The Viruses Portal
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Viruses are small infectious agents that can replicate only inside the living cells of an organism. Viruses infect all forms of life, including animals, plants, fungi, bacteria and archaea. They are found in almost every ecosystem on Earth and are the most abundant type of biological entity, with millions of different types, although only about 6,000 viruses have been described in detail. Some viruses cause disease in humans, and others are responsible for economically important diseases of livestock and crops.
Virus particles (known as virions) consist of genetic material, which can be either DNA or RNA, wrapped in a protein coat called the capsid; some viruses also have an outer lipid envelope. The capsid can take simple helical or icosahedral forms, or more complex structures. The average virus is about 1/100 the size of the average bacterium, and most are too small to be seen directly with an optical microscope.
The origins of viruses are unclear: some may have evolved from plasmids, others from bacteria. Viruses are sometimes considered to be a life form, because they carry genetic material, reproduce and evolve through natural selection. However they lack key characteristics (such as cell structure) that are generally considered necessary to count as life. Because they possess some but not all such qualities, viruses have been described as "organisms at the edge of life".
Selected disease
Hepatitis B is an infectious inflammatory disease of the liver caused by the hepatitis B virus (HBV), a hepadnavirus. It affects humans and possibly other great apes. The virus is transmitted by exposure to infectious blood or some body fluids. Mother-to-child transmission is a major route in endemic countries. HBV is 50–100 times more infectious than HIV. The virus replicates in liver cells, and enters the blood where viral proteins and antiviral antibodies are found.
Acute infection is often asymptomatic but can cause liver inflammation resulting in vomiting, jaundice and, rarely, death. Over 95% of infected adults and older children clear the infection spontaneously, developing protective immunity. Only 30% of children aged 1–6 years and 5% of newborns infected perinatally clear the infection. Chronic hepatitis B may eventually progress to cirrhosis and liver cancer, causing death in around 40% of those chronically infected. The virus has infected humans since at least the Bronze Age, with HBV DNA being found in 4,500-year-old human remains. About a third of the global population has been infected at one point in their lives, including nearly 350 million who are chronic carriers. The virus is endemic in East Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. Infection can be prevented by vaccination.
Selected image
Some viruses, such as the T7 bacteriophage, encode their own RNA polymerase, the enzyme that makes messenger RNA based on a DNA template. The T7 enzyme has a single subunit, and is more like chloroplast and mitochondrial enzymes than those of bacteria or the cell.
Credit: Thomas Splettstoesser (25 June 2007)
In the news
26 February: In the ongoing pandemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), more than 110 million confirmed cases, including 2.5 million deaths, have been documented globally since the outbreak began in December 2019. WHO
18 February: Seven asymptomatic cases of avian influenza A subtype H5N8, the first documented H5N8 cases in humans, are reported in Astrakhan Oblast, Russia, after more than 100,0000 hens died on a poultry farm in December. WHO
14 February: Seven cases of Ebola virus disease are reported in Gouécké, south-east Guinea. WHO
7 February: A case of Ebola virus disease is detected in North Kivu Province of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. WHO
4 February: An outbreak of Rift Valley fever is ongoing in Kenya, with 32 human cases, including 11 deaths, since the outbreak started in November. WHO
21 November: The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) gives emergency-use authorisation to casirivimab/imdevimab, a combination monoclonal antibody (mAb) therapy for non-hospitalised people twelve years and over with mild-to-moderate COVID-19, after granting emergency-use authorisation to the single mAb bamlanivimab earlier in the month. FDA 1, 2
18 November: The outbreak of Ebola virus disease in Équateur Province, Democratic Republic of the Congo, which started in June, has been declared over; a total of 130 cases were recorded, with 55 deaths. UN
Selected article
Reverse transcriptase is an enzyme that generates complementary DNA from an RNA template, in contrast to the usual information flow from DNA to RNA. It was discovered in Rous sarcoma virus and murine leukaemia virus, two retroviruses, by Howard Temin and David Baltimore, working independently in 1970, for which the two shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Reverse transcription is essential for the replication of retroviruses, allowing them to integrate into the host genome as a provirus. The enzyme is a target for reverse-transcriptase inhibitors, a major class of anti-HIV drugs. Reverse transcription is also used by Hepadnaviridae and Caulimoviridae, DNA viruses that replicate via an RNA intermediate, such as hepatitis B. The process is important in the movement of retrotransposons, a type of mobile genetic element, and in the extension of chromosome ends in eukaryotic genomes. The enzyme is widely used in the laboratory for molecular cloning, RNA sequencing, polymerase chain reaction and genome analysis.
Selected outbreak
The 2001 foot-and-mouth outbreak included 2,000 cases of the disease in cattle and sheep across the UK. The source was a Northumberland farm where pigs had been fed infected meat that had not been adequately sterilised. The initial cases were reported in February. The disease was concentrated in western and northern England, southern Scotland and Wales, with Cumbria being the worst-affected area. A small outbreak occurred in the Netherlands, and there were a few cases elsewhere in Europe.
The UK outbreak was controlled by the beginning of October. Control measures included stopping livestock movement and slaughtering over 6 million cows and sheep. Public access to farmland and moorland was also restricted (pictured), greatly reducing tourism in affected areas, particularly in the Lake District. Vaccination was used in the Netherlands, but not in the UK due to concerns that vaccinated livestock could not be exported. The outbreak cost an estimated £8 billion in the UK.
Selected quotation
“ | A virus is not an individual organism in the ordinary sense of the term, but something which could almost be called a stream of biological patterns. | ” |
Recommended articles
Viruses & Subviral agents: bat virome • elephant endotheliotropic herpesvirus • HIV • introduction to viruses • Playa de Oro virus • poliovirus • prion • rotavirus
• virus
Diseases: colony collapse disorder • common cold • croup • dengue fever • gastroenteritis • Guillain–Barré syndrome • hepatitis B • hepatitis C • hepatitis E • herpes simplex • HIV/AIDS • influenza
• meningitis
• myxomatosis • polio
• pneumonia • shingles • smallpox
Epidemiology & Interventions: 2007 Bernard Matthews H5N1 outbreak • Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations • Disease X • 2009 flu pandemic • HIV/AIDS in Malawi • polio vaccine • Spanish flu • West African Ebola virus epidemic
Virus–Host interactions: antibody • host • immune system • parasitism • RNA interference
Methodology: metagenomics
Social & Media: And the Band Played On • Contagion • "Flu Season" • Frank's Cock • Race Against Time: Searching for Hope in AIDS-Ravaged Africa
• social history of viruses
• "Steve Burdick" • "The Time Is Now" • "What Lies Below"
People: Brownie Mary • Macfarlane Burnet • Bobbi Campbell • Aniru Conteh • people with hepatitis C
• HIV-positive people
• Bette Korber • Henrietta Lacks • Linda Laubenstein • Barbara McClintock
• poliomyelitis survivors
• Joseph Sonnabend • Eli Todd • Ryan White
Selected virus
Sputnik virophage is a subviral agent, discovered in 2008, that infects Acanthamoeba protozoa. It is a satellite virus of giant viruses of the Mimiviridae family. It requires a mimivirus to infect the cell simultaneously to replicate, hijacking the virus factories that mimivirus creates and impairing its replication. Sputnik was the first satellite to be shown to inhibit the replication of its associated helper virus. Such viruses have been termed "virophages" or "virus eaters" – by analogy with bacteriophages, viruses that parasitise bacteria – but the distinction between virophages and classical satellite viruses that infect plants, arthropods and mammals is disputed. Three Sputnik types are now known, and other virophages have since been discovered, now classified in the Lavidaviridae family, including the Zamilon, Mavirus and Organic Lake virophages. All virophages that have been characterised infect protists and all rely on nucleocytoplasmic large DNA viruses as helpers.
Sputnik's non-enveloped icosahedral capsid is 74 nm in diameter, and contains a circular double-stranded DNA genome of 18.3 kb. Three of its 21 predicted protein-coding genes are thought to derive from Acanthamoeba polyphaga mimivirus, suggesting that virophages and giant viruses can swap genes during their joint infection of Acanthamoeba, and also that virophages might mediate horizontal gene transfer between giant viruses.
Did you know?
- ...that elephant endotheliotropic herpesvirus, found mostly among young captive Asian elephants (pictured), can have a fatality rate of up to 90%?
- ...that epidemiologist Joseph L. Melnick found that polio chiefly spread through fecal contamination, usually by soiled hands, and that the poliovirus could survive for extended periods in sewage?
- ...that a global advisory committee has been monitoring rapidly developing COVID-19 vaccines against a background of growing misinformation and vaccine hesitancy?
- ...that sexual-health doctor Mags Portman and activist Greg Owen worked together to provide accessible HIV medication, preventing thousands of new HIV diagnoses in the United Kingdom?
- ...that before the Hershey–Chase experiment confirmed the role of DNA, scientists believed that genes were carried by proteins?
Selected biography
Peter Piot (born 17 February 1949) is a Belgian virologist and public health specialist, known for his work on Ebola virus and HIV.
During the first outbreak of Ebola in Yambuku, Zaire in 1976, Piot was one of a team that discovered the filovirus in a blood sample. He and his colleagues travelled to Zaire to help to control the outbreak, and showed that the virus is transmitted via blood and during preparation of bodies for burial. He advised WHO during the West African Ebola epidemic of 2014–16.
In the 1980s, Piot participated in collaborative projects in Burundi, Côte d'Ivoire, Kenya, Tanzania and Zaire, including Project SIDA in Kinshasa, the first international project on AIDS in Africa, which provided the foundations for understanding HIV infection in that continent. He was the founding director of UNAIDS, and has served as president of the International AIDS Society and assistant director of the WHO Global HIV/AIDS Programme. As of 2020, he directs the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine.
In this month
1 July 1796: Edward Jenner first challenged James Phipps with variolation, showing that cowpox inoculation is protective against smallpox
3 July 1980: Structure of southern bean mosaic virus solved by Michael Rossmann and colleagues
6 July 1885: Louis Pasteur (pictured) gave rabies vaccine to Joseph Meister
10 July 1797: Jenner submitted paper on Phipps and other cases to the Royal Society; it was read to the society but not published
14–20 July 1968: First International Congress for Virology held in Helsinki
16 July 2012: FDA approved tenofovir/emtricitabine (Truvada) for prophylactic use against HIV; first prophylactic antiretroviral
19 July 2013: Pandoravirus described, with a genome twice as large as Megavirus
22 July 1966: International Committee on Nomenclature of Viruses (later the ICTV) founded
25 July 1985: Film star Rock Hudson made his AIDS diagnosis public, increasing public awareness of the disease
28 July 2010: First global World Hepatitis Day
Selected intervention
The first Ebola vaccine was approved in 2019. Developed by the Public Health Agency of Canada, rVSV-ZEBOV is based on an attenuated recombinant vesicular stomatitis virus, genetically modified to express a surface glycoprotein of Zaire ebolavirus, and is estimated to be 97.5% effective. In the Kivu Ebola epidemic of 2018–20, a ring vaccination strategy was employed to protect direct and indirect contacts of infected people, as well as health workers, and around 300,000 people were vaccinated with rVSV-ZEBOV. A second vaccine was approved in 2020; this uses two different doses – a vector based on human adenovirus serotype 26 used to prime, boosted around eight weeks later by modified vaccinia Ankara (based on a heavily attenuated vaccinia virus) – and is not suitable for response to an outbreak. The efficacy is unknown. Multiple other vaccine candidates are in development to prevent Ebola, including replication-deficient adenovirus vectors, replication-competent human parainfluenza 3 vectors, and virus-like nanoparticle preparations.
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