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Archive for October 6th, 2005

Scientists have resurrected the influenza virus that killed an estimated 50 million people in 1918, the worst pandemic in history.

They used a process known as ‘reverse genetics’ to reconstruct a living flu virus from dead fragments retrieved from stored hospital tissue samples and a corpse that had been buried in the frozen tundra of Alaska for 80 years. Tests on animals and human lung cells showed that the reconstructed virus retained the highly lethal properties that made the 1918 strain of influenza such a killer.

Scientists working for the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, Georgia, said the virus was being kept in one of its high-security laboratories.

The reconstructed virus quickly killed laboratory mice and chick embryos when they were infected with the agent. It also grew rapidly in cultured human lung cells.

In contrast, most flu viruses that infect humans today show none of these lethal characteristics, said Terrence Tumpey, whose study is published today in the journal Science.

The influenza outbreak of 1918 was the largest of the three flu pandemics of the 20th century. A separate study in the journal Nature reveals that the 1918 virus was in effect an avian flu virus that had jumped the species barrier into humans.

Copyright 2005 Independent Newspapers UK Limited
Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights Reserved.

Information provided by: Findarticles.com

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Scientists have pieced together the 1918 flu virus, resurrecting for the first time the cause of a pandemic that killed tens of millions worldwide.

Two research teams report separately today that the virus, which was re-created using genetic information from a 1918 victim exhumed from Alaskan permafrost in 1997, offers clues to the virulence of the avian flu strain that has killed 65 people in Southeast Asia and is the focus of a global meeting of health experts today in Washington, D.C.

Doctors say the research might provide information that could help prevent the next pandemic. “We have to understand much better how pandemics like this evolve their virulence,” says Anthony Fauci of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

Like avian flu, the 1918 virus is closer to the current bird flu viruses than those adapted to pigs or humans. Studies in mice suggest that it’s …


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