Variola virus WORLD OF MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY
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Naturally acquired immunity to chickenpox does not
prevent individuals from contracting shingles years, even
decades later. Shingles occurs in between 10% and 20% of
those who have had chickenpox. In the United States, upwards
of 800,000 people are afflicted with shingles each year. The
annual number of shingles sufferers worldwide is in the mil-
lions. The disease occurs most commonly in those who are
over 50 years of age.
As the symptoms of chickenpox fade, varicella zoster
virus is not eliminated from the body. Rather, the virus lies
dormant in nerve tissue, particularly in the face and the body.
The roots of sensory nerves in the spinal cord are also a site of
virus hibernation. The virus is stirred to replicate by triggers
that are as yet unclear. Impairment of the immune system
seems to be involved, whether from immunodeficiency dis-
easesor from cancers, the effect of drugs, or a generalized
debilitation of the body with age. Whatever forces of the
immune system that normally operate to hold the hibernating
virus in check are abrogated.
Reactivation of the virus causes pain and a rash in the
region that is served by the affected nerves. The affected areas
are referred to as dermatomes. These areas appear as a rash or
blistering of the skin. This can be quite painful during the one
to two weeks they persist. Other complications can develop.
For example, shingles on the face can lead to an eye infection
causing temporary or even permanent blindness. A condition of
muscle weakness or paralysis, known as Guillan-Barre
Syndrome, can last for months after a bout of shingles. Another
condition known as postherpetic neuralgia can extend the pain
of shingles long after the visible symptoms have abated.
See alsoImmunity, active, passive and delayed; Infection and
resistance; Latent viruses and diseases
VVariola virusARIOLA VIRUS
Variola virus (or variola major virus) is the virus that causes
smallpox. The virus is one of the members of the poxvirus
group (Family Poxviridae). The virus particle is brick shaped
and contains a double strand of deoxyribonucleic acid. The
variola virus is among the most dangerous of all the potential
biological weapons.
Variola virus infects only humans. The virus can be eas-
ily transmitted from person to person via the air. Inhalation of
only a few virus particles is sufficient to establish an infection.
Transmission of the virus is also possible if items such as con-
taminated linen are handled. The various common symptoms
of smallpox include chills, high fever, extreme tiredness,
headache, backache, vomiting, sore throat with a cough, and
sores on mucus membranes and on the skin. As the sores burst
and release pus, the afflicted person can experience great pain.
Males and females of all ages are equally susceptible to infec-
tion. At the time of smallpox eradication approximately one
third of patients died—usually within a period of two to three
weeks following appearance of symptoms.
The origin of the variola virus in not clear. However, the
similarity of the virus and cowpoxvirus has prompted the sug-
gestion that the variola virus is a mutated version of the cow-
pox virus. The mutation allowed to virus to infect humans. If
such a mutation did occur, then the adoption of farming activ-
ities by people, instead of the formally nomadic existence,
would have been a selective pressure for a virus to adopt the
capability to infect humans.
Vaccinationto prevent infection with the variola virus is
long established. In the 1700s, English socialite and public
healthadvocate Lady Mary Wortley Montaguepopularized the
practice of injection with the pus obtained from smallpox
sores as a protection against the disease. This technique
became known as variolation. Late in the same century,
Edward Jenner successfully prevented the occurrence of
smallpox by an injection of pus from cowpox sores. This rep-
resented the start of vaccination.
Vaccination has been very successful in dealing with
variola virus outbreaks of smallpox. Indeed, after two decades
of worldwide vaccination programs, the virus has been virtu-
ally eliminated from the natural environment. The last
recorded case of smallpox infection was in 1977 and vaccina-
tion against smallpox is not practiced anymore.
In the late 1990s, a resolution was passed at the World
Health Assembly that the remaining stocks of variola virus be
destroyed, to prevent the re-emergence of smallpox and the
misuse of the virus as a biological weapon. At the time only
two high-security laboratories were thought to contain variola
virus stock (Centers for Disease Controland Prevention in
Atlanta, Georgia, and the Russian State Centre for Research
on Virologyand Biotechnology, Koltsovo, Russia). However,
this decision was postponed until 2002, and now the United
States government has indicated its unwillingness to comply
with the resolution for security issues related to potential
bioterrorism. Destruction of the stocks of variola virus would
deprive countries of the material needed to prepare vaccinein
the event of the deliberate use of the virus as a biological
weapon. This scenario has gained more credence in the past
decade, as terrorist groups have demonstrated the resolve to
use biological weapons, including smallpox. In addition, intel-
ligence agencies in several Western European countries issued
opinions that additional stocks of the variola virus exist in
other than the previously authorized locations.
See also Bioterrorism, protective measures; Bioterrorism;
Centers for Disease Control (CDC); Smallpox, eradication,
storage, and potential use as a bacteriological weapon; Viral
genetics; Virology; Virus replication; Viruses and responses to
viral infection
VVenter, John CraigENTER, JOHNCRAIG(1946- )
American molecular biologist
John Craig Venter, who until January 2002 was the President
and Chief Executive Officer of Celera Genomics, is one of the
central figures in the Human Genome Project. Venter co-
founded Celera in 1998, and he directed its research and oper-
ations while he and the company’s other scientists completed
a draft of the human genome. Using a fast sequencing tech-
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