Guest guest Posted October 14, 2001 Report Share Posted October 14, 2001 Another Terrorist's Attack Possibility Saturday | October 13, 2001 Plague's gene code is cracked New understanding of bacterium may help explain its deadliness 10/08/2001 By ALEXANDRA WITZE / The Dallas Morning News Related content• En español One of humanity's greatest scourges has revealed its deadly secrets. Biologists have decoded the genetic makeup of Yersinia pestis, the bacterium that causes plague. On the surface, the rod-shaped bacterium looks simple. But studies of its DNA reveal a crazy quilt of 4.6 billion pairs of chemicals, stitched and restitched together over time. The genetic flexibility of Y. pestis may help explain its deadly nature – especially how the plague, known in some historical periods as the Black Death, managed to kill 200 million people over the course of history. The research may also help scientists develop better drugs to fight plague, which has long been considered a possible biological warfare agent. Antibiotics work if given soon enough after infection, but there is no effective vaccine available to prevent plague in the first place. Scientists hope that details of the bacterium's genetic makeup, or genome, will suggest new ways to diminish the threat of plague. Up to 3,000 people worldwide still die of the disease every year. "Having the genome sequence means you have every possible vaccine target or drug target," says team leader n Parkhill of the Sanger Centre in Cambridge, England. "It's a new beginning for research on the disease." The genome, which was described last week in the journal Nature, is unlike that of other disease-causing organisms. In just a few thousand years of evolution, the genetic makeup of Y. pestis appears to have undergone several dramatic changes. Other disease-causing organisms, such as E. coli or salmonella, have remained mostly the same after 100 million years of evolution, says Dr. Parkhill. "Finding a related organism that can flip around sections of its genome is actually quite surprising," he says. The genes of Y. pestis are a patchwork of missing and repeating DNA chunks. Many of its genes appear to have been lifted from viruses, as well as from other bacteria. The plague bacterium was born between 1,500 and 20,000 years ago from the bacterium Y. pseudotuberculosis. The two bacteria are genetically quite similar but drastically different in the diseases they cause. Y. pseudotuberculosis, which is present in animals, soil, and water on every continent, produces only a minor gastrointestinal illness in humans. Emilio , a biologist at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California, leads the team that is decoding the genome for Y. pseudotuberculosis. When that research is finished, in the next six months to a year, scientists hope to compare the two genomes side by side for clues to what makes Y. pestis so nasty. Already, the researchers have found that Y. pestis contains two major genetic elements not found in its cousin organism, which may help it better survive in fleas. Comparatively, Y. pestis is also missing other chunks of genes, whose absence may render it more malignant in humans. "Whatever change there is, in going from one [bacterium] to the other, might explain why this organism is suddenly so virulent," says Dr. . Something definitely happened to Y. pestis in its recent history, says n Wren of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. "It's gone from an organism that gives you a mild tummy ache to one that's devastating and has shaped Western civilization," he says. Three waves of plague have struck humanity, each caused by a different strain of Y. pestis. The so-called ian plague began in Egypt and swept across Europe in the sixth, seventh and eighth centuries. The episode known as the Black Death killed 20 million to 30 million people – one-third of Europe's population – in the mid-14th century. Modern plague has killed more than 12 million people in China and India alone since it arose in 1855. The recently studied Y. pestis strain came from a Colorado veterinarian who died in 1992 after being sneezed on by a plague-infected cat he was trying to rescue from under a house. Plague can strike in several forms; each is caused by Y. pestis but differs in its symptoms depending on how it was contracted. Bubonic plague, characterized by "buboes," or swollen lymph nodes, is usually transferred to humans by the bite of an infected flea. Pneumonic plague, characterized by fever, chills, and breathing difficulty, is caught by inhaling aerosolized droplets carrying the bacterium. Experts say Y. pestis is a potential bioweapon because terrorists theoretically could spray aerosolized bacteria over a city, triggering cases of pneumonic plague. The disease, in that form, is usually fatal unless antibiotics are given within 24 hours after infection. (Bubonic plague is less deadly, but even so, 1 in 7 of all plague cases in the United States are fatal.) Biologists have already deciphered the genomes of other disease-causing organisms, including those that cause meningitis and cholera. So far, nobody has developed a vaccine directly from that information, but it's only a matter of time, scientists say. "People are still learning how to use genomes to the best advantage, but they are learning fast and things are changing fast," says Keim, a biologist at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff. Dr. Keim uses DNA "fingerprinting" techniques, as would be used in a court case to identify a suspect, to study bacteria that could be used as biological weapons. By examining very specific areas of the genome, he can identify slightly different versions of the strains of plague. That information, in turn, could help pinpoint the source of any suspected bioterrorism bug. Meanwhile, other scientists are working on ways to render the bacterium harmless once it gets inside humans. ston, a molecular biologist at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, develops "genetic vaccines" that aim to disarm a specific disease-causing gene in an organism. Knowing the genome of plague, Dr. ston says, will help him better identify which genes to work on. "It reduces the complexity of the search about twentyfold," he says. Someday, such studies – which are conducted in animals – may help in developing a better human vaccine. The plague vaccine that was licensed for use in the United States was discontinued by its manufacturers in 1999 because of side effects and questions about its potency. It was never available to the public, only to the military and laboratory workers who might be exposed to the plague. It also worked only for the bubonic plague – not the pneumonic form that is a more likely outcome of a bioterrorist attack. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 15, 2001 Report Share Posted October 15, 2001 Today, they found a 7-month-old -baby testing positive for anthrax, after visiting his father's offices at ABC Network. Should we all be concerned about this child, or just ignore the matter, and push it aside? MM / NSIF ----- Original Message ----- From: <cjheer@...> < > Sent: Monday, October 15, 2001 6:13 AM Subject: Re: Pneumonic Plague & Terrorists Attacks Good grief I realize this information may be good and maybe some people are really interested in it, however isn't it somewhat ridiculous for us to get all worked up over these things? We have to live our lives and go on and we cannot become paranoid. I feel like there is enough of this stuff on the news and personally don't need to read it here, am I out of line? TIRED OF IT ALL! In @y..., " MARTHA-NSIF " <MAM-NSIF@P...> wrote: > Another Terrorist's Attack Possibility > > Saturday | October 13, 2001 > > > Plague's gene code is cracked > New understanding of bacterium may help explain its deadliness > > 10/08/2001 > > By ALEXANDRA WITZE / The Dallas Morning News > > Related content > . En español > One of humanity's greatest scourges has revealed its deadly secrets. Biologists have decoded the genetic makeup of Yersinia pestis, the bacterium that causes plague. > > On the surface, the rod-shaped bacterium looks simple. But studies of its DNA reveal a crazy quilt of 4.6 billion pairs of chemicals, stitched and restitched together over time. > > The genetic flexibility of Y. pestis may help explain its deadly nature - especially how the plague, known in some historical periods as the Black Death, managed to kill 200 million people over the course of history. > > The research may also help scientists develop better drugs to fight plague, which has long been considered a possible biological warfare agent. Antibiotics work if given soon enough after infection, but there is no effective vaccine available to prevent plague in the first place. > > Scientists hope that details of the bacterium's genetic makeup, or genome, will suggest new ways to diminish the threat of plague. Up to 3,000 people worldwide still die of the disease every year. > > " Having the genome sequence means you have every possible vaccine target or drug target, " says team leader n Parkhill of the Sanger Centre in Cambridge, England. " It's a new beginning for research on the disease. " > > The genome, which was described last week in the journal Nature, is unlike that of other disease-causing organisms. > > In just a few thousand years of evolution, the genetic makeup of Y. pestis appears to have undergone several dramatic changes. Other disease-causing organisms, such as E. coli or salmonella, have remained mostly the same after 100 million years of evolution, says Dr. Parkhill. > > " Finding a related organism that can flip around sections of its genome is actually quite surprising, " he says. > > The genes of Y. pestis are a patchwork of missing and repeating DNA chunks. Many of its genes appear to have been lifted from viruses, as well as from other bacteria. > > The plague bacterium was born between 1,500 and 20,000 years ago from the bacterium Y. pseudotuberculosis. The two bacteria are genetically quite similar but drastically different in the diseases they cause. Y. pseudotuberculosis, which is present in animals, soil, and water on every continent, produces only a minor gastrointestinal illness in humans. > > Emilio , a biologist at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California, leads the team that is decoding the genome for Y. pseudotuberculosis. When that research is finished, in the next six months to a year, scientists hope to compare the two genomes side by side for clues to what makes Y. pestis so nasty. > > Already, the researchers have found that Y. pestis contains two major genetic elements not found in its cousin organism, which may help it better survive in fleas. Comparatively, Y. pestis is also missing other chunks of genes, whose absence may render it more malignant in humans. > > " Whatever change there is, in going from one [bacterium] to the other, might explain why this organism is suddenly so virulent, " says Dr. . > > Something definitely happened to Y. pestis in its recent history, says n Wren of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. " It's gone from an organism that gives you a mild tummy ache to one that's devastating and has shaped Western civilization, " he says. > > Three waves of plague have struck humanity, each caused by a different strain of Y. pestis. The so-called ian plague began in Egypt and swept across Europe in the sixth, seventh and eighth centuries. The episode known as the Black Death killed 20 million to 30 million people - one-third of Europe's population - in the mid- 14th century. Modern plague has killed more than 12 million people in China and India alone since it arose in 1855. > > The recently studied Y. pestis strain came from a Colorado veterinarian who died in 1992 after being sneezed on by a plague- infected cat he was trying to rescue from under a house. > > Plague can strike in several forms; each is caused by Y. pestis but differs in its symptoms depending on how it was contracted. Bubonic plague, characterized by " buboes, " or swollen lymph nodes, is usually transferred to humans by the bite of an infected flea. Pneumonic plague, characterized by fever, chills, and breathing difficulty, is caught by inhaling aerosolized droplets carrying the bacterium. > > Experts say Y. pestis is a potential bioweapon because terrorists theoretically could spray aerosolized bacteria over a city, triggering cases of pneumonic plague. The disease, in that form, is usually fatal unless antibiotics are given within 24 hours after infection. (Bubonic plague is less deadly, but even so, 1 in 7 of all plague cases in the United States are fatal.) > > Biologists have already deciphered the genomes of other disease-causing organisms, including those that cause meningitis and cholera. So far, nobody has developed a vaccine directly from that information, but it's only a matter of time, scientists say. > > " People are still learning how to use genomes to the best advantage, but they are learning fast and things are changing fast, " says Keim, a biologist at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff. > > Dr. Keim uses DNA " fingerprinting " techniques, as would be used in a court case to identify a suspect, to study bacteria that could be used as biological weapons. By examining very specific areas of the genome, he can identify slightly different versions of the strains of plague. That information, in turn, could help pinpoint the source of any suspected bioterrorism bug. > > Meanwhile, other scientists are working on ways to render the bacterium harmless once it gets inside humans. ston, a molecular biologist at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, develops " genetic vaccines " that aim to disarm a specific disease-causing gene in an organism. Knowing the genome of plague, Dr. ston says, will help him better identify which genes to work on. > > " It reduces the complexity of the search about twentyfold, " he says. > > Someday, such studies - which are conducted in animals - may help in developing a better human vaccine. > > The plague vaccine that was licensed for use in the United States was discontinued by its manufacturers in 1999 because of side effects and questions about its potency. It was never available to the public, only to the military and laboratory workers who might be exposed to the plague. > > It also worked only for the bubonic plague - not the pneumonic form that is a more likely outcome of a bioterrorist attack. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 15, 2001 Report Share Posted October 15, 2001 Good grief I realize this information may be good and maybe some people are really interested in it, however isn't it somewhat ridiculous for us to get all worked up over these things? We have to live our lives and go on and we cannot become paranoid. I feel like there is enough of this stuff on the news and personally don't need to read it here, am I out of line? TIRED OF IT ALL! In @y..., " MARTHA-NSIF " <MAM-NSIF@P...> wrote: > Another Terrorist's Attack Possibility > > Saturday | October 13, 2001 > > > Plague's gene code is cracked > New understanding of bacterium may help explain its deadliness > > 10/08/2001 > > By ALEXANDRA WITZE / The Dallas Morning News > > Related content > . En español > One of humanity's greatest scourges has revealed its deadly secrets. Biologists have decoded the genetic makeup of Yersinia pestis, the bacterium that causes plague. > > On the surface, the rod-shaped bacterium looks simple. But studies of its DNA reveal a crazy quilt of 4.6 billion pairs of chemicals, stitched and restitched together over time. > > The genetic flexibility of Y. pestis may help explain its deadly nature - especially how the plague, known in some historical periods as the Black Death, managed to kill 200 million people over the course of history. > > The research may also help scientists develop better drugs to fight plague, which has long been considered a possible biological warfare agent. Antibiotics work if given soon enough after infection, but there is no effective vaccine available to prevent plague in the first place. > > Scientists hope that details of the bacterium's genetic makeup, or genome, will suggest new ways to diminish the threat of plague. Up to 3,000 people worldwide still die of the disease every year. > > " Having the genome sequence means you have every possible vaccine target or drug target, " says team leader n Parkhill of the Sanger Centre in Cambridge, England. " It's a new beginning for research on the disease. " > > The genome, which was described last week in the journal Nature, is unlike that of other disease-causing organisms. > > In just a few thousand years of evolution, the genetic makeup of Y. pestis appears to have undergone several dramatic changes. Other disease-causing organisms, such as E. coli or salmonella, have remained mostly the same after 100 million years of evolution, says Dr. Parkhill. > > " Finding a related organism that can flip around sections of its genome is actually quite surprising, " he says. > > The genes of Y. pestis are a patchwork of missing and repeating DNA chunks. Many of its genes appear to have been lifted from viruses, as well as from other bacteria. > > The plague bacterium was born between 1,500 and 20,000 years ago from the bacterium Y. pseudotuberculosis. The two bacteria are genetically quite similar but drastically different in the diseases they cause. Y. pseudotuberculosis, which is present in animals, soil, and water on every continent, produces only a minor gastrointestinal illness in humans. > > Emilio , a biologist at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California, leads the team that is decoding the genome for Y. pseudotuberculosis. When that research is finished, in the next six months to a year, scientists hope to compare the two genomes side by side for clues to what makes Y. pestis so nasty. > > Already, the researchers have found that Y. pestis contains two major genetic elements not found in its cousin organism, which may help it better survive in fleas. Comparatively, Y. pestis is also missing other chunks of genes, whose absence may render it more malignant in humans. > > " Whatever change there is, in going from one [bacterium] to the other, might explain why this organism is suddenly so virulent, " says Dr. . > > Something definitely happened to Y. pestis in its recent history, says n Wren of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. " It's gone from an organism that gives you a mild tummy ache to one that's devastating and has shaped Western civilization, " he says. > > Three waves of plague have struck humanity, each caused by a different strain of Y. pestis. The so-called ian plague began in Egypt and swept across Europe in the sixth, seventh and eighth centuries. The episode known as the Black Death killed 20 million to 30 million people - one-third of Europe's population - in the mid- 14th century. Modern plague has killed more than 12 million people in China and India alone since it arose in 1855. > > The recently studied Y. pestis strain came from a Colorado veterinarian who died in 1992 after being sneezed on by a plague- infected cat he was trying to rescue from under a house. > > Plague can strike in several forms; each is caused by Y. pestis but differs in its symptoms depending on how it was contracted. Bubonic plague, characterized by " buboes, " or swollen lymph nodes, is usually transferred to humans by the bite of an infected flea. Pneumonic plague, characterized by fever, chills, and breathing difficulty, is caught by inhaling aerosolized droplets carrying the bacterium. > > Experts say Y. pestis is a potential bioweapon because terrorists theoretically could spray aerosolized bacteria over a city, triggering cases of pneumonic plague. The disease, in that form, is usually fatal unless antibiotics are given within 24 hours after infection. (Bubonic plague is less deadly, but even so, 1 in 7 of all plague cases in the United States are fatal.) > > Biologists have already deciphered the genomes of other disease-causing organisms, including those that cause meningitis and cholera. So far, nobody has developed a vaccine directly from that information, but it's only a matter of time, scientists say. > > " People are still learning how to use genomes to the best advantage, but they are learning fast and things are changing fast, " says Keim, a biologist at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff. > > Dr. Keim uses DNA " fingerprinting " techniques, as would be used in a court case to identify a suspect, to study bacteria that could be used as biological weapons. By examining very specific areas of the genome, he can identify slightly different versions of the strains of plague. That information, in turn, could help pinpoint the source of any suspected bioterrorism bug. > > Meanwhile, other scientists are working on ways to render the bacterium harmless once it gets inside humans. ston, a molecular biologist at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, develops " genetic vaccines " that aim to disarm a specific disease-causing gene in an organism. Knowing the genome of plague, Dr. ston says, will help him better identify which genes to work on. > > " It reduces the complexity of the search about twentyfold, " he says. > > Someday, such studies - which are conducted in animals - may help in developing a better human vaccine. > > The plague vaccine that was licensed for use in the United States was discontinued by its manufacturers in 1999 because of side effects and questions about its potency. It was never available to the public, only to the military and laboratory workers who might be exposed to the plague. > > It also worked only for the bubonic plague - not the pneumonic form that is a more likely outcome of a bioterrorist attack. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 16, 2001 Report Share Posted October 16, 2001 Dear Martha please do not get angry at me, I cannot stress more that my post was not intended to make any one upset or angry, I am only saying that I do not think it is healthy for anyone with an illness or even without an illness to obscess too much on the state of the world these days, there isn't much we can do about it is there? I am not cold or mean, I am being realistic, I have had so many sleepless nights after watching the news and it is so upsetting to just constantly listen to this stuff, I never said we should not be concerned I just said that when I come to this suport group I don't want to be overloaded with more and more news stories, I am getting so much of that on the tv as it is. I don't think it is a good idea all the press coverage as it leads to many copycats who think it is fun to send white powder to people or put it on airplaines, this is happening all over the place and yet half the time the powder is nothing but flour, so I think all the hype is setting off allot of crazies in the world. Of course this is a trying time, but if you are religious as I am you know that the end of the world is probably coming soon and that those who are not followers of christ will persish. I am not going to sing my religious praises on this group, because I don't think it is appropriate, but I also don't think sending the country into a pancik is appropriate or that it is going to do any good either, so just calm yourself down and take a deep breath. I feel very bad for this child you are talking about, and for anyone who is exposed to this stuff, and I will not deny that I am worried about it, I have family in SF and even my daughter is there right now and my husband travels in his business so yes I am worried, but I pray and believe in god, and Jesus Christ and the world needs to do the same. God bless, HUGS In @y..., " MARTHA-NSIF " <MAM-NSIF@P...> wrote: > Today, they found a 7-month-old -baby testing positive for anthrax, after > visiting his father's offices at ABC Network. Should we all be concerned > about this child, or just ignore the matter, and push it aside? > > MM / NSIF > ----- Original Message ----- > From: <cjheer@i...> > < @y...> > Sent: Monday, October 15, 2001 6:13 AM > Subject: Re: Pneumonic Plague & Terrorists Attacks > > > Good grief I realize this information may be good and maybe some > people are really interested in it, however isn't it somewhat > ridiculous for us to get all worked up over these things? We have to > live our lives and go on and we cannot become paranoid. I feel like > there is enough of this stuff on the news and personally don't need > to read it here, am I out of line? > > > TIRED OF IT ALL! > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > In @y..., " MARTHA-NSIF " <MAM-NSIF@P...> wrote: > > Another Terrorist's Attack Possibility > > > > Saturday | October 13, 2001 > > > > > > Plague's gene code is cracked > > New understanding of bacterium may help explain its > deadliness > > > > 10/08/2001 > > > > By ALEXANDRA WITZE / The Dallas Morning News > > > > Related content > > . En español > > One of humanity's greatest scourges has revealed its deadly > secrets. Biologists have decoded the genetic makeup of Yersinia > pestis, the bacterium that causes plague. > > > > On the surface, the rod-shaped bacterium looks simple. But > studies of its DNA reveal a crazy quilt of 4.6 billion pairs of > chemicals, stitched and restitched together over time. > > > > The genetic flexibility of Y. pestis may help explain its > deadly nature - especially how the plague, known in some historical > periods as the Black Death, managed to kill 200 million people over > the course of history. > > > > The research may also help scientists develop better drugs to > fight plague, which has long been considered a possible biological > warfare agent. Antibiotics work if given soon enough after infection, > but there is no effective vaccine available to prevent plague in the > first place. > > > > Scientists hope that details of the bacterium's genetic > makeup, or genome, will suggest new ways to diminish the threat of > plague. Up to 3,000 people worldwide still die of the disease every > year. > > > > " Having the genome sequence means you have every possible > vaccine target or drug target, " says team leader n Parkhill of > the Sanger Centre in Cambridge, England. " It's a new beginning for > research on the disease. " > > > > The genome, which was described last week in the journal > Nature, is unlike that of other disease-causing organisms. > > > > In just a few thousand years of evolution, the genetic makeup > of Y. pestis appears to have undergone several dramatic changes. > Other disease-causing organisms, such as E. coli or salmonella, have > remained mostly the same after 100 million years of evolution, says > Dr. Parkhill. > > > > " Finding a related organism that can flip around sections of > its genome is actually quite surprising, " he says. > > > > The genes of Y. pestis are a patchwork of missing and > repeating DNA chunks. Many of its genes appear to have been lifted > from viruses, as well as from other bacteria. > > > > The plague bacterium was born between 1,500 and 20,000 years > ago from the bacterium Y. pseudotuberculosis. The two bacteria are > genetically quite similar but drastically different in the diseases > they cause. Y. pseudotuberculosis, which is present in animals, soil, > and water on every continent, produces only a minor gastrointestinal > illness in humans. > > > > Emilio , a biologist at Lawrence Livermore National > Laboratory in California, leads the team that is decoding the genome > for Y. pseudotuberculosis. When that research is finished, in the > next six months to a year, scientists hope to compare the two genomes > side by side for clues to what makes Y. pestis so nasty. > > > > Already, the researchers have found that Y. pestis contains > two major genetic elements not found in its cousin organism, which > may help it better survive in fleas. Comparatively, Y. pestis is also > missing other chunks of genes, whose absence may render it more > malignant in humans. > > > > " Whatever change there is, in going from one [bacterium] to > the other, might explain why this organism is suddenly so virulent, " > says Dr. . > > > > Something definitely happened to Y. pestis in its recent > history, says n Wren of the London School of Hygiene and > Tropical Medicine. " It's gone from an organism that gives you a mild > tummy ache to one that's devastating and has shaped Western > civilization, " he says. > > > > Three waves of plague have struck humanity, each caused by a > different strain of Y. pestis. The so-called ian plague began > in Egypt and swept across Europe in the sixth, seventh and eighth > centuries. The episode known as the Black Death killed 20 million to > 30 million people - one-third of Europe's population - in the mid- > 14th century. Modern plague has killed more than 12 million people in > China and India alone since it arose in 1855. > > > > The recently studied Y. pestis strain came from a Colorado > veterinarian who died in 1992 after being sneezed on by a plague- > infected cat he was trying to rescue from under a house. > > > > Plague can strike in several forms; each is caused by Y. > pestis but differs in its symptoms depending on how it was > contracted. Bubonic plague, characterized by " buboes, " or swollen > lymph nodes, is usually transferred to humans by the bite of an > infected flea. Pneumonic plague, characterized by fever, chills, and > breathing difficulty, is caught by inhaling aerosolized droplets > carrying the bacterium. > > > > Experts say Y. pestis is a potential bioweapon because > terrorists theoretically could spray aerosolized bacteria over a > city, triggering cases of pneumonic plague. The disease, in that > form, is usually fatal unless antibiotics are given within 24 hours > after infection. (Bubonic plague is less deadly, but even so, 1 in 7 > of all plague cases in the United States are fatal.) > > > > Biologists have already deciphered the genomes of other > disease-causing organisms, including those that cause meningitis and > cholera. So far, nobody has developed a vaccine directly from that > information, but it's only a matter of time, scientists say. > > > > " People are still learning how to use genomes to the best > advantage, but they are learning fast and things are changing fast, " > says Keim, a biologist at Northern Arizona University in > Flagstaff. > > > > Dr. Keim uses DNA " fingerprinting " techniques, as would be > used in a court case to identify a suspect, to study bacteria that > could be used as biological weapons. By examining very specific areas > of the genome, he can identify slightly different versions of the > strains of plague. That information, in turn, could help pinpoint the > source of any suspected bioterrorism bug. > > > > Meanwhile, other scientists are working on ways to render the > bacterium harmless once it gets inside humans. ston, a > molecular biologist at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical > Center at Dallas, develops " genetic vaccines " that aim to disarm a > specific disease-causing gene in an organism. Knowing the genome of > plague, Dr. ston says, will help him better identify which genes > to work on. > > > > " It reduces the complexity of the search about twentyfold, " > he says. > > > > Someday, such studies - which are conducted in animals - may > help in developing a better human vaccine. > > > > The plague vaccine that was licensed for use in the United > States was discontinued by its manufacturers in 1999 because of side > effects and questions about its potency. It was never available to > the public, only to the military and laboratory workers who might be > exposed to the plague. > > > > It also worked only for the bubonic plague - not the > pneumonic form that is a more likely outcome of a bioterrorist attack. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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