Microbiology and Immunology

(Axel Boer) #1
WORLD OF MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY Vozrozhdeniye island

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relatively rare except for individuals who have the inherited
disorder sickle cell anemia. Canine and feline parvovirus
infections are fatal, but a vaccine against parvovirus is avail-
able for dogs and cats.
Orthomyxoviruses cause influenza (“flu”). This highly
contagious viral infection can quickly assume epidemic pro-
portions, given the right environmental conditions. An
influenza outbreak is considered an epidemic when more than
10% of the population is infected. Antibodies that are made
against one type of rhinovirus are often ineffective against
other types of viruses. For this reason, most people are sus-
ceptible to colds from season to season.
These helical, enveloped, single-stranded RNA viruses
cause pneumonia, croup, measles, and mumps in children. A
vaccine against measles and mumps has greatly reduced the
incidence of these diseases in the United States. In addition, a
paramyxovirus called respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)
causes bronchiolitis (an infection of the bronchioles) and
pneumonia.
Flaviviruses (from the Latin word meaning “yellow”)
cause insect-carried diseases including yellow fever, an often-
fatal disease characterized by high fever and internal bleeding.
Flaviviruses are single-stranded RNA viruses.
The two filoviruses, Ebola virusand Marburg virus, are
among the most lethal of all human viruses. Both cause severe
fevers accompanied by internal bleeding, which eventually
kills the victim. The fatality rate of Marburg is about 60%,
while the fatality rate of Ebola virus approaches 90%. Both are
transmitted through contact with body fluids. Marburg and
Ebola also infect primates.
Rhabdoviruses are bullet-shaped, single-stranded RNA
viruses. They are responsible for rabies, a fatal disease that
affects dogs, rodents, and humans.
Retroviruses are unique viruses. They are double-
stranded RNA viruses that contain an enzyme called reverse
transcriptase. Within the host cell, the virus uses reverse tran-
scriptase to make a DNA copy from its RNA genome. In all
other organisms, RNA is synthesized from DNA. Cells
infected with retroviruses are the only living things that
reverse this process.
The first retroviruses discovered were viruses that
infect chickens. The Rous sarcoma virus, discovered in the
1950s by Peyton Rous(1879–1970), was also the first virus
that was linked to cancer. However, it was not until 1980 that
the first human retrovirus was discovered. Called Human T-
cell Leukemia Virus (HTLV), this virus causes a form of
leukemia called adult T-cell leukemia. In 1983, another
human retrovirus, Human ImmunodeficiencyVirus, the virus
responsible for AIDS, was discovered independently by
two researchers. Both HIV and HTLV are transmitted in
body fluids.

See alsoBacteria and bacterial infection; Epidemics, viral;
Immune stimulation, as a vaccine; Immunity, active, passive,
and delayed; Immunology; Virology; Virus replication

VITAL STAINS•seeLABORATORY TECHNIQUES IN

MICROBIOLOGY

VVozrozhdeniye islandOZROZHDENIYE ISLAND

Vozrozhdeniye island is located in the Aral Sea approximately
1,300 miles (2,092 km) to the east of Moscow. The island was
used as biological weapons test site for the former Soviet
Union. Now decommissioned, the island has served for
decades as the repository of a large quantity of spores of
Bacillus anthracis, the bacterial agent of anthrax, and other
disease-causing bacteriaand viruses.
Vozrozhdeniye island translates as Renaissance island.
The island was used for open-air testing of bioweapons. The
sparse vegetation on the island, remote location, and summer
temperatures that reach 140°F (60°C) reduced the chances that
escaping bioweapons would survive. Besides the testing of
anthrax bioweapons, Soviet archives indicate that the micro-
bial agents of tularemia, plague, typhoid, and possibly small-
poxwere used for experimentation.
The biological warfareagents buried on the island were
supposed to have been destroyed following the signing of a
treaty with the Soviet Union banning the manufacture and use
of such weapons. Similar weapons manufactured for the same
reason by the United States were reportedly destroyed in 1972.
The bioweapons were manufactured by Soviet Union as part
of their Cold War–inspired biological warfare program. They
were buried on the island in 1988. The island has been aban-
doned since 1991 by the Russian government.
Vozrozhdeniye island has remained unguarded since
that time. The main reason has been the isolated location of the
facility in the middle of the Aral Sea. Over the past two
decades, irrigation demands for water have depleted the fresh-
water sea to such an extent that the sea is becoming smaller.
Many scientists now fear that Vozrozhdeniye Island might
soon be directly connected to the mainland, making the stock-
piled weapons more vulnerable to bioterrorist theft.
Additionally, indications are that some of the buried
bioweapons are migrating towards the surface. Once exposed,
some of the materials could be aerosolized and spread by the
wind, or transported by birds.
The anthrax buried on the island was designed espe-
cially for the lethal use on humans in the time of war. The
powder is a freeze-dried form of the bacteria called a spore.
The spore is a dormant form of the bacterium that allows the
persistence of the genetic material for very long periods of
time. Resuscitation of the spore requires only suspension in
growth media having the appropriate nutrients and incubation
of the suspension at a temperature that is hospitable for the
bacterial growth. Direct inhalation of the spores produces a
lethal form of anthrax.

See alsoBioterrorism, protective measures; Containment and
release prevention protocol

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