There is no "cold family".
Mine was fairly unemotional, although I always knew my mom and dad loved me.
There is no "cold family".
Mine was fairly unemotional, although I always knew my mom and dad loved me.
In answer to your question the selective pressure to increase virulence is the development of (partial) immunity in the host population. Partially immune hosts will be less likely to be infected, with milder shorter lived disease and less viral shedding. Either mutations that suppress or evade the immune response or increase viral shedding, will favour continued viral circulation.Funny, other than mild differences, we don't see that happening. Care to cite a strain of seasonal flu that happened to that wasn't from a reassortment?
And no, your cites didn't say seasonal flu mutates to more severe cases. Your sources were about genetic changes in general, basic evolution we all know: selection pressures acting on random mutations.
Also, what are the selection pressures that act on seasonal flu to produce more virulent strains? You seem to have forgotten that half of the equation.
Transient virulence of emerging pathogens.
Bolker BM; Nanda A; Shah D.
Journal of the Royal Society Interface. 7(46):811-22, 2010 May 06.
Should emerging pathogens be unusually virulent? If so, why? Existing theories of virulence evolution based on a tradeoff between high transmission rates and long infectious periods imply that epidemic growth conditions will select for higher virulence, possibly leading to a transient peak in virulence near the beginning of an epidemic. This transient selection could lead to high virulence in emerging pathogens. Using a simple model of the epidemiological and evolutionary dynamics of emerging pathogens, along with rough estimates of parameters for pathogens such as severe acute respiratory syndrome, West Nile virus and myxomatosis, we estimated the potential magnitude and timing of such transient virulence peaks. Pathogens that are moderately evolvable, highly transmissible, and highly virulent at equilibrium could briefly double their virulence during an epidemic; thus, epidemic-phase selection could contribute significantly to the virulence of emerging pathogens. In order to further assess the potential significance of this mechanism, we bring together data from the literature for the shapes of tradeoff curves for several pathogens (myxomatosis, HIV, and a parasite of Daphnia) and the level of genetic variation for virulence for one (myxomatosis). We discuss the need for better data on tradeoff curves and genetic variance in order to evaluate the plausibility of various scenarios of virulence evolution.
Re-emergence of H3N2 strains carrying potential neutralizing mutations at the N-linked glycosylation site at the hemagglutinin head, post the 2009 H1N1 pandemic.
Ushirogawa H; Naito T; Tokunaga H; Tanaka T; Nakano T; Terada K; Ohuchi M; Saito M.
BMC Infectious Diseases. 16:380, 2016 08 08.
Abstract
Background
Seasonally prevalent H1N1 and H3N2 influenza A viruses have evolved by antigenic drift; this evolution has resulted in the acquisition of asparagine (N)-linked glycosylation sites (NGSs) in the globular head of hemagglutinin (HA), thereby affecting the antigenic and receptor-binding properties, as well as virulence. An epidemiological survey indicated that although the traditional seasonal H1N1 strain had disappeared, H3N2 became predominant again in the seasons (2010–11 and 2011–12) immediately following the H1N1 pandemic of 2009. Interestingly, although the 2009 pandemic H1N1 strain (H1N1pdm09) lacks additional NGSs, clinically isolated H3N2 strains obtained during these seasons gained N (Asn) residues at positions 45 and 144 of HA that forms additional NGSs.
Methods
To investigate whether these NGSs are associated with re-emergence of H3N2 within the subtype, we tested the effect of amino acid substitutions on neutralizing activity by using the antisera raised against H3N2 strains with or without additional NGSs. Furthermore, because the N residue at position 144 of HA was identified as the site of mismatch between the vaccine and epidemic strains of 2011–2012, we generated mutant viruses by reverse genetics and tested the functional importance of this particular NGS for antibody-mediated neutralization by intranasal inoculation of mice.
Results
The results indicated that amino acid substitution at residue 144 significantly affected neutralization activity, acting as an escape mutation.
Conclusions
Our data suggest that the newly acquired NGSs in the HA globular head may play an important role in the re-emergence of endemic seasonal H3N2 strain by aiding the escape from humoral immunity.
This paper which looked at a number of viruses suggests virulence should increase during outbreaks.
If that happens with Covid-19, we'll be looking at 100 million dead and a global economic recession much worse the the Great Depression.
Sleep well.
If that happens with Covid-19, we'll be looking at 100 million dead and a global economic recession much worse the the Great Depression.
Sleep well.
IIRC they stopped at Hong Kong instead of bypassing it.
I don't know why you keep pushing the doomsday scenarios, here.
If that happens with Covid-19, we'll be looking at 100 million dead and a global economic recession much worse the the Great Depression.
Sleep well.
I don't know why you keep pushing the doomsday scenarios, here.
Or, in code, Hong Mei House (at Cheung Hong Estate) is the new Amoy Gardens.If that happens with Covid-19, we'll be looking at 100 million dead and a global economic recession much worse the the Great Depression.
Sleep well.
I don't know why you keep pushing the doomsday scenarios, here.
"If the world doesn't want to wake up and consider the virus as public enemy number one, I don't think we will learn from our lessons," WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in Geneva.
Not everything has a dry surface. Lettuce, for example. By the time it's in your bag it has been touched by the grocer, clerk and the bagger.
Since it doesn't cause "Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome" the same way SARS did, did you see why they were considering SARS in the name?Virus name is proposed as SARS-COV-2. Disease is COVID-19.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Belz is right, TA, your posts read like a panic attack.Jesus H Christ, if you read the thread, you'd see that all the way through .....
Of course. But this comes down to how infectious the pathogen is and whether rinsing the lettuce and peeling the outer layers off assures no virus goes from the bag and lettuce to your hands and your mouth.I hope everyone already washes their lettuce for bacterial reasons. I usually use soapy water followed by a rinse. Often I also discard the outer leaves because they are brown first.