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    Monkey-Killing Virus Sickens Lab Workers

    An outbreak of a monkey-killing cold virus is the first example of an adenovirus that can infect both monkeys and humans.

    Since they were discovered in the 1950s, researchers have thought each adenovirus strain could infect only one species of animal. One species of adenovirus might be able to infect only a hamster while another might infect only a cat. This is the first example of an adenovirus infecting two different types of animals, in this case, titi monkeys and lab-worker humans.

    "Now adenoviruses can be added to the list of pathogens that have the ability to cross species," study researcher Charles Chiu, director of the viral diagnostics center at the University of California, San Francisco, said in a statement. [10 Deadly Diseases That Hopped Across Species]

    Lethal outbreak

    The virus outbreak occurred in 2009 at the California National Primate Research Center, at the University of California, Davis. The titi monkeys in the colony mysteriously fell ill, the sickness killing about a third of the 65 monkeys there. Only four of the 23 sick monkeys survived the illness.

    At the same time, a researcher came down with a cold and fever lasting four weeks. Two members of the researcher's family, who had never encountered the monkeys, also became sick, though their illness was milder and lasted only two weeks.

    The researchers tested samples from the monkeys to determine the type of virus they were infected with. The infected monkeys had high levels of an unknown adenovirus, which they named titi monkey adenovirus (TMAdV).

    The researchers also found antibodies — proteins the immune system designs and uses to fight off specific infections — in two of the people possibly infected with TMAdV, evidence that the adenovirus might have been what made them ill.

    The researchers suggest this could happen again with other viruses. "Our discovery of TMAdV, a novel adenovirus with the capacity to cross species barriers, highlights the need to monitor adenoviruses closely for outbreak or even pandemic potential," they write in the July 14 issue of the journal PLoS Pathogens.

    Making the jump

    The researchers can't be sure who infected whom, but the mortality rate in titis could mean the virus is native to another species. (If the monkeys were the original hosts, they likely would've already developed some immunity to the virus.)

    "The virulence of TMAdV in healthy and apparently immuno-competent [with normal, healthy immune systems] titi monkeys (83 percent case fatality rate) is highly unusual for infections by adenovirus," the researchers write. "The severity of TMAdV-related illness in affected titi monkeys suggests that this species of monkey may not be the natural host for the virus."

    Interestingly, none of the macaques housed in the same building showed symptoms of the virus, but their antibodies indicated that one had been infected with TMAdV at some time. This monkey could have had a low-lying infection, which spread to the titis and to humans, the researchers suggest.

    You can follow LiveScience staff writer Jennifer Welsh on Twitter @microbelover. Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience and on Facebook.

    What do you feel about this article?

     

    18 comments

    • Centrist  •  10 months ago
      Large and crowded human population on earth means we WILL have epidemics, repeatedly, from viruses that mutate on their own, like this one. Ebola, hanta and other deadly ones must be researched to find weapons against them. NOT messing with Nature means Nature will prune it's own over-grown garden in its own way. What kind of "weeds" do you think she would be pulling?
    • Jennie  •  10 months ago
      I wonder if they tested the birds droppings for the virus. Birds are known to carry disease.
      • Bella 10 months ago
        everything is known to carry disease.
    • Troubleman  •  10 months ago
      Now, I'm only an evil jenyous but, isn't this the plot to the movie OUTBREAK? Where's Dustin when you FINALLY need him?
    • Serena B  •  10 months ago
      It's human nature to keep screwing around with things they shouldn't.
      • Fooki 10 months ago
        Sad but true.
      • Patton 10 months ago
        Yes, isn't it horrible what they did with polio in the 1950's?
    • Fooki  •  10 months ago
      And so we can all be glad that the NBAF is moving from Plum island to Kansas... This way we can all die quicker. (National Bio and Agro-Defense Facility). There is a reason it's on an island...
    • Fooki  •  10 months ago
      Well now they know better and remember kids "knowing is half the battle". Oh and hey thanks for exposing the human race to yet another deadly disease and thereby giving it a chance to mutate. The 3 people involved must have been exposed to the general population at some point or another...
    • bigdog  •  10 months ago
      We have a destructive virus here spreading like crazy! it's called republicans!
      • Jeremy 10 months ago
        Do you have to spam every article with your politico-psycho trash? Go to another forum; we're sick of it.
      • Fooki 10 months ago
        1) agree with Jeremy 2) its all politicians not one party or another 3) they are parasites not a virus.
    • Anonymous  •  10 months ago
      Oh another brilliant creation! Keep working on that population control! Congrats! Lets see what "mandatory" vaccine they develop now...and i wonder what their selection of death to lace it with will be...brilliant. PIGS
    • Jason  •  10 months ago
      zombie apocyclipse here we come baby!!
    • John  •  10 months ago
      Any ever heard of a strain of Ebola called Ebola Reston? In 1986 it wiped out all the onkeys at a quarantine facility and also infected the lab people working there but had no symptoms in the human hosts. They are JUST carriers of a strain of Ebola that can mutate again just like it did in the town of Reston. Oh, this all took place in a close proximity to Washington D.C.. Go look it up if you don't believe me.
    • wyndsurfr  •  10 months ago
      jesus christ... why don't these people get a clue and stop risking their families and the rest of the world like this. If you are working with weird stuff like that, you should live in total isolation while doing it. Oh well, someone shows up in my yard with some weird symptoms, theyre getting blown away, might not save me but sure would make me feel a little better.
      • Jeremy 10 months ago
        If you did that, their blood would aerosolize and infect you too.
      • Patton 10 months ago
        Yea, let's kill all the monkeys. Let's kill all the other primates too.
    • j  •  10 months ago
      OH #$%$
    • D  •  10 months ago
      Isn't this where zombies come from?
    • 25,763,932 minutes ago  •  10 months ago
      Reminds me of Bernadine(Howard's GF)on Big Bang Theory show. She works with viruses and such then uses the lab equipment for making drinks! LOL..At least she occasionally ends up quarantined.
    • alpine  •  10 months ago
      "The researchers can't be sure who infected whom".
      This is funny."Who infected whom".Oh boy.it can kill us.
    • shawn  •  10 months ago
      guess who was playing around with the monkeys
    • Larry  •  10 months ago
      Humping monkeys gave us AIDS, what else do you want.
    • Publius Americanus  •  10 months ago
      If they quarantine the White House ... The Monkey in Chief will not be able to golf.
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