故聖人之事,廣之則極宇宙,窮日月, 約之則無出乎身者也。
呂 不韋
What the sage does, considered in terms of its breadth, reaches to the ends of the universe, to the very limit of where the sun and moon shine, but when considered in terms of its essential features, it does not go beyond its own self.
LÜ BUWEI
The curse of fakes in science, mistaken assessment of the severity of the H1N1 flu 2008-2009
These pages are provided "as is", in the form they had when they were created, except for typographic corrections when found. Links are periodically checked for validity. Unfortunately, the memory of the WWW is very short, and links become obsolete fast. In this case they are deleted. This implies that original information is progressively lost, exactly as in human memory...
20 december 2009. Influenza
is for some persons a very dangerous disease, which needs to be
taken seriously. It causes a number of fatalities every year. Yet,
because this number is usually low in proportion of the number of
affected persons, flu outbreaks can be judged as benign, mild or
severe. The present outbreak of an H1N1 strain is a mild
outbreak (once again this does not say that the disease is not serious
for some persons, but only that the number of serious cases is low).
The WHO, which monitors the development of the pandemic notes that the
pattern of the disease in the Northern Hemisphere did not change from
what it was during our summer in the Southern Hemisphere. The pandemic
is therefore on the mild side. We need to remember this when the
so-called seasonal flu will spread, as the H3N2 virus which will
probably dominate, it will not cause a milder outbreak but possibly a
significanly more severe outbreak.
19 december 2009. All domains of biology are
the theater of unethical behaviour. This is particularly so,
unfortunately, for work published in fashionable magazines (see underlying
reasons for this otherwise surprising behaviour). This would not
be a matter of great concern if this had no consequence in the domain
of health for example. The case of H. M. Krishna Murthy, which is
under investigation, is of particular concern, as it dealt with an
improbable domain of science as a subject to fakes, that of
crystallographic data describing the structure of proteins, and in
particular of a protein of the dangerous dengue virus. All the work of
this scientist in this domain has been
retracted by the Journal of Biological Chemistry. It will be
important to monitor the faite of other articles of this author in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) and Nature,
as they deal with important topics for medicine, atherosclerosis and
innate immunity.
10 december 2009. While experts from all
over the world discuss the present climate changes, few dare to name
the first cause of the phenomenon, the enormous increase of the world
population. Malthus is seen as the devil. Only
China, which for decades became aware of the danger of an ever
increasing population, dares to say that no solution will be
sustainable if the world population is not rapidly under control (and,
in fact, decreasing). Indeed, beside climate, this process is at the
root of the general modification of ecosystems, and of what is
becoming the sixth mass extinction of living species. Many reasons
account for this blind spot in our perception, and also for the wrong
idea that an ageing population is more costly to the society than a
population of young people. The cult of the triangular age pyramid is
perhaps one of the most dangerous ideas plaguing our societies of the
biblical "grow and multiply". And one must wonder about programmes
meant to alleviate hunger that only take into account an elusive
present and do not provide, as itis done in China (even if the methods
used there have been and still are often crual), the deserved hope for
the children which are today saved for a brieef period, to benefit
from a happy life, by teaching their parents how to control their
birth rate.
5 december 2009. The difference between mild
seasonal flu episodes and the present H1N1 pandemic is mostly in the
peak date of the disease and in the fact that older persons are
affected to a lesser extent. Overall the by the WHO shows that the
disease is already levelling off in most European countries. This is
consistent with what has been observed in the Southern hemispher last
summer. If no mutation towards a more pathogenic form occurs in the
near future, the disease will have been quite mild as compared to
previous influenza outbreaks.
2 december 2009. There is much agitation
around the present flu pandemic, and one may wonder about the
underlying interests in our world where the only value is venal. The
most concerning feature of the present epidemic is the way it is
managed, not the severity of the disease. The risk is that laypersons
would forget about the real dangers of some types of influenza, so
that when a new pandemic happens the population would be reluctant to
be vaccinated. We no longer know in details the fate of the H5N1
virus. In the same way an infection with a type
A H9 influenza virus has been recently identified in Hong Kong,
and it is important to monitor the spread of the virus. Cases have
already been noted in Hong kon in 1999, 2003, 2007 and 2008.
1 december 2009. Among the most
interesting features of Synthetic Biology is the ability to express
proteins which harbour amino acid residues that do not belong to the
standard family of the twenty amino acids found in all proteins. The
laboratory of Peter Schultz
at the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California is among the
most famous ones in this domain. Unfortunately, Schultz
and his colleagues just retracted several articles that
described remarkably interesting experiments (showing ncorporation of
glycosylated aminoacids in proteins) and in particular the reference
article published in 2004 in the manazine Science, because
they were unable to reproduce the corresponding results. The tentation
to publish too fast is increasing, in particular because of the
inappropriate weight given to magazines considered as prestigious
(such as Nature and Science) where the popular
dimension of mass media communication is favoured. One observes indeed
that a large number of
articles published in these magazine describe results which cannot
be reproduced.
27 november 2009. Much inaccuracies or
plainly wrong information plagues news about the present H1N1
pandemic. In this context it may be interesting to have a look at
Peter Osborn site, where careful compilation provides information only
a few days late. The best vaccine in the world, the vaccine against
the virus causing Yellow Fever is used in a
multicountry vaccination campaign as the disease is back in West
Africa. 12 million people are targeted for vaccination.
20 november 2009. Facing the
indiscriminate way mass media spread rumors, the WHO just published a
briefing note about a mutation of the H1N1 swine flu, which appears
sporadically and has been found in a few fatalities. Nothing can tell,
at this time, whether the mutant viruses are particularly prone to
spread, nor whether they are responsible for the dangerous symptoms.
15 november 2009. Safe drinking water is a
luxury. Countries such as Bangladesh and India (some regions of China
also, and regions immediately downstream of mines such as Carnoulès in
France) are heavily contaminated with arsenic. Work in progress tries
to understand how using the microbial flora could improve water
contamination by arsenic. Another hardship associated to water
pollution is the ubiquitous spread of cholera in regions with poor
sanitation. 120,000 people to receive oral cholera vaccine in
Bangladesh. An epidemic is active
in Congo-Kinsasha.
11 november 2009. As a controversy about
global warming is stirred up by persons fond of their own promotion by
mass media we should be concerned by the extent of the area of a dangerous
virus, Crimean-Congo virus, often transmitted by ticks, and the
cause of a letal hemorrhagic fever. This virus has recently been the
cause of a casualty in the American troops in Afghanistan.
8 november 2009. Information about the nature of the new
disease agent XMRV (based
on fake work this has been retracted) can be found at
the Wittemore Peterson Institute. It is important to remember how
diseases can spread from animals to humans. Unfortunately there is
always a tendency to explore dangerous borders, often with the support
of the general public when apparent immediate personal interest is at
stake. Today some scientists crave of doing human/chimeras, and this
is of course not new. In the 1920s, in a vision to Africa, supported
by the Soviet government, the Academy of Science and the Institut
Pasteur, the renowned specialist Ilya Ivanov
went about this strange project by artificially fertilizing
chimpanzee females with human sperm – without success, as should
have been expected anyway. Serge Voronoff,
starting in the early 1920s
and for many years, grafted ape and monkey testicles to old men
to enhance their longevity. Working at the Collège de France, he was
supported by his rich second wife who made a donation to this
institution that is still active. And today many in the world have
undertaken similar types of experiments with human cells and embryos,
not without general support from individual in the public.
Yet, even human tissues may be dangerous, as can be seen with
cornea grafts or the use of human growth hormone leading to
Creutzfeld-Jakob disease.
1 november 2009. The new H1N1 influenza
"swine" virus is spreading in the Northern Hemisphere as a fairly mild
disease. In this context it is important to monitor the fate of the
H5N1 avian virus, and it seems puzzling that it has apparently more or
less disappeared from the picture, the
last confirmed case being reported in Egypt by the WHO on september
24th. We need to remember that patients can be infected by
several flu viruses at the same time, and that this is during such
events that reassortments of virus segments can happen. A reassorted
H1N1 / H5N1 virus might be particularly dangerous. The lack of report
could be due to inappropriate diagnostic in apparently severe cases
attributed to H1N1.
25 october 2009. The first general outbreak
of the influenza H1N1 virus expanded rapidly to the Southern
Hemisphere at a time when it was winter there. As winter favours
influenza it may be useful to analyse the pattern of the disease in
Australia, New Zeland, South Africa and South America to help
predicting what will now happen in the Northern Hemisphere. The Eurosurvellance
network just released a thorough analysis of this situation. The
conclusion of this study is that, as expected, the most vulnerable
patients are those immunocompromized (including AIDS patients), with
pre-existing respiratory diseases, those with morbid obesity and
pregnant women. The pattern of infection suggest a greater
susceptibility of persons younger than 60. It is also clear that
children younger than 5 years are more at risk than adult. The
situation is somewhat difficult to analyze because two H1N1 A viruses
are circulating concomitantly with somewhat similar symptoms. The
seasonal H1N1 virus (which propagates also in parallel with a H3N2 A
virus) has a mean peak of infectivity for people aged around 27, while
the new pandemic H1N1 A virus has a peak for persons ten years
younger. Overall, however, the symptoms of the disease are not
considerably different in both cases. This analysis sugests that, if
the pandemic virus does not mutate towards a more dangerous form, the
present outbreak should not disrupt the health care systems in the
Northern Hemisphere.
21 october 2009. With all the hype about
the influenza H1N1 A virus it is important to understand how it works.
In a blog for computer scientists or people familiar with computers bunnie's
blog gives an excellent illustration of what a virus is. In this
context it is useful to understand that this H1N1 virus is but a
variant (a significant one) of the seasonal flu which infected us for
many years. Vaccines which are made following the old recipes, with
the new virus, should have no more and no less harmful consequences
than the ordinary seasonal flu vaccine. The questions should be
whether this is the case of the vaccine which is proposed to you. If
the MD can answer, and gives you this specific answer, no problem.
Otherwise you may have good reasons to refuse to be vaccinated. Note
however that the present virus seems to have affinity to younger
people, so that it may well be wise to be vaccinated if you are young
(or have young children).
16 october 2009. New studies do not
substantiate the association between the XMR Virus and prostate
cancer (note that the work is fake and has been retracted).
However the specialists of the domain remain cautious. It is indeed
quite difficult to characterize this virus. Let us remember that at
the time when the SARS virus was discovered the
first studies suggested that it was a metapneumovirus while it
was a coronavirus, of a quite different family. In general it remains
difficult to establish the causality relationship between viruses and
cancer, so that we do not know exactly how many cancers are caused by
viruses (probably at least 25% of all cancers).
10 october 2009. In january 1983 we
delivered a conference in
Ouagadougou (Burkina Faso, then Upper Volta) on the potential
dangers of body fluids, blood in particular, in view of the
emergence of a novel disease which appeared to preferentially affect
homosexuals. At the time not many people showed great concern about
this kind of event. We are possibly facing a similar event today with
the identification of a novel blood borne viral pathogen, the
xenotropic murine leukemia virus, XMRV. This retrovirus is now
proposed (2011: this
work has been retracted) to be connected to two major
diseases, the most
aggressive forms of prostate cancer, and an enigmatic disease
which affected many soldiers in the first Irak war, Myalgic
Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. This observation
suggests that these diseases and in particular the aggressive form of
prostate cancer maybe transmitted through transfusions, and may belong
to sexually transmitted diseases. This is a signal that we should be
extremely cautious when using blood derivatives and cell cultures. In
this context, the idea of preparing vaccines using cell cultures
(which generally require complex media for growth and many shed
unwanted viruses) should be monitored with the utmost care, and in
particular use recognized methods for virus inactivation.
2 october 2009. With the H1N1 flu
developping it is important to remember a few terms and facts. Mass
media, curiously, speak about influenza A as different from seasonal
flu! In fact the major component of seasonal flu this year is an
influenza A virus, of the subtype H3N2. The virus possess an RNA
genome that encodes ten genes. It is divided into eight segments, each
containing only one or two genes. Two of the gene products,
haemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA), usually elicit an antibody
response from its host, as they are seen by its immune system. The
virus comes in a variety of "flavours" or rather "subtypes" referring
to the specific HA and NA alleles: 'Spanish flu’, a variety of H1N1
virus, H3N2 ‘1968 Hong Kong flu’, H5N1 ‘avian flu’. So far, 16 HA and
9 NA antigenic subtypes have been identified. Several subtypes are a
great matter of concern, especially H5N1 and H9N2. The major reservoir
of viruses is birds of the Anatidae family (ducks, geese and similar
birds), where it is generally innocuous and transmitted, not as in
humans, by the oro-fecal route. As other organisms the influenza virus
mutates (i.e. changes the spelling of the text of its genome). It has
also another means of variation, named reassortment. This permits it
to exchange entire segments among the eight which makes its genome. A
cell which is infected by two viruses can therefore reassort its
genome: say that a cell is infected by both type A H1N1 and H7N7, it
can generate a virus of type H7N1. This type of change has often been
at the origin of pandemics. The present status has
been summarized earlier. It is also important to note that a new
A flu subtype H3N2 is spreading rapidly at present and is not
recognized by the seasonal flu vaccine that is now distributed!
24 september 2009. A buzz ripples the WWW with an
interesting study showing that much false positive results can be
generated in one uses statistics without proper care in cognition
studies of the brain. Bennett and colleagues showed that an experiment
using a dead salmon could convincingly (for uncautious readers) mimick
brain activity showing cognitive properties !
23 september 2009. Almost 40,000 persons
are injected with a vaccine against the flu H1N1 virus in Beijing.
This trial should show whether the vaccine can protect health
personnel and persons at risk. The first observations did not show
major negative side effects.
12 august 2009. The University of Hong
Kong recently published two interesting studies, in collaboration with
other laboratories in the world. At the Department of Biochemistry an
explanation of missing bones in fingers was found to be related to a
mutation in a regulatory gene, Ihh. This may be due to an alteration
of binding of the gene product to its receptor and also to alteration
of its diffusion. In parallel, a study at the Department of
Microbiology showed that the
present swine flu virus had a long history, especially in pigs.
Tracing back its history the scientists highlight the need for
increased surveillance in pigs. Once again this points out the
importance of pig breeding in
shifting the host of the virus from birds to humans.
2 august 2009. A new source of HIV, the
AIDS virus, coming from gorillas (SIVgor) is at the origin of a human
case detected in France. A still highly controversial hypothesis
states that bats are cousins of primates. These mammals, which play a
considerable role in pollinisation of many tropical plants as well as
distribution of their seeds in the environment, are indeed the
reservoirs of many viruses which infect humans. Rabies is probably the
most infamous one, but the SARS coronavirus was also found in bats,
where it is probably fairly widespread. And the haemorrhagic fever
Marburg virus is also infecting, but not causing much disease in the
common fruit bat Rousettus aegyptiacus, which is eaten by
humans in some quarters. Other viruses potentially dangerous for
humans (Hendra and Nipah viruses) are also widespread in bats, such as
Eidolon helvum, the African Straw-coloured fruit bat.
24 july 2009. Birds do not sweat, and this
poses a physiological problem when the weather is warm, as well as in
tropical areas. It is not rare to see sparrows (or storks
if one has the opportunity) that stay with they beak open to
evacuate heat. For a long time the enormous beak of the toucan has
been an enigma: was is a sexual attractant, a device meant to select
for birds apt to survive with such a disadvantage, an instrument to
peel fruits? Glenn Tattersall and his colleagues at Brock University
in the province of Ontario, Canada have found the solution. The
toucan's beak is a radiator which permits the bird to adapt their body
temperature to outside temperature in tropical forests. This solution
is typical of the tinkering specific to the absence of design in the
evolution of life.
23 july 2009. Many persons were affected by
a variety of troubles after swimming on the beaches in Algeria. The
symptoms are reminiscent of those caused by Ostreopsis ovata,
a marine dinoflagellate living in tropical and subtropical areas but
recently frequently found in the Mediterranean Sea, possibly as a
consequence of global warming.
22 july 2009. It was thought for a long
time that despite the similarity (and ancestry) of the parent of the
HIV virus, the virus SIVcpz did not cause disease in chimpanzees. Yet
a long observation of chimpanzees in the wild showed that some animals
did die younger than others, and that this corresponds to those
infected by SIVcpz. Beatrice Hahn and her colleagues at the University
of Alabama at Birmingham (USA) established that the animals indeed
display symptoms similar to those of AIDS. This could not be
established earlier because the disease needs time to be established,
as in humans.
9 july 2009. Despite the old age of the
Chinese civilisation, which should have precluded invasion from
western fads and fallacies, a lobby has tried to introduce teaching
creationism and intelligent design in Hong Kong schools.Fortunately
this was unsuccessful and the government of Hong Kong ruled that
evolution should be taught at school, in particular making reference
to the theories of Charles Darwin and Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck.
30 june 2009. The number of deaths due to
swine flu (A H1N1) has largely topped those caused by avian flu (A
H5N1). Yet, the former is much less severe than the latter. But it
seems to be extremely contagious at least in people younger than about
50. Because of this situation, some people have tried to organise
"swine flu parties" where they would catch the disease in order to be
vaccinated. This is a very wrong idea, not for individual persons, but
for the whole health care system: if flu were to spread extremely
fast, it would, despite its fairly innocuous symptoms, create a number
of severe cases which might flood the health care systems... We need
to think collectively!
26 june 2009. From the medical standpoint
Iran is located at a crucial position for the spread of diseases
between the Eastern and the Western part of the Asian-European
continent. It is most important the the country remains as open as
possible. The present situation of control of the media by the
government despite the major use of Twitter with the #iranelection tag
is a matter of concern. To get an idea of the background political
situation In terms of statistics, it is interesting to see the analysis
performed by Dr Walter Mebane using Benford's law.
It is now extremely difficult to monitor the situation, in particular
in hospitals. Fortunately the type A flu H1N1 does not seem, for the
time being, to be a dangerous form of the disease.
20 june 2009. Bubonic plague is endemic in many parts of the
world, associated with rodents and occasionally affecting humans. An
epidemic recently affected the region of Tobruk (Tubruq), in Lybia
with more than 30 persons catching the disease (which is fortunately
sensitive to antibiotics if taken early enough).
14 june 2009. A study published
in Nature with the Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine of Hong Kong,
the University of Arizona and the University of Oxford substantiates
the idea, developed repeatedly, that
the flu virus tends to reassort between birds, pigs and humans.
The present outbreak is typical of this situation.
12 june 2009. The new pandemic of H1N1 flu will require
billions of vaccine doses. As the common practice is producing
vaccine by growing the virus on fertilised hen's eggs this will
pose an enormous logistic hurdle. Some companies are starting to
produce the virus on animal cells, but this may be very dangerous, as
these cells may yield infective prions. A deep analysis is therefore
needed before this approach can be used. Any mistake in the domain
would result in spongiform encephalopathies after decades, as in the
case of the mad cow's disease. To be updated daily on viruses H5N1 and
H1N1 see AIDaily.
10 june 2009. Autumn is starting in the
South hemisphere, and it is expected that this is where swine flu
could develop. Australia has indeed reached 1,200 cases of H1N1 flu.
This demonstrates person-to-person contagion independent of the
initial source, the exact definition of the beginning of a pandemic.
2 june 2009. Among the great many
explanations proposed for the vanishing
of flight AF447, one stressed the possible "innovative"
behaviour of computers. As we wrote at the end of our presentation in
French of synthetic biology, "who would like to fly in a plane that
innovates in its behaviour?", it may be what happened. During
particularly violent turbulences, the plane computers might have taken
the upper hand, without leaving to the pilots the possibility to react
intelligently... Will we know, ever, the answer?
30 may 2009. A new
member of the Arenaviridae, viruses comprising the
infamous Ebola and Lassa viruses has been discovered recently in South
Africa. It has been provisionally named Lujo virus (LUJV) in
recognition of its geographic origin (Lusaka, Zambia, and
Johannesburg, South Africa). This is the first discovery of this
family after three decades. The virus seems highly letal, as his
counterparts, and is spread by direct contact or body fluids, which
limits its transmission. Its genome has been sequenced. The origin of
the virus is, as yet, unknown.
29 may 2009. As unfortunately expected
with all chemical treatments the WHO has warned that malaria parasites
begin to evolve to forms resistant to the most efficacious drug,
artemisinin. This resistance is building up at the frontier between
Cambodia and Thailand, and seems to be spreading.
19 may 2009. Now that the H1N1 flu is
spreading in Japan, without direct contact with the original source of
the virus it is likely that the epidemic will spread fairly rapidly,
and reach the highest level of pandemic contagion according to the WHO
classification. Fortunately, for the time being, while the virus seems
to be extremely contagious, its symptoms are generally fairly mild.
Further evolution is utterly unpredictable. One of the difficulties to
monitor the spread of the disease is that many viral diseases have
early symptoms similar to those of flu. Chikungunya, for example, is
active at present in India and in Malaysia.
16 may 2009. Swine
flu is expanding. In an interesting move demonstrating how far the
link between diseases and social behaviour goes, the name of this
particular strain of the influenza A virus shifted from mexican, to
swine, to H1N1 or simply A influenza. All kinds of special interest
groups are involved, suggesting that it will be difficult to trace
back exactly the history of the virus. Fortunately, for the time
being, the symptoms of the disease are fairly similar to those of
routine flu, which causes many deaths every year anyway. A study
published in the Journal of Neurovirology shows that the large
population of cognitively
impaired HIV-infected patients (about half of the total
population) is due to white
matter tract injury. This advocates for treatments that would
pass the blood-brain barrier in HIV-infected persons.
2 may 2009. Born in a polish family famous
for its poets, scientists and musicians, Piotr
Slonimski, one of the fathers of molecular genetics died on
april 25th. He was one of the few pioneers of genomics in
France. Working with Boris
Ephrussi, he played a seminal role in the difficult development
of genetics in a country where this science always had an ambiguous
status. His contribution to the genetics of mitochondria (remains of
previously symbiotic bacteria, which manage energy in the cell) is
considerable.
1 may 2009. The various sequences of the
new H1N1 swine flu virus are available at GISAID. As usual with flu,
the virus evolves both by mutations and by reassortment. In the
present case a triple reassortment event, is likely to have occurred
some ten years ago (in 1998) assorting avian, human, and swine viruses
components which combined in pigs. At the present time all segments of
the current virus seems to be of pig origin. In terms of protection, masks
are quite ambiguous as it is necessary to use ones hands to put
them on. Hand hygiene is the most important protection, and one should
rigorously avoid touching ones face, mouth, nose and eyes in
particular. New studies contradict two decades of studies on the way
the HIV penetrates cells. The virus does not directly fuse with the
cell's membrane, but is internalised first in vesicles.
26 april 2009. In contrast to the SARS
episode, when not much was known about the cause of the epidemic, we
know much about flu outbreaks and even pandemics. The profile of the
patients is somewhat atypical in Mexico (20-40 years of age) and this
is one of the reasons of concern. Yet, the main problem is social
control of the spread of the disease. Knowing, unfortunately, is
not enough to prevent people from moving and having irrational
behaviour. A strict hygiene is absolutely
necessary. The next few days will say how much we have learnt
from previous experience. We need at least two months to create a
vaccine, but at least one of the present antiflu drugs are effective.
25 april 2009. Many influenza virus types
are spread in the world, and while the avian flu virus H5N1 has been
the object of much concern, the more usual H1N1 type (a variant of
which caused the infamous 1918-1919 pandemic) is lingering. The World
Heath Organization released yesterday an alert on an epidemic
developing in Mexico and in the USA. The disease appears to have
started in pigs, a common relay
between the natural hosts of the virus, Anatidae birds, and
humans.Hong Kong authorities
step up control measures at the border to monitor swine flu (the
population of pigs is huge in China, and there is sometimes diseases
that are not understood). Interestingly, the recommended hygiene
rules are the same as those during
the SARS episode.
9 april 2009. Shrimp is bred in
aquaculture world-wide. This means high local concentration of
animals, so that many parasites may affect them. Microsporidia are a
known plague of shrimp farms. A virus, the white spot syndrome virus
is also a plague of these farms. A
taiwanese group of investigators identified a protein coded by the
virus, ICP11, and showed that it mimicks DNA in its binding to
histones, creating havoc in the shrimp tissue. This is a remarkable
observation that should trigger more work on nucleic acids mimicking
proteins.
4 april 2009. Pr
Chen Zhu (陈竺), the ministry of health of China has stated that
his services had recently identified more than 200 cases of the
extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR) in the Mainland.
23 march 2009. It is well-known that locusts form dangerous
swarms, eating out everything on their passage. One of the seven Egypt
plagues, they still exist and are carefully monitored by the FAO. One
long wondered why these animals, which are usualy shy and look for
solitude, avoiding contact with others, can suddenly form swarms with
several tens of thousands individuals. This is now understood.
Investigators from Oxford, Cambridge and Syndney (Australia) have
shown that when locusts are forced to stay together for more than two
hours the firing pattern of their neuronal circuitsis completely
changed while, their
behaviour is suddenly drastically altered as they become
gregarious. The change is due to a universal neuromediator, serotonin
(known to be involved in many brain processes in Man, including
depression), which distributes in a completely novel pattern. Much
remains to be understood, but it is perhaps somewhat unconfortable to
remark that a gregarisation can be induced under crowding conditions,
and could give birth to collective irrepressible behaviours...
19 march 2009. The historian of sciences
and physician Mirko
Grmek would certainly have largely commented upon the sayings of
the pope about AIDS and condoms. He had proposed the concept of pathocenosis
(formed as biocenose a central concept in Karl Möbius ecology)
to show how diseases are as due to social behaviour as to microbes.
Who would today ask about the reasons that led Africa (where HIV comes
from, and where it was present for many decades without detectable
epidemies) to be the "priviledged" continent where this terrible
disease spreads? His History of AIDS, published in French in
1989 and subsequently translated into English, would be very helpful
in understanding, but who remembers that work and its ideas?
17 march 2009. We often forget it, but biological
warfare does not exist only in our imagination. In a recent book
Patrick Berche reminds us, alas, how Ian Smith and his government used
cholera in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) against its population, and we must
wonder of possible consequences till now. It is not impossible that
the memory of the past is coming with a revenge: in Mozambique,
personnel from the Red Cross has just been attacked (with several
deaths) because of a rumor attributing the present outbreak of cholera
there to this organisation...
11 march 2009. Facing the huge increase in
the world population many developing countries begin to turn to growth
of genetically modified plants, with, for the time being, much
success.The
International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-biotech Applications
(ISAAA) published the detail of
the development of transgenic plants during year 2008. Cultivation of
such plants grew for more than 10%, corresponding to a value of some
750 millions US dollars (cf
).
10 march 2009. At a time when enthusiasm for stem cell
therapy is building up it must be reminded that much research needs to
be developed before going - if ever - to applications. In particular
it is of extreme concern that work on humans appears often to predate
extensive work on animals. Joerg Huelsken thus begins an analysis of
the problem: "Importantly, stem cells can be transformed to form
benign or cancerous lesions by the action of only one oncogene or
the loss of one tumor suppressor gene. This demonstrates that the
regenerative capacity of stem cells comes at a price: an increased
hazard of cancerogenesis." And we have reminded the cancer
has indeed been observed in a patient after stem cell
transplantation.
9 march 2009. Vaccines
against rotaviruses, one of the leading causes of diarrhoea are systematically
being tested by the ICCCR,B. The results are promising, at a
time when further tests are ongoing.
5 march 2009. Members of the teams of the ICDDR,B
from Dakha, Bangladesh, have been monitoring the progression of
cholera in Zimbabwe. The disease is still progressing as the
number of contaminated wells is considerable. HIV is progressing in
people aged 50 and more world-wide, in particular in developing
countries (but also in developed countries, as advertisements for
improvement of sexual activities is widely spread there) and this
corresponds often to new contatiminations.
4 march 2009. The pattern of the
distribution of avian flu this year looked a bid unusual, as Indonesia
had apparently suddenly disappeared from the picture: not so. The
health authorities of the country now recognize that four persons died
of the disease during the past two months.
28 february 2009.The company Baxter
confirmed that it released flu virus material contaminated with live
H5N1 avian flu viruses from a plant in Austria to companies in three
countries, Czech Republic, Slovenia and Germany. This was discovered
when an experimental laboratory in Czech republic discovered that
ferrets injectected with the sample, supposed to be H3N2 human virus,
died after injection, while they should have stayed alive and
developed a strong immune response. This is a very serious incident as
it is known that the flu virus can reassort (it is made of several
independent pieces or RNA), so that simultaneous conatmination of
cells with different viruses is supposed to be the major possible
cause of initiation of a pandemic.
19
february 2009. The popular belief that what is natural is
potentially less dangerous than what is artificial (illustrated in the
reluctance for genetically modified plants, but not animals) is at the
root of the idea of stem cell therapy. However almost by definition, stem
cells could be at the root of cancer. This has unfortunately
been demonstrated in a report of a human brain tumor complicating
neural stem cell therapy. The Eurosurveillance
network substantiates the role of pigs as intermediary hosts in flu.
11 february 2009. China
monitors carefully morbidity and mortality in the pig population as
these animals might be intermediary hosts for human avian flu. More
than 1,000 piglets died in the Shanxi province, according to the
Xinhua agency, but the cause of their death is not yet known.
7 february 2009. Liberia has recently been invaded by swarms
of caterpillars which eat out wild and cultivated plants. A popular
interpretation has been that these were members of the infamous army
worms, known for their considerable destructive power. Georg Goergen —
an entomologist at International Institute for Tropical Agriculture in
Benin — identified
them as the tree-dwelling caterpillars of another moth, Achae
catocaloides rena. If this is confirmed we will need to
understand their shift of ecological niche. Part of the reason could
be the massive destruction of forests in the region.
3 february 2009. Several outbreaks of
avian flu are affecting mainland China, and a high proportion of dead
birds washing ashore in Hong Kong are infected by the H5N1 virus. This
situation needs to be carefully monitored as it may indicate that the
disease is developing to a level without much precedent in China.
29 january 2009. Two European Union white
papers reports concerns about research intensity in Europe, which lags
far behind efforts in Japan and in the USA. China R and D efforts are
growing very fast and will soon reach the European level in terms of
proportion of the GDP. France, Italy, UK and Germany appear to be poor
investors in R and D, and this should have harmful consequences in the
medium / long term for their economy. A man has been infected by the Ebola
Reston pig virus in the Philippines. This is a matter of concern
as the scenario of contagion to humans is similar to that of avian
flu, where the pig could be an efficient intermediate for adapation of
viruses to humans.
27 january 2009. A dangerous outbreak of
dengue fever affects the north of Queensland in Australia. China is
the victim of several outbreaks of bird flu, with already five
casualties, more than in 2008 as a whole. The disease is also present
in Egypt, Bangladesh, and Vietnam.
22 january 2009. The pattern of avian flu outbreaks differs
from that of last year, with significant foci (and human deaths) in
China. The cholera outbreak in Zimbabwe, far from being under control
is now reaching villages, and the death toll will soon reach 3,000.
20 january 2009. Back in 2003, Algeria witnessed a brief re-emergence
of plague, showing that what Albert Camus described is still
relevant. It seems that a
real outbreak is developing in the region of Tizi Ouzou, perhaps
in a terrorist group operating in the region.
15 january 2009. Synthetic Biology is a buzzword that
spreads like fire to describe new approaches in endeavours to
reconstruct living organisms. As usual this is associated to
far-fetched promises, but some are really in the process of being
actualised. Victor de Lorenzo and his colleagues from Madrid, for
example, have just published a paper: Tracing
explosives in soil with transcriptional regulators of Pseudomonas
putida evolved for responding to nitrotoluenes, where they
give hints about ways to help in decontaminating mine fields... If
successful this would be a positive counterpart to the highly
destructive tendency of Mankind.
14 january 2009. In a move showing unusual openness the
Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention revealed that 1,200
Chinese citizens died of infectious diseases in december (remember
that the population is of 1.3 billion people). H5N1 avian flu recently
killed a patient in China, while a child is infected in Egypt. Many of
the "traditional" places where the disease develops have cases of bird
infections.
31 december 2008. While 2008 ends up with
an avian flu H5N1 contamination record lower than the three preceding
years and matching that of 2004, a
two-months old baby from Shenzhen has been contaminated by the H9N2
form, a rare occurrence in humans. Only a few cases have been
recorded in recent years, but most suggested that the virus piecemeal
genome had been reassorted between different kinds of domestic birds'
viruses. This indicated an ongoing evolution process that needs close
monitoring.
30 december 2008. Zimbabwe finally decided
to recruit physicians from Bangladesh in an attempt to control the
spread of cholera (some 30,000 persons have already been infected).
29 december 2008. This has been suspected for a long time:
plasticware is not innocuous. In fact, we apparently live in an ocean
of chemicals associated to plastics and many leach out and contaminate
our environment, our food in particular. This interferes with
many of our enzymes, with drugs and with standard molecular mediators
of our normal life. The consequence is enormous, in particular in
terms of the outcome of clinical trials for testing new drugs, which
are affected in a completely uncontrolled way by plastic associated
chemicals. A recent publication
in the magazine Science should sound as an alarm clock.
16 december 2008. Year 2008 will end with a
situation on the front of avian flu which is back
to the 2004 level. While this is good news, recent human cases
resulting in deaths shows that we should not consider the
episode over. Cambodia, Bangladesh, Indonesia and Hong Kong have
recently seen new cases in birds and twice in humans. Mass slaughter
of fowl is underway to contain the spread of the disease. The
situation for cholera in Zimbabwe is extremely serious, but almost
impossible to monitor correctly, and is extending to neighbouring
countries. The WHO is trying to prevent the spread of the disease. A
few weeks ago an outbreak of Ebola virus, Reston subtype emerged in
the Island of Luzon in the Philippines. The scare triggered by this
event stopped export of pork meat to Singapore.
2 december 2008. Water supply has been cut
off in centre Harare, Zimbabwe, in an attempt to stop the spread of
cholera. On the bird flu's front the situation has improved to the
level reached five years ago. Unfortunately two recent episodes in
Bangladesh and India, where thousands of chicken had to be slaughtered
needs to be monitored closely.
23 november 2008. The
world-wide free market creates a new kind of colonisation:
compagnies, and even countries can rent or buy foreign land where they
develop their own activities, in particular by growing crops and
collecting water. Cholera is dangerously spreading in Zimbabwe.
18 november 2008. Cholera is endemic in many
places in the world. It begins to take epidemic proportions at places
ruined by war, such as the republic of Congo, or political unrest,
such as Zimbabwe, where the epidemic toll is underreported.
17 november 2008. We tend to think that
paper is more environmental-friendly than oil derivatives.
Unfortunately this may not be so. Indeed, making paper world-wide
might emit much more carbon dioxide than global aviation...
16 november 2008. The
number of insect species is rapidly dwindling in Europe. It is
now more and more difficult to see on the wing butterflies which were
until recently quite common, and this will have considerable
consequences not only on our landscapes but also on agriculture. Most
urban dwellers are entirely unaware of this fact, as they never saw
most butterfly species in the wild, and it is therefore unlikely that
much effort will be devoted to insect protection.
9 november 2008. The EMBO (European
Molecular Biology Organisation) Science and Society programme hosted a
conference on Systems and Synthetic Biology, where the scientific
questions were debated in parallel with societal interrogations. Among
the remarkable lectures at the conference was that presented by Lee
Hood, on the future of Systems Biology, illustrated by the work
developed at the Institute for Systems Biology in Seattle. A plan for
the construction of a sister Institute in Luxembourg has been
unveiled.
29 october 2008. A fifth case of an
infection caused by a mysterious virus in South Africa has been
reported yesterday. Preliminary analyses suggest that it could be a
member of the arenaviruses.
8 october 2008. More than a hundred persons
who came into contact with three persons who died of an unknown kind
of viral haemorrhagic fever remain under observation in Johannesburg.
They all appear to be fine. The seasonal influenza season is
approaching. The 2008-2009 trivalent vaccine virus strains recommended
by the WHO are A/Brisbane/59/2007 (H1N1)-like, A/Brisbane/10/2007
(H3N2)-like, and B/Florida/4/2006-like antigens. Luc Montagnier
present in Abidjan for the inauguration of the conference «Cissida
08», was congratulated by president Gbagbo, who emphasized the effort
of Ivory Coast in the domain.
1 october 2008. Diseases which should be
eradicated such as leprosy surface again in Senegal. More than 50 new
cases have been recently identified, some 30 of which in the region of
Kaolack.