What Have We Learned by Resurrecting the 1918 Influenza Virus?

IF 8.1 1区 医学 Q1 VIROLOGY Annual Review of Virology Pub Date : 2023-09-29 DOI:10.1146/annurev-virology-111821-104408
Brad Gilbertson, Kanta Subbarao
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Abstract

The 1918 Spanish influenza pandemic was one of the deadliest infectious disease events in recorded history, resulting in approximately 50-100 million deaths worldwide. The origins of the 1918 virus and the molecular basis for its exceptional virulence remained a mystery for much of the 20th century because the pandemic predated virologic techniques to isolate, passage, and store influenza viruses. In the late 1990s, overlapping fragments of influenza viral RNA preserved in the tissues of several 1918 victims were amplified and sequenced. The use of influenza reverse genetics then permitted scientists to reconstruct the 1918 virus entirely from cloned complementary DNA, leading to new insights into the origin of the virus and its pathogenicity. Here, we discuss some of the advances made by resurrection of the 1918 virus, including the rise of innovative molecular research, which is a topic in the dual use debate.

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我们从1918年流感病毒的复活中学到了什么?
1918年西班牙流感大流行是有记录以来最致命的传染病事件之一,导致全球约5000万至1亿人死亡。1918年病毒的起源及其异常毒力的分子基础在20世纪的大部分时间里仍然是个谜,因为这场大流行早于分离、传播和储存流感病毒的病毒学技术。20世纪90年代末,保存在1918名受害者组织中的流感病毒RNA的重叠片段被扩增并测序。流感反向遗传学的使用使科学家能够完全从克隆的互补DNA中重建1918年的病毒,从而对病毒的起源及其致病性有了新的见解。在这里,我们讨论1918年病毒复活所取得的一些进展,包括创新分子研究的兴起,这是两用辩论中的一个话题。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
19.40
自引率
0.90%
发文量
28
期刊介绍: The Annual Review of Virology serves as a conduit for disseminating thrilling advancements in our comprehension of viruses spanning animals, plants, bacteria, archaea, fungi, and protozoa. Its reviews illuminate novel concepts and trajectories in basic virology, elucidating viral disease mechanisms, exploring virus-host interactions, and scrutinizing cellular and immune responses to virus infection. These reviews underscore the exceptional capacity of viruses as potent probes for investigating cellular function.
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