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What is biodiversity? - Press Release, 1998
News release, October 30, 1998, effective
immediately. For media inquiries, contact Caroline Booth Lara, Communications Specialist, (580)
224-6379.
email: cblara@noble.org
(Sidebar for Marilyn
Roossinck's award article)
What is a biodiversity inventory
of viruses?
by Marilyn J. Roossinck, Ph.D.
Associate Staff Scientist, The Noble
Foundation
Most of us are familiar with viruses
that make us sick, like the rhinoviruses, which cause the common cold, or influenza
virus, which causes the flu. Some farmers and ranchers may also know about viruses
like tomato spotted wilt virus or cucumber mosaic virus that can make plants
sick. Viruses can infect every known type of organism, from bacteria to humans.
Some of them, especially plant viruses, can also remain in a dormant state outside
of a host for long periods of time. However, almost nothing is known about viruses
that exist in most of the natural world, the world outside of humans and their
crop plants and domesticated animals.
Viruses are the smallest known life
forms. Some scientists don't even consider them alive. Many of them have only
three or four genes, while others like the poxviruses (the virus that caused
small pox is in this group) have more than a hundred genes. The genes are made
up of RNA or DNA, and each gene carries the blueprint for a viral protein. Viruses
are always parasites; that means that they can only live and grow inside the
cell of another living organism. They use the host cell to make the proteins
that are encoded by their genes. The proteins are used as enzymes (biological
molecules that catalyze a chemical reaction) or as a coating for the viral genes,
to allow them to pass to a new host.
Most viruses we know about disturb
the host cells when they infect them, making people and plants and animals sick.
Many people think all viruses cause disease, but this is only because no one
has ever studied the viruses that don't cause disease. But everyone probably
has plenty of viruses living inside them that don't cause any disease. Many
years ago when scientists first starting using monkey cells grown in culture
for medical research, they found more than 50 viruses in these cells, but only
one was ever studied because it was found to cause tumors. The rest had no apparent
effect on anything. About 250 different viruses have been described that infect
humans, most of which cause disease. If the same ratio is true in humans as
in monkeys, there would be more than 12,000 viruses that infect humans without
causing disease.
Why is it important to know about
viruses that don't cause disease? One important reason to know is because viruses
that don't cause disease in one organism (perhaps their natural host) can occasionally
jump into a new host species and cause severe disease. This is what happened
with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. HIV was originally a monkey virus. It
didn't cause any disease in monkeys, but it has been devastating in humans.
There are many other examples of "emerging" viruses, in both plants
and animals. Since we don't know anything about natural or "wild"
viruses, we don't have any tools to deal with emerging viruses quickly.
Another reason is to understand the
role that viruses play in a natural ecosystem. They can actually be a benefit
to their hosts. Sometimes infection with a virus that doesn't cause disease
will prevent infection of a virus that does cause disease. Sometimes viruses
are important in helping an organism reproduce. Viruses may also be important
in controlling populations in a balanced ecosystem.
Finally, a lot of what we know today
about molecular biology came from studying viruses, and viral enzymes have become
very important tools for biomedical research. Newly discovered viruses may offer
a lot of new information and new tools for research and medicine.
The problem is that we don't know
very much about viruses because we have only studied a very small fraction of
them. A biodiversity inventory of viruses will take a defined region and survey
every life form in that region plants, animals, insects, fungi, bacteria,
etc. for viruses. There are two regions where virus inventories are being
organized: the northwestern region of Costa Rica, and the Great Smokey Mountain
National Park. An inventory is an enormous task. It will take a lot of scientists
a long time to complete them, but even completing a small part of the inventories
will tell us a lot more than we know now about the unseen world of viruses that
surrounds us and is within us.
# # #
Noble Foundation
Scientist Wins Award
(FYI The Noble Foundation
is a privately funded, nonprofit organization headquartered in Ardmore, Okla.
The Foundation conducts agricultural and plant biology research; provides grants
to numerous other charitable and educational organizations; and assists farmers
and ranchers through educational and consultative programs.)
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