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Medicine Science

Human Tissue Preserved Since World War I Yields New Clues About 1918 Pandemic (sciencemag.org) 42

sciencehabit quotes Science magazine: On 27 June 1918, two young German soldiers—one age 18, the other 17—died in Berlin from a new influenza strain that had emerged earlier that year. Their lungs ended up in the collection of the Berlin Museum of Medical History, where they rested, fixed in formalin, for 100 years. Now, researchers have managed to sequence large parts of the virus that infected the two men, giving a glimpse into the early days of the most devastating pandemic of the 20th century. The partial genomes hold some tantalizing clues that the infamous flu strain may have adapted to humans between the pandemic's first and second waves.

The researchers also managed to sequence an entire genome of the pathogen from a young woman who died in Munich at an unknown time in 1918. It is only the third full genome of the virus that caused that pandemic and the first from outside North America, the authors write in a preprint posted on bioRxiv.

"It's absolutely fantastic work," says Hendrik Poinar, who runs an ancient DNA lab at McMaster University. "The researchers have made reviving RNA viruses from archival material an achievable goal. Not long ago this was, like much ancient DNA work, a fantasy."

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Human Tissue Preserved Since World War I Yields New Clues About 1918 Pandemic

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  • been done before (Score:4, Informative)

    by NikeHerc ( 694644 ) on Saturday May 22, 2021 @03:15PM (#61411050)
    In work from about 2004: "CDC researchers and their colleagues successfully reconstructed the influenza virus that caused the 1918-19 flu pandemic, which killed as many as 50 million people worldwide." https://www.cdc.gov/flu/about/qa/1918flupandemic.htm [cdc.gov]

    See also "The Deadliest Flu: The Complete Story of the Discovery and Reconstruction of the 1918 Pandemic Virus." https://www.cdc.gov/flu/pandemic-resources/reconstruction-1918-virus.html [cdc.gov]

    If memory serves, a researcher contracted the 1918 flu and died. We are lucky this wasn't a Wuhan-like event.
    • by Opyros ( 1153335 )
      And Slashdot ran a story [slashdot.org] about it then. And ran another story [slashdot.org] the next year about reconstruction of the virus.
      • "And Slashdot ran a story [slashdot.org] about it then. And ran another story [slashdot.org] the next year about reconstruction of the virus." - Wow, Slashdot ran stories in 1918 and 1919 already? I never knew the pantographs were that sophisticated.
  • It's the fact that recipies like this, in combination with the ever increasing presence of technologies like CRISPR, will become more accessible until eventually some sociopath will weaponize and unleash it. Ted Kasinsky may have been crazy, but he wasn't entirely stupid. And while a weaponized version of this might not wipe out the whole human race, the amount of pain and suffering it could inflict would be horrific at best.
  • It will be out in the street in a few years.
  • by crunchygranola ( 1954152 ) on Saturday May 22, 2021 @10:41PM (#61411916)

    At exactly the same time as the 1918 Influenza Pandemic there was another viral pandemic that killed millions of people (maybe 1 or 2, not 50-100). This one infected the nervous system and killed perhaps 10% of those who became ill. Some of the victims who survived became lifelong catatonics. One group of such people is discussed in Oliver Sack's book Awakenings. After spreading around the world with tens of millions infected, it disappeared in the 1920s. No one knows what type of virus it was.

    I used to think (by inference) that Encephalitis lethargica was a weird presentation of the 1918 flu, as the progression of the two pandemics closely match - but in reality they were unrelated diseases.

    If someone preserved a tissue sample from a Encephalitis lethargica victim perhaps we can find out what it was.

  • Descendants of the 1918 H1N1 virus make up the influenza viruses we’re fighting today. Getting historical samples gives us insight into how the virus has mutated over the last 100 years.

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