Principles of Virology, Volume 1. Jane Flint

Principles of Virology, Volume 1 - Jane Flint


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      Although viruses have been known as distinct biological entities for only about 120 years, evidence of viral infection can be found among the earliest recordings of human activity, and methods for combating viral disease were practiced long before the first virus was recognized. Consequently, efforts to understand and control these important agents of disease began only in the last century.

      Reconstruction of the prehistoric past to provide a plausible account of when or how viruses established themselves in human populations is challenging. However, extrapolating from current knowledge, we can deduce that some modern viruses were undoubtedly associated with the earliest precursors of mammals and coevolved with humans. Other viruses entered human populations only recently. The last 10,000 years of history was a time of radical change for humans and our viruses: animals were domesticated, the human population increased dramatically, large population centers appeared, and commerce and technology drove worldwide travel and interactions among unprecedented numbers of people.

      Viruses that established themselves in human populations were undoubtedly transmitted from animals, much as still happens today. Early human groups that domesticated and lived with their animals were almost certainly exposed to different viruses than were nomadic hunter/gatherer societies. Similarly, as many different viruses are endemic in the tropics, human societies in that environment must have been exposed to a greater variety of viruses than societies established in temperate climates. When nomadic groups met others with domesticated animals, human-to-human contact could have provided new avenues for virus spread. Even so, it seems unlikely that viruses such as those that cause measles or smallpox could have entered a permanent relationship with small groups of early humans. Such highly virulent viruses, as we now know them to be, either kill their hosts or induce lifelong immunity. Consequently, they can survive only when large, interacting host populations offer a sufficient number of naive and permissive hosts for their continued propagation. Such viruses could not have been established in human populations until large, settled communities appeared. Less virulent viruses that enter into a long-term relationship with their hosts were therefore more likely to be the first to become adapted to reproduction in the earliest human populations. These viruses include the modern retroviruses, herpesviruses, and papillomaviruses.

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