The story of how the deadliest virus to humans was revived
- Scientists routinely engineer new viruses in the laboratory.
- They make changes to the genetic material of existing viruses to create new variants that may or may not exist naturally.
- It allows scientists to compare the properties of the edited variants to their natural counterparts and infer the role of the changes that they made.
Virus from Scratch
- While scientists can easily introduce changes to the genetic material of a virus, they can’t create a virus from scratch.
- Scientists take samples from patients, make more copies of the genetic material using a technique called a polymerase chain reaction (PCR).
- PCR is a technique used to make numerous copies of a specific segment of DNA quickly and accurately.
- They use it to understand the sequence of bases that makeup its genetic material.
- Once they have the sequence, they can tweak it.
Meet H and N
- Researchers designate influenza strains using the types of two genes present in the virus, named haemagglutinin and neuraminidase, designated ‘H’ and ‘N’.
- There are 18 subtypes of haemagglutinin, labelled H1-H18 and 11 types of neuraminidase, N1-N11, in nature.
- An influenza virus contains one of each and is classified accordingly.
- For example, the 1918 epidemic was caused by the H1N1 variant and the 1957 Asian flu was caused by H2N2.
- There exist further sub-variations of these primary classifications, where different mutations exist in the ‘H’ and ‘N’ genes.
- These can further modify a virus’s properties.
- The 1918 flu and the 2009 swine flu were both caused by H1N1 but they varied in disease severity due to the presence of changes on the H1 and N1 genes.
Full Genetic Sequence
- The samples of the deadly 1918 H1N1 influenza virus allowed Taubenberger and Reid to determine the virus’s full genetic sequence.
- The sequence allowed other scientists to unearth insights into the virus’s beginnings.
- It appeared to have an ancestor that was avian in origin.
- However, the ancestral virus that infected birds had switched to infecting humans or swine.
- It had also been circulating for a few years, getting better at its job, before it vanished.
- Sometime later, it reemerged as one of the deadliest pathogens ever to afflict humankind.
Conclusion
- But for all these remarkable insights, the virus’s genetic sequence revealed nothing dramatic about the virus itself.
- It failed to explain how it could infect people so quickly or why it killed millions.
- There were minor variations in the genetic material but this is to be expected for RNA viruses.
- There remains but one way to answer that question, to recreate the virus itself.