World of viruses uncovered
Humans are surrounded by viruses in our daily lives
1445 viruses have been discovered in the most populous animals – those
without backbones such as insects and worms – in a Nature paper
that shows human diseases like influenza are derived from those present in
invertebrates.
A groundbreaking study of the
virosphere of the most populous animals – those without backbones such as
insects, spiders and worms and that live around our houses – has uncovered 1445
viruses, revealing people have only scratched the surface of the world of
viruses – but it is likely that only a few cause disease.
The meta-genomics research, a collaboration between the
University of Sydney and the Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention
in Beijing, was made possible by new technology that also provides a powerful
new way to determine what pathogens cause human diseases.
Professor Edward Holmes, from the Marie Bashir Institute
for Infectious Diseases & Biosecurity and the School of Life and Environmental Sciences, who
led the Sydney component of the project said although the research revealed
humans are surrounded by viruses in our daily lives, these did not transfer
easily to humans.
“This groundbreaking study re-writes the virology text book by
showing that invertebrates carry an extraordinary number of viruses – far more
than we ever thought,” Professor Holmes said.
“We have discovered that most groups of viruses that infect
vertebrates – including humans, such as those that cause well-known diseases
like influenza – are in fact derived from those present in invertebrates,” said
Professor Holmes, who is also based at the University’s multidisciplinary Charles Perkins
Centre.
The study suggests these viruses have been associated with
invertebrates for potentially billions of years, rather than millions of years
as had been believed, and that invertebrates are the true hosts for many types
of virus.
The paper, “Redefining the invertebrate RNA virosphere,” is
published today in Nature.
“Viruses are the most common source of DNA and RNA on earth,”
Professor Holmes said.
The findings suggest viruses from ribonucleic acid, known as RNA
– whose principal role is generally to carry instructions from DNA – are likely
to exist in every species of cellular life.
“It’s remarkable that invertebrates like insects carry so very
many viruses – no one had thought to look before because most of them had not
been associated with human-borne illnesses.”
Although insects such mosquitoes are well-known for their
potential to transmit viruses like zika and dengue, Professor Holmes stressed
that insects should not generally be feared because most viruses were not
transferable to humans and invertebrates played an important role in the
ecosystem.
Importantly, the same techniques used to discover these
invertebrate viruses could also be used to determine the cause of novel human
diseases, such as the controversial ‘Lyme-like disease’ that is claimed to
occur following tick bites.
“Our study utilised new techniques in meta-genomics, which we
are also using to provide insights into the causes of human-borne diseases,”
said Professor Holmes, who is also a National Health and Medical Research
Council Australia Fellow.
“The new, expensive technologies available to researchers which
have allowed us to do this landmark project, provide the ultimate diagnostic
tool.”
Professor Holmes and his collaborators are conducting human
studies using these new techniques to analyse Lyme-like disease and other
clinical syndromes.
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