Author Topic: Scientist discovers 1.400 year old Giant Islamovirus  (Read 841 times)

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Offline Chiram

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Scientist discovers 1.400 year old Giant Islamovirus
« on: September 08, 2015, 07:20:10 PM »
Recently scientists have discovered many giant viruses frozen in arctic ice:
http://www.nature.com/news/giant-virus-resurrected-from-30-000-year-old-ice-1.14801

Believe it or not, breaking news occurred when yesterday morning, after long nights in the lab working with his microscope, Dr Chuck Noblet Ph.D, a researcher at Oxford University's Balliol College, finally went outside for a cup of coffee with a geeky grad student.

During their brief walk beyond the quad's ivy walls, they encountered what appeared to be a mass migration of legions of veiled creatures swarming with spawn headed toward the public school across from the coffee shop.

Realizing his discovery, Dr Noblet rushed back to publish his findings. He is now guaranteed a place in science's hallowed halls as the discoverer of the world's largest virus.

Offline Israel Chai

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Re: Scientist discovers 1.400 year old Giant Islamovirus
« Reply #1 on: September 08, 2015, 08:47:01 PM »
we can't visit that site, password protected, post the article
The fear of the L-rd is the beginning of knowledge

Offline Israel Chai

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Re: Scientist discovers 1.400 year old Giant Islamovirus
« Reply #2 on: September 08, 2015, 08:48:10 PM »
Scientists in France and Russia discovered the giant virus in samples of frozen earth taken from the far north-east of Russia. Tests in the laboratory showed that the virus was capable of infecting amoeba – single-celled micro-organisms – although it cannot infect multi-cellular animals and humans.

http://www.anthrogenica.com/archive/index.php/t-2269.html

k not worried about the single cell organisms.
The fear of the L-rd is the beginning of knowledge

Offline Chiram

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Re: Scientist discovers 1.400 year old Giant Islamovirus
« Reply #3 on: September 08, 2015, 09:07:22 PM »
we can't visit that site, password protected, post the article

Here's the article verbatim and picture from Nature.com, it says that a giant virus species called Marseillevirus has infected an 11 month old boy.

Ironically, the virus is named after Marseilles, a filthy city in southern France that has basically been colonized by Algeria.


Giant virus resurrected from 30,000-year-old ice

Largest virus yet discovered hints at viral diversity trapped in permafrost.

In what seems like a plot straight out of a low-budget science-fiction film, scientists have revived a giant virus that was buried in Siberian ice for 30,000 years — and it is still infectious. Its targets, fortunately, are amoebae, but the researchers suggest that as Earth's ice melts, this could trigger the return of other ancient viruses, with potential risks for human health.

The newly thawed virus is the biggest one ever found. At 1.5 micrometres long, it is comparable in size to a small bacterium. Evolutionary biologists Jean-Michel Claverie and Chantal Abergel, the husband-and-wife team at Aix-Marseille University in France who led the work, named it Pithovirus sibericum, inspired by the Greek word 'pithos' for the large container used by the ancient Greeks to store wine and food. “We’re French, so we had to put wine in the story,” says Claverie. The results are published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Claverie and Abergel have helped to discover other so-called giant viruses — including the first, called Mimivirus, in 2003, and two others, known as Pandoraviruses, last year. “Once again, this group has opened our eyes to the enormous diversity that exists in giant viruses,” says Curtis Suttle, a virologist at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada, who was not involved in the work.

Two years ago, Claverie and Abergel's team learned that scientists in Russia had resurrected an ancient plant from fruits buried in 30,000-year-old Siberian permafrost. “If it was possible to revive a plant, I wondered if it was possible to revive a virus,” says Claverie. Using permafrost samples provided by the Russian team, they fished for giant viruses by using amoebae — the typical targets of these pathogens — as bait. The amoebae started dying, and the team found giant-virus particles inside them.

Under a microscope, Pithovirus appears as a thick-walled oval with an opening at one end, much like the Pandoraviruses. But despite their similar shapes, Abergel notes that “they are totally different viruses”.

Surprising properties

Pithovirus has a ‘cork’ with a honeycomb structure capping its opening. It copies itself by building replication ‘factories’ in its host’s cytoplasm, rather than by taking over the nucleus, as most viruses do. Only one-third of its proteins bear any similarity to those of other viruses. And, to the team’s surprise, its genome is much smaller than those of the Pandoraviruses, despite its larger size.

“That huge particle is basically empty,” says Claverie. “We thought it was a property of viruses that they pack DNA extremely tightly into the smallest particle possible, but this guy is 150 times less compacted than any bacteriophage [viruses that infect bacteria]. We don’t understand anything anymore!”

Although giant viruses almost always target amoebae, Christelle Desnues, a virologist at the French National Centre for Scientific Research in Marseilles, last year discovered signs that another giant virus, Marseillevirus, had infected an 11-month-old boy. He had been hospitalized with inflamed lymph nodes, and Desnues's team discovered traces of Marseillevirus DNA in his blood, and the virus itself in the a node. “It is clear that giant viruses cannot be seen as stand-alone freaks of nature,” she says. “They constitute an integral part of the virosphere with implications in diversity, evolution and even human health.”

Claverie and Abergel are concerned that rising global temperatures, along with mining and drilling operations in the Arctic, could thaw out many more ancient viruses that are still infectious and that could conceivably pose a threat to human health.

But Suttle points out that people already inhale thousands of viruses every day, and swallow billions whenever they swim in the sea. The idea that melting ice would release harmful viruses, and that those viruses would circulate extensively enough to affect human health, “stretches scientific rationality to the breaking point”, he says. “I would be much more concerned about the hundreds of millions of people who will be displaced by rising sea levels.”

Offline Israel Chai

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Re: Scientist discovers 1.400 year old Giant Islamovirus
« Reply #4 on: September 09, 2015, 08:14:53 AM »
Here's the article verbatim and picture from Nature.com, it says that a giant virus species called Marseillevirus has infected an 11 month old boy.

Ironically, the virus is named after Marseilles, a filthy city in southern France that has basically been colonized by Algeria.


Giant virus resurrected from 30,000-year-old ice

Largest virus yet discovered hints at viral diversity trapped in permafrost.

In what seems like a plot straight out of a low-budget science-fiction film, scientists have revived a giant virus that was buried in Siberian ice for 30,000 years — and it is still infectious. Its targets, fortunately, are amoebae, but the researchers suggest that as Earth's ice melts, this could trigger the return of other ancient viruses, with potential risks for human health.

The newly thawed virus is the biggest one ever found. At 1.5 micrometres long, it is comparable in size to a small bacterium. Evolutionary biologists Jean-Michel Claverie and Chantal Abergel, the husband-and-wife team at Aix-Marseille University in France who led the work, named it Pithovirus sibericum, inspired by the Greek word 'pithos' for the large container used by the ancient Greeks to store wine and food. “We’re French, so we had to put wine in the story,” says Claverie. The results are published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Claverie and Abergel have helped to discover other so-called giant viruses — including the first, called Mimivirus, in 2003, and two others, known as Pandoraviruses, last year. “Once again, this group has opened our eyes to the enormous diversity that exists in giant viruses,” says Curtis Suttle, a virologist at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada, who was not involved in the work.

Two years ago, Claverie and Abergel's team learned that scientists in Russia had resurrected an ancient plant from fruits buried in 30,000-year-old Siberian permafrost. “If it was possible to revive a plant, I wondered if it was possible to revive a virus,” says Claverie. Using permafrost samples provided by the Russian team, they fished for giant viruses by using amoebae — the typical targets of these pathogens — as bait. The amoebae started dying, and the team found giant-virus particles inside them.

Under a microscope, Pithovirus appears as a thick-walled oval with an opening at one end, much like the Pandoraviruses. But despite their similar shapes, Abergel notes that “they are totally different viruses”.

Surprising properties

Pithovirus has a ‘cork’ with a honeycomb structure capping its opening. It copies itself by building replication ‘factories’ in its host’s cytoplasm, rather than by taking over the nucleus, as most viruses do. Only one-third of its proteins bear any similarity to those of other viruses. And, to the team’s surprise, its genome is much smaller than those of the Pandoraviruses, despite its larger size.

“That huge particle is basically empty,” says Claverie. “We thought it was a property of viruses that they pack DNA extremely tightly into the smallest particle possible, but this guy is 150 times less compacted than any bacteriophage [viruses that infect bacteria]. We don’t understand anything anymore!”

Although giant viruses almost always target amoebae, Christelle Desnues, a virologist at the French National Centre for Scientific Research in Marseilles, last year discovered signs that another giant virus, Marseillevirus, had infected an 11-month-old boy. He had been hospitalized with inflamed lymph nodes, and Desnues's team discovered traces of Marseillevirus DNA in his blood, and the virus itself in the a node. “It is clear that giant viruses cannot be seen as stand-alone freaks of nature,” she says. “They constitute an integral part of the virosphere with implications in diversity, evolution and even human health.”

Claverie and Abergel are concerned that rising global temperatures, along with mining and drilling operations in the Arctic, could thaw out many more ancient viruses that are still infectious and that could conceivably pose a threat to human health.

But Suttle points out that people already inhale thousands of viruses every day, and swallow billions whenever they swim in the sea. The idea that melting ice would release harmful viruses, and that those viruses would circulate extensively enough to affect human health, “stretches scientific rationality to the breaking point”, he says. “I would be much more concerned about the hundreds of millions of people who will be displaced by rising sea levels.”

What do I care if the virus is big or small? Is it more dangerous one way or the other?
The fear of the L-rd is the beginning of knowledge

Online angryChineseKahanist

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Re: Scientist discovers 1.400 year old Giant Islamovirus
« Reply #5 on: September 09, 2015, 09:16:18 AM »
So finally we see obongo's ancestors.
U+262d=U+5350=U+9774