WORLD OF MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY Epidemics and pandemics
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specificity. The active site of an enzyme consists of two key
regions, the catalytic site, which interacts with the substrate
during the reaction, and the binding site, the chemical groups
of the enzyme that bind the substrate, allowing the interactions
at the catalytic site to occur. The crevice of the active site cre-
ates a microenvironment whose properties are critical for
catalysis. Environmental factors influencing enzyme activity
include pH, polarity and hydrophobicity of amino acids in the
active site, and a precise arrangement of the chemical groups
of the enzyme and its substrate.
Enzymes have high catalytic power, high substrate
specificity, and are generally most active in aqueous solvents
at mild temperature and physiological pH. Most enzymes cat-
alyze the transfer of electrons, atoms, or groups of atoms.
There are thousands of known enzymes, but most can be cat-
egorized according to their biological activities into six major
classes: oxidoreductases, transferases, hydrolases, lyases,
isomerases, and ligases.
Enzymes generally have an optimum pH range in which
they are most active. The pH of the environment will affect the
ionization state of catalytic groups at the active site and the
ionization of the substrate. Electrostatic interactions are there-
fore controlled by pH. The pH of a reaction may also control
the conformation of the enzyme by influencing amino acids
critical for the three-dimensional shape of the macromolecule.
Inhibitors can diminish the activity of an enzyme by
altering the binding of substrates. Inhibitors may resemble the
structure of the substrate, thereby binding the enzyme and
competing for the correct substrate. Inhibitors may be large
organic molecules, small molecules, or ions. They can be used
for chemotherapeutic treatment of diseases.
Regulatory enzymes are characterized by increased or
decreased activity in response to chemical signals. Metabolic
pathways are regulated by controlling the activity of one or
more enzymatic steps along that path. Regulatory control
allows cells to meet changing demands for energy and
metabolites.
See alsoBiochemical analysis techniques; Biotechnology;
Bioremediation; Cloning, application of cloning to biological
problems; Enzyme induction and repression; Enzyme-linked
immunosorbant assay (ELISA); Food preservation; Food
safety; Immunologic therapies; Immunological analysis
techniques
EEpidemics and pandemicsPIDEMICS AND PANDEMICS
Epidemics are outbreaks of disease of bacterial or viral origin
that involve many people in a localized area at the same time.
An example of an epidemic is the hemorrhagic fever outbreak
caused by the Ebola virusin Zaire in 1976. When Ebola fever
occurs, it tends to be confined to a localized area, and can
involve many people. If an outbreak is worldwide in scope, it
is referred to as a pandemic. The periodic outbreaks of
influenzacan be pandemic.
Some maladies can be both epidemic and pandemic.
This can be a function of time. An example is Acquired
ImmunodeficiencySyndrome (AIDS). Initially, the acknowl-
edged viral agent of AIDS, the Human Immunodeficiency
Virus(HIV), was prevalent in a few geographic regions, such
as Haiti, and among certain groups, such as homosexual men
in the United States. In these regions and populations, the
infection was epidemic in scope. Since these early days, AIDS
has expanded to become a worldwide disease that cuts across
all racial, cultural, economic and geographic categories. AIDS
is now a pandemic.
Influenza can also be epidemic or pandemic. In this
case, the antigenic composition of the viral agent of the dis-
ease determines whether the virus becomes global in its distri-
bution or not. Antigenic variants of the virus that are quite
different from varieties that have preceded it, and so require an
adaptive response by the immune system before the
infection can be successfully coped with, tend to become
pandemic.
Pandemics of influenza can be devastating. The huge
number of people who become ill can tax the capability of a
regions’ or countries’ health infrastructure. The preparation to
attempt to thwart an influenza pandemic is immense. For
example, the preparation and distribution of the required vac-
cine, and the subsequent inoculation of those who might be at
risk, is a huge undertaking. In human terms, influenza pan-
demics exact a huge toll in loss of life. Even thought the death
rate from influenza is typically less than one percent of those
who are infected, a pandemic involving hundreds of millions
of people will result in a great many deaths.
Epidemics and pandemics have been a part of human
history for millennia. An example of this long-standing pres-
ence is cholera. Cholera is an infection that is caused by a
bacterium called Vibrio cholerae. The bacterium is present in
the feces, and can be spread directly to drinking water, and to
food via handling of the food in an unhygienic manner. The
resulting watery diarrhea and dehydration, which can lead to
collapse of body functions and death if treatment is not
prompt, has devastated populations all over the world since
the beginning of recorded history. The first reports that can be
identified as cholera date back to 1563 in India. This and
other epidemics in that part of the world lead to the spread of
the infection. By 1817 cholera had become pandemic. The
latest cholera pandemic began in 1961 in Indonesia. The out-
break spread through Europe, Asia, Africa, and finally
reached South America in the early 1990s. In Latin America,
cholera still causes 400,000 cases of illness and over 4000
deaths each year.
Influenza is another example of am illness that has been
present since antiquity. Indeed, the philosopher Hippocrates
first described an influenza outbreak in 412 B.C. There were
three major outbreaks of influenza in the sixteenth century
(the one occurring in 1580 being a pandemic), and at least
three pandemics in the eighteenth century. In the twentieth
century there were pandemics in 1918, 1957, and 1968. These
were caused by different antigenic types of the influenza virus.
The 1918 pandemic is thought to have killed some 30 million
people, more than were killed in World War I.
A common theme of epidemics and pandemics through-
out history has been the association of outbreaks and sanitary
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