The last may have not been heard
about the dreaded Ebola Virus Disease, EVD, which claimed thousands of
lives in West Africa including Nigeria as researchers have identified
mutations in Ebola virus that increased ability of the virus to infect
human cells during the 2013-2016 Ebola virus epidemics. The findings
have been reported by two independent teams of researchers as reported
in Cell.
The
Ebola outbreak over the last two years had been adjudged the worst
that ravaged the region the world has ever seen. By the end of the
epidemic in 2016, more than 28,652 people had been infected and more
than 11,325 people were dead. In Nigeria, 20 cases and eight deaths were
recorded before the country was declared Ebola free October 20, 2014.
Mutations:
The new study which investigated whether the virus might have changed
genetically in response to infection of such large numbers of people,
found mutations of the gene that encodes the Ebola virus glycoprotein
increased the virus’ ability to infect cells of humans and other
primates. By increasing infectivity in human cells, it is possible that
these mutations increased Ebola virus spread during the outbreak.

A
co-author of one of the papers and Professor at the University of
Massachusetts Medical School, Jeremy Luban, in the new research
explained that: “Ebola virus is thought to circulate in an unknown
animal reservoir and to only rarely cross over into people. When the
virus does cross over, the effect has been devastating to those people
who are infected. Until recently, the human disease outbreaks have been
short lived, and the virus has had little opportunity to adapt
genetically to the human host.”
Also
reacting to the findings, a virologist at the University of Nottingham
and co-author of the other paper, Jonathan Ball said: “If you introduce a
virus into a new host, like humans, it may need to adapt to better
infect and spread in that host.” One particular mutation, studied by
both groups, emerged early in the outbreak just as case numbers vastly
increased and soon became the dominant virus type circulating in the
outbreak.
Ball
added that the Ebola virus mutations did not increase the ability of
Ebola virus to infect cells from other mammalian species, including the
presumed natural host of Ebola virus.
“We
found that, as Ebola virus was spreading from human to human, it
apparently didn’t have to worry about maintaining its infectivity in
bats,” Ball stated.
The
research teams are continuing their work to learn more about how these
specific mutations made the Ebola virus more infectious for human cells.
“It’s important to understand how these viruses evolve during
outbreaks,” says Luban. “By doing so, we will be better prepared should
these viruses spill over to humans in the future.”
By: Chioma Obinna
Vanguard News
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