The Flu Hunter
For years, Robert Webster has been warning of a global influenza outbreak. Now governments worldwide are finally listening to him
- By Michael Rosenwald
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2006, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 5)
He was strolling along with his research partner Graeme Laver. Webster was in his 30s then, Laver a little older. Every 10 or 15 yards they came across a dead mutton bird that apparently had been washed up on the beach. By that time, the two men had been studying influenza for several years. They knew that in 1961, terns in South Africa had been killed by an influenza virus. Webster asked Laver: “What if the flu killed these birds?”
It was a tantalizing question. They decided to investigate further, arranging a trip to a deserted coral island off Queensland. Their boss was not entirely supportive of the adventure. “Laver is hallucinating,” the boss told a colleague. They were undeterred. “Why there?” Laver once wrote of the trip. “Beautiful islands in an azure sea, hot sand, a baking sun, and warm coral lagoon. What better place to do flu research!” They snorkeled during the day. At night, they swabbed the throats of hundreds of birds. Back at their lab, they had a eureka moment: 18 birds had antibodies to a human flu virus that had circulated among people in 1957. Of course this meant only that the birds had been exposed to the virus, not that they were carrying or transmitting it.
To figure out if they were, Webster and Laver took subsequent trips to the Great Barrier Reef, Phillip Island and Tryon Island. More swimming during the day, sherry parties at dusk, and then a few hours of swabbing birds. They took the material back to their lab at Australian National University, in Canberra. It is standard procedure to grow flu viruses in chicken eggs. So they injected the material from the swabs into chicken eggs, to see if the influenza virus would grow. Two days later the fluid was harvested. In most of the eggs, the virus had not grown. But in one of the eggs, it had grown. That could mean
only one thing: the virus was in the birds.
Webster wanted to know more. Specifically, he wanted to know whether birds might have played a role in the influenza pandemic of 1957. He traveled to the World Influenza Center, in London, which has a large collection of influenza virus strains from birds and also antibody samples from flu victims. His experiment there was rather simple. He gathered antibody samples from victims of the 1957 flu pandemic. He also gathered samples of several avian flu strains. Then he mixed the samples. What did the antibodies do? They attacked the bird flu strains, meaning the human flu virus had some of the same molecular features as avian flu viruses.
How could that be? The answer is something now known as reassortment. The influenza virus, whether it’s carried by birds or humans, has ten genes, which are arranged on eight separate gene segments. When two different influenza viruses infect the same cell, their genes may become reassorted—shuffled, mixed up. The net effect is that a new strain of flu virus forms, one that people have never been exposed to before. Webster refers to the mixing process as “virus sex.” Perhaps Webster’s greatest contribution to science is the idea that pandemics begin when avian and human flu viruses combine to form a new strain, one that people lack the ability to fight off.
After he entered the Hong Kong poultry markets, Webster needed only a few days to turn up enough chicken droppings to show that the H5N1 strain was indeed circulating. Along with many of his colleagues, he recommended that all the chickens in the market area be killed, to prevent spread of the virus. About 1.5 million chickens in Hong Kong met their maker. And that seemed to do the trick. The virus was gone.
But Webster had a hunch it would be back. The reason was ducks. Webster thinks the most dangerous animal in the world is the duck. His research has shown that ducks can transmit flu viruses quite easily to chickens. But while chickens that come down with bird flu die at rates approaching 100 percent, many ducks don’t get sick at all. So they fly off to other parts of the world carrying the virus. “The duck is the Trojan horse,” Webster says.
After the chickens in Hong Kong were killed, wild ducks probably relocated the virus to other parts of Asia, where it continued to infect chickens and shuffle its genetic makeup. When the strain emerged from hiding again, in Thailand and Vietnam in late 2003, it was even stronger. The virus passed directly from birds to people, killing dozens in what the World Health Organization has described as the worst outbreak of purely avian influenza ever to strike human beings.
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Comments (1)
I am a Special Education and Literature teacher for Middle Grades, and had frequently been told that my "expectations were too high" when people learned that these 10-13 year old students, many with diagnosed learning disabilities or behavioral problems, were reading articles and completing projects from Smithsonian Magazine. In 2006 my 7th grade class did a project with this article as the centerpiece. It was a surprise "hit" with the students, many following up independantly on viral research, and many predicting what was, as we see, sure to come. I am awed today at the ramifications of the coincidence, and the fulfilled expectations.
Posted by Kelly Reece on April 30,2009 | 07:59 PM