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标题: [肝胆速递] 在狗中发现类丙肝病毒 [打印本页]

作者: bigben446    时间: 2011-5-26 06:12     标题: [肝胆速递] 在狗中发现类丙肝病毒

本帖最后由 bigben446 于 2011-5-26 06:12 编辑

在狗中发现类丙肝病毒
Researchers Find Cousin of Hepatitis C Virus in Dogs

[肝胆速递]:对其研究可利于丙肝病毒的理解和治疗,但无交叉感染的危险

http://health.usnews.com/health-news/family-health/digestive-disorders/articles/2011/05/23/researchers-find-cousin-of-hepatitis-c-virus-in-dogs

MONDAY, May 23 (HealthDay News) -- Researchers report that they've discovered a virus similar to the human hepatitis C virus in dogs, a finding that might provide insight into how the germ evolved in people and perhaps lead to better treatments.


About 200 million people around the world are thought to suffer from hepatitis C, including an estimated 3.2 million chronically infected people in the United States. Many don't know they're infected with the liver-damaging virus that causes the disease, which means they can spread it to others without realizing it.

The new findings suggest that hepatitis C may have "jumped" from dogs to humans more than five centuries ago, the researchers said.

"Considering the origin of HIV, we expected to find the closest homologs, or genetic relatives, of [hepatitis C virus] in non-human primates," study author Dr. Amit Kapoor, an investigator with Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health's Center for Infection and Immunity, said in a news release.
"However," Kapoor added, "while we were analyzing samples from dogs involved in outbreaks of respiratory disease, we came upon a virus that was more similar to HCV than other viruses of the same family. So far, we have only detected [the virus] in sick animals, a few of which had died of unknown causes. Because of its close genetic similarity to HCV, we suggested the name of canine hepacivirus."
Study co-author Dr. Charles Rice, scientific and executive director of the Center for the Study of Hepatitis C at The Rockefeller University, said in the news release that the beginnings of hepatitis C "remain a mystery. These findings underscore the need to look beyond primates for clues to the origins."

Scientists say there's no risk of modern-day dogs infecting people with either human hepatitis C or the canine form.

Hepatitis C is a liver disease that's typically spread through contact with infected blood. It can also spread through sex with an infected person and from mother to baby during childbirth, according to the U.S. National Institutes of Health.

The study appears in this week's issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.



作者: StephenW    时间: 2011-5-26 06:25

本帖最后由 StephenW 于 2011-5-26 06:25 编辑

"The new findings suggest that hepatitis C may have "jumped" from dogs to humans more than five centuries ago, the researchers said."

为什么可能从狗跳转到人类, 而不是从人类跳转到狗?
作者: bigben446    时间: 2011-5-26 07:24

StephenW 发表于 2011-5-26 06:25
"The new findings suggest that hepatitis C may have "jumped" from dogs to humans more than five cent ...

作者猜测的,因为好多病毒都是由动物传染到人类(猜测人类进化中出现比较晚),当然是好多好多年前,从进化的角度讲得,作者同时提示,现在不要担心这个问题,因为物种间相互传染病毒也不是容易的事情,SARS也不过那么多年才出现一次


作者: deng245    时间: 2011-5-26 08:47

这点和乙肝病毒有别,乙肝病毒不感染狗、只有人和大猩猩是易感源
作者: chs10    时间: 2011-5-27 17:10

   盼尽快研制出丙肝疫苗
作者: deng245    时间: 2011-5-30 10:19

嗯、疫苗也是好东东、走一步算一步
作者: StephenW    时间: 2011-5-31 12:43

Viral Outbreaks in Dogs Yield Clues on Origins of Hepatitis C    By CARL ZIMMERPublished: May 30, 2011        
Hepatitis C is, in some ways, a high-profile disease. Worldwide, an estimated 200 million people are infected with the virus. Some of them will suffer cirrhosis, liver cancer and even death. Celebrities like Steven Tyler of Aerosmith and “American Idol” have spoken publicly of their infections.         
      But mysteries still shroud the disease. Typically spread through drug injections, blood transfusions and sexual contact, hepatitis C can quietly cause liver damage for 20 years or more before victims become aware that they are ill. “Worldwide, it’s causing devastation,” said Brian Edlin, an epidemiologist at SUNY Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn.        
Its origins are even more puzzling. Hepatitis C is a distinct disease from hepatitis A and B; it belongs to an entirely different virus family that includes diseases like West Nile fever and yellow fever. Scientists have searched for years for related viruses in animals to figure out how it evolved into a human disease.        
“Identifying the species reservoir of hepatitis C — one of the most common and deadly of all human viruses — has been something of a holy grail in studies of viral evolution,” said Eddie Holmes, a virologist at Penn State University.        
Now scientists have gotten an important clue, finding a close relative in an unexpected host: dogs.        
The discovery, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, “represents a major step forward,” said Dr. Holmes, who was not involved in the research.        
The finding came as a surprise to all the scientists involved. Researchers at Pfizer were investigating virus outbreaks in dogs in shelters across the United States. They swabbed the noses of dogs sick with respiratory diseases and searched for viruses. In some cases they could not isolate a known virus, so they sent samples to the Center for Infection and Immunity at Columbia University, where researchers specialize in finding new viruses.        
The Columbia center found that six of nine dogs in one outbreak and three of five in another shared the same unknown virus. Nasal swabs from 60 healthy dogs showed no sign of it.        
Amit Kapoor, a Columbia virologist, compared the genetic material of the new virus to known ones. His analysis revealed it was closely related to the hepatitis C virus (HCV for short). “I was not expecting anything like HCV,” Dr. Kapoor said. Like many other researchers, he assumed that it had evolved from a primate virus, because chimpanzees can be experimentally infected with hepatitis C.        
But as Dr. Kapoor and Peter Simmonds of the University of Edinburgh analyzed more genetic data, the link continued to hold. Dr. Kapoor and his colleagues have called the new virus canine hepacivirus, or CHV for short.        
The Columbia researchers collaborated with hepatitis C experts at Rockefeller University in New York to compare the two viruses. Canine hepacivirus infects the airways of dogs and is present at low levels in the liver.        
Based on the genetic similarity of the two viruses, the scientists estimate that they share a common ancestor that lived 500 to 1,000 years ago. “It’s really quite rough,” said W. Ian Lipkin, the director of the Center for Infection and Immunity and an author of the journal article. “This is not something that happened recently, but it didn’t happen hundreds of thousands of years ago.”        
The researchers see three possibilities for the origin of the viruses. The least likely is that dogs acquired hepatitis C from humans. Another possibility is that dogs and humans both acquired the virus from an unknown animal. This is the sort of evolution that gave rise to the 2004 outbreak of SARS. At first scientists found the virus in the catlike palm civet of Southeast Asia. But later research revealed that the virus actually started out in bats and then spread to palm civets and humans.        
A third possibility — one favored by Dr. Kapoor — is that the virus started in dogs, and then evolved into a liver-infecting disease in humans.        
“The evidence we have favors an origin in dogs,” Dr. Kapoor said.        
To test these alternatives, Dr. Kapoor and his colleagues plan to search for hepatitis C-like viruses in dogs from other countries, as well as in foxes and other species of carnivorous mammals.        
Even before that mystery is resolved, however, researchers expect to see some benefits from the discovery of canine hepacivirus. In the current issue of the journal Nature, Dr. Edlin argues that much more needs to be done to fight the hepatitis C epidemic. Along with better surveillance, he sees a need for research into antiviral drugs as well as vaccines. (Currently there is no commercially available hepatitis C vaccine.) Researchers may now be able to study CHV in dogs to get insights into hepatitis C in humans.        
“I’m sure this will be helpful,” Dr. Edlin said.        
作者: StephenW    时间: 2011-5-31 12:43

丙型肝炎是,在某些方面,高调的疾病。在全世界,估计有2亿人感染了病毒。他们中有些人会患上肝硬化,肝癌,甚至死亡。像史蒂芬泰勒史密斯飞船和“美国偶像”的名人都曾公开发言的感染。

但仍然笼罩的神秘疾病。一般是通过药物注射,输血和性接触传播,丙肝可以悄悄导致20年或更前肝损害的受害者意识到他们生病。 “在世界范围内,它造成的破坏,”布赖恩埃德林,一个在纽约州立大学下州医学中心的流行病学家在布鲁克林。

它的起源更是令人费解。丙型肝炎是一种由A和B型肝炎不同的疾病,它属于一个完全不同的病毒家族,包括像西尼罗河热和黄热病等疾病。科学家们已经为相关病毒在动物中找出年它是如何进化成为人类疾病的搜查。

“识别物种的丙肝水库 - 最常见的人类病毒和所有致命一 - 一直在病毒进化研究的圣杯的东西,”埃迪说福尔摩斯,在宾夕法尼亚州立大学的病毒学家。

现在,科学家们得到了一个重要线索,发现了一个意想不到的主机近亲:狗。

这一发现,在美国国家科学院学报上发表,“是一大进步,”霍姆斯博士说,谁没有参与这项研究。

这一发现之际,向所有参与的科学家感到惊讶。在辉瑞公司的研究人员正在调查在美国各地的收容所犬病毒爆发。他们擦洗狗的呼吸系统疾病病人的鼻子和病毒搜查。在某些情况下,他们不能孤立已知病毒,所以他们送样到哥伦比亚大学感染与免疫中心,那里的研究人员在寻找新病毒专门研究。

哥伦比亚中心发现,60只于一九五三爆发和在共享相同的另一个未知病毒。来自60个健康的狗鼻腔分泌物没有表现出这种迹象。

阿米特卡普尔,哥伦比亚病毒学家,比较了这种新病毒与已知的遗传物质。他的分析,发现那是密切相关的丙型肝炎病毒(HCV的缩写)。 “我没想到像丙型肝炎病毒的东西,”博士卡普尔说。像许多其他研究人员,他认为它已经从一个灵长类动物病毒的演变,因为黑猩猩可以在实验中丙型肝炎病毒感染

但随着卡普尔博士和彼得西蒙兹爱丁堡大学的分析更多的遗传数据,链接继续举行。卡普尔博士和他的同事们称为新的病毒犬hepacivirus,或简称CHV。

哥伦比亚研究人员合作,C型肝炎在纽约洛克菲勒大学的专家来比较这两种病毒。犬hepacivirus狗的呼吸道感染,并在目前低水平的肝脏。

基于这两种病毒的遗传相似性,科学家们估计,他们都有一个共同的祖先,500至1000年前生活。 “这真的很粗糙,说:”瓦特伊恩Lipkin,对感染与免疫中心主任,也是该杂志文章的作者。 “这不是最近发生的事情,但是这没有发生过的几十万年前。”

研究人员看到的三种病毒的来源的可能性。最不可能的是,狗从人类获得C型肝炎。另一种可能性是,狗和人类都获得从一个未知的动物病毒。这是进化的一种赋予上升到2004年爆发严重急性呼吸系统综合症。起初,科学家们发现,在东南亚像猫掌果子狸病毒。但后来的研究发现,这种病毒实际上开始了蝙蝠,然后蔓延到手掌果子狸和人类。

第三种可能性 - 一个博士卡普尔青睐 -​​ 是,病毒开始在狗,然后进入肝脏疾病感染人类进化。

“我们主张的证据,在狗的起源,”博士卡普尔说。

为了测试这些替代品,卡普尔博士和他的同事计划寻找C型肝炎病毒在其他国家的狗,以及在狐狸和其他物种的食肉哺乳动物。

甚至在此之前的神秘,解决,然而,研究人员希望看到从犬hepacivirus发现了一些好处。在本期Nature杂志,埃德林博士认为,需要做更多的工作要做,以对抗C型肝炎流行。随着更有效的监察,他看到了用于研究抗病毒药物以及疫苗的需求。 (目前市面上有没有C型肝炎的疫苗。)的研究人员现在能够研究在狗CHV让人类进入丙型肝炎的见解。

“我敢肯定,这将是有益的,”博士埃德林说。




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