Recycling of pathogenic microbes through survival in ice

被引:51
作者
Rogers, SO
Starmer, WT
Castello, JD
机构
[1] Bowling Green State Univ, Dept Biol Sci, Bowling Green, OH 43403 USA
[2] Syracuse Univ, Dept Biol, Syracuse, NY 13244 USA
[3] SUNY Coll Environm Sci & Forestry, Syracuse, NY 13210 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1016/j.mehy.2004.04.004
中图分类号
R-3 [医学研究方法]; R3 [基础医学];
学科分类号
1001 ;
摘要
Viable microorganisms (e.g. fungi, bacteria, Archaea and viruses) are distributed by wind over great distances, including globally. Microbes may settle out of the atmosphere or may be incorporated into fog, rain, sleet, hail, or snow. These organisms fall into takes, streams, oceans, or onto the land or glaciers. When they become incorporated into environmental ice (e.g. glaciers, ice sheets, and snow), those that survive freezing and thawing may persist for years, centuries, millennia, or longer. Once they melt from the ice, they may enter contemporary populations. This mixing of ancient and modern genotypes (i.e. temporal gene flow, or what we term "genome recycling") may lead to a change of allele proportions in the population, which may have effects on mutation rates, fitness, survival, pathogenicity and other characteristics of the organisms. Pathogenic microbes that survive freezing and thawing (e.g. influenza viruses, polioviruses, caticiviruses and tobamoviruses) can remain in these icy reservoirs long enough to avoid resistance mechanisms of the hosts, thereby conveying a selective advantage to these pathogens over those that cannot survive in ice. Ice is an abiotic reservoir of microbes that has been ignored in surveillance activities for human diseases. (C) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:773 / 777
页数:5
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