in response to infection of such large numbers of people, the research
teams used publicly available Ebola virus
genomic sequences to track virus mutations.
The teams found that mutations of the gene
that encodes the Ebola virus glycoprotein
increased the virus' ability to infect cells of humans and other primates. By increasing
infectivity in human cells, it is possible that
these mutations increased Ebola virus spread
during the outbreak. "If you introduce a virus into a new host, like
humans, it may need to adapt to better infect
and spread in that host," says Jonathan Ball, a
virologist at the University of Nottingham and
co-author of the other paper. One particular
mutation, studied by both groups, emerged early in the outbreak just as case numbers
vastly increased and soon became the
dominant virus type circulating in the
outbreak. The Ebola virus mutations did not increase the
ability of Ebola virus to infect cells from other
mammalian species, including fruit bats, the
presumed natural host of Ebola virus. "We
found that, as Ebola virus was spreading from
human to human, it apparently didn't have to worry about maintaining its infectivity in
bats," Ball says. The research teams are continuing their work
to learn more about how these specific
mutations made the Ebola virus more
infectious for human cells. "It's important to
understand how these viruses evolve during
outbreaks," says Luban. "By doing so, we will be better prepared should these viruses spill
over to humans in the future."
No comments:
Post a Comment