SCI Scientists Extract Evidence of Smallpox from 17th Century Mummy

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
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http://www.voanews.com/a/scientists-extract-evidence-of-smallpox-from-17-century-mummy/3628629.html

SCIENCE & HEALTH

Scientists Extract Evidence of Smallpox from 17th Century Mummy

December 08, 2016 3:00 PM
Jessica Berman

Scientist have discovered genetic evidence of smallpox from the remains of a 17th century mummy found in a crypt beneath a Lithuanian church. The early DNA provides a timeline of the highly infectious disease that was finally eradicated in the 20th century.

The mummy is of the lower half of a child. Samples of the mummy’s skin were taken by Canadian and Australian researchers, who were then able to reconstruct the decomposing genome of the virus.

The mummified child, one of several bodies found in the 400-year-old crypt, provides the first conclusive evidence of smallpox in humans.

Before the discovery, it was thought that the ancient Egyptian pharaoh, Ramses V, was the earliest example of smallpox because of what scientists assumed were pox marks found on the remains. But it is so far been impossible to get DNA from a 3,000- to 4,000-year-old mummy.

The child’s body had no such scarring, so the discovery surprised Hendrik Poinar, Director of the Ancient DNA Center at McMaster University in Ontario.

“We were using these mummies as a good test to looking back in time for the potential sort of deep time travel with viruses," he said. "And so we tried to pull out all the viruses and we looked at the reads that we found and, lo and behold, there was variola – some reads of variola – and we thought, 'Oh, that can’t be.'”

Two strains of smallpox

Widespread vaccination eliminated smallpox or variola virus as a human scourge in 1977.

By reconstructing the 17th century DNA and comparing it to genomes dating to the mid-1900s and genetic material before variola’s eradication in the 1970s, the scientists concluded the samples shared a common viral ancestor that originated between 1588 and 1645.

In addition to providing a timeline of smallpox, scientists believe they have pinpointed its evolution. They think two strains branched off from a common ancestor around the time that a variola vaccine was created in the 1800s by Edward Jenner. They suggest the vaccine caused pressure on the smallpox virus, leading to mutations that separated it into two strains, variola major and variola minor. One caused more severe disease than the other.

The time period when the strains branched apart, according to Poinar, coincides in history with human exploration, migration and colonization, activities that would have caused smallpox to spread around the world.

Even though smallpox has been eradicated and is no longer a health threat, Poinar thinks it’s important to have a timeline for diseases to see how they evolve and progress, something that could be important for treatment and eradication.

“I don’t think these sorts of studies are navel gazing exercises,” said Poinar. “I think they can shed important light on the evolutionary tempo and mode of these infectious agents, and I think that’s important to understand.”

The findings reveal that the smallpox virus is most closely related to variola virus in camels and gerbils, although researchers don’t know specifically what animal the human version came from.

Poinar and colleagues had to obtain permission to conduct their work from the World Health Organization because of concerns that the research could reawaken the virus, something Poinar said degraded DNA from a mummified child could not do.

The discovery was published in the Cell press journal Current Biology.
 

Ractivist

Pride comes before the fall.....Pride month ended.
They have samples of live viruses to work with if they want to do that.
I suspect the day will come where they loose this upon the world. This, being some biological attack of magnitude.
 

Meadowlark

Has No Life - Lives on TB
No one has been vaccinated against smallpox since 1975. Even those old enough to have been vaccinated are still at risk. One of the soviet weaponized strains release over the Aral sea accidently was exposed to people on a research vessel. Several died despite being vaccinated! The weaponized strain was that deadly! Imagine such a strain released to an un-vaccinated public.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
No one has been vaccinated against smallpox since 1975. Even those old enough to have been vaccinated are still at risk. One of the soviet weaponized strains release over the Aral sea accidently was exposed to people on a research vessel. Several died despite being vaccinated! The weaponized strain was that deadly! Imagine such a strain released to an un-vaccinated public.

And if you really want to have nightmares, the Soviets were reported to have ICBM warheads designed to deliver biological agents, specifically small pox, in the early 1960s.

ETA: According to one defector they were deployed for a time.
 
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TerryK

TB Fanatic
No one has been vaccinated against smallpox since 1975. Even those old enough to have been vaccinated are still at risk. One of the soviet weaponized strains release over the Aral sea accidently was exposed to people on a research vessel. Several died despite being vaccinated! The weaponized strain was that deadly! Imagine such a strain released to an un-vaccinated public.

Not true.
I've had three of them, one after 9-11
I was working for the state of Florida and received a small pox vaccination right after 9-11.
It was my third. My first one was when I was young and another one when I was in the Navy.

There were a lot of elaborate precautions taken on the third one. Bandage, and followup visits to inspect the site.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
I was hopping around the net and saw a couple of other articles on this find (if I see them again I'll link here) but apparently there is some evidence in this discovery that points to Small Pox being a much more modern disease than originally thought and/or the current strain may be newer.

If it does turn out that what scientists THOUGHT was Small Pox (on Ramses the 5th and a few other ancient finds) is NOT Smallpox; from a medical and scientific view point that is HUGE news.

It isn't certain yet, and I suspect that scientists are going to go out of their way to try to sort this mystery because it is important; it is important if it is really a relatively new disease and it is important even if it is an old disease in a newer form.

I haven't even told Nightwolf about this yet (he just got home) but I know he will be interested; he's been observing surgery this week so probably hasn't seen this yet.
 

Meadowlark

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Not true.
I've had three of them, one after 9-11
I was working for the state of Florida and received a small pox vaccination right after 9-11.
It was my third. My first one was when I was young and another one when I was in the Navy.

There were a lot of elaborate precautions taken on the third one. Bandage, and followup visits to inspect the site.
You are correct. I should have said universal vaccination has not occurred since smallpox was declared extinct in the wild. First responders, military personal and those traveling into potential smallpox areas are still vaccinated on a limited basis. But the general public is for the most part wide open.
 

ShadowMan

Designated Grumpy Old Fart
THAT SAMPLE NEEDS TO BE ABSOLUTELY DESTROYED!!!

That is a disease that needs to be completely and totally eradicated from this planet! Nothing should be allowed to remain of it. That is how deadly and horrific it is.
 

Faroe

Un-spun
THAT SAMPLE NEEDS TO BE ABSOLUTELY DESTROYED!!!

That is a disease that needs to be completely and totally eradicated from this planet! Nothing should be allowed to remain of it. That is how deadly and horrific it is.

Best practice, probably, but remember the sample came from a body. More is available, if anyone wants to go looking for it.
 
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