Scientists revive giant 30,000-year-old virus from Siberian
permafrost
The virus had lain dormant since the age of Neanderthals - but became
infectious again when thawed
The discovery of an infectious giant virus that had been entombed in
Siberian permafrost for 30,000 years has led scientists to warn of other
disease-causing viruses and microbes that may escape from the frozen
earth once it has melted.
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.

An image from an electron microscope showing a section of
the pithovirus particle in an infected amoeba cell |
The virus is much larger than usual viruses and is so big it can be
seen under ordinary optical microscopes. It is similar to two other
known types of giant viruses, but its genetic material is different
enough for it to be classified as belonging to a distinct species,
Pithovirus sibericum, within a totally new group of viruses.
Researchers said that the virus was buried 30 metres (100 feet) below
ground in the Chukotka autonomous region of Siberia and must have been
frozen for at least 30,000 years before it burst back into life when
offered the "bait" of living amoeba in a laboratory experiment.
"This study demonstrates that viruses can survive in permafrost - the
permanently frozen layer of soil found in the Arctic regions - almost
over geological time periods, that is for more than 30,000 years," a
CNRS spokeswoman said.
"These findings have important implications in terms of public-health
risks related to the exploitation of mining and energy resources in
circumpolar regions, which may arise as a result of global warming," she
said.
"The re-emergence of viruses considered eradicated, such as smallpox,
whose replication process is similar to Pithovirus, is no longer the
domain of science fiction.
The probability of this type of scenario needs to be estimated
realistically," she said.
The virus was last active at a time when mammoths roamed the Siberian
steppes and the last Neanderthals were on the verge of extinction in the
Iberian peninsula. The virus particle survived by being encased in a
protective protein coat, measuring 1.5 thousandths of a millimetre long.
The giant Pithovirus replicates inside the part of the amoeba that
lies outside its cell's nucleus.
This form of cytoplasmic replication is similar to the way large DNA
virus replicate, including the Variola virus which causes smallpox.
Chantal Abergel, a CNRS scientist who helped to carry out the work,
said that there may be other viruses frozen in the permafrost layers of
the Arctic that could become active again when disturbed either by
drilling or by the melting of the frozen ground.
"It may be possible to find other viruses that may be able to infect
other kinds of host organisms other than amoeba. We need really to study
the DNA of permafrost samples to directly study the kind of microbes
that exist there," Dr Abergel said.
"We don't know what is there in the permafrost but we need to be
careful when prospecting for oil, minerals or whatever we are looking
for.
The message should be 'think before you drill'. And if someone does
get sick on the spot, the last thing is to send them back immediately to
New York or London or any other city where a virus infection can
spread," she said.
- The Independent |