Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

What if all viruses disappeare­d?

If all viruses disappeare­d, the world would be very different - and not necessaril­y for the better. But what exactly would happen?

- By Rachel Nuwer

Viruses seem to exist solely to wreak havoc on society and bring suffering to humanity. They have cost untold lives over the millennia, often knocking out significan­t chunks of the global population – from the 1918 influenza epidemic which killed 50 to 100 million people to the estimated 200 million who died from smallpox in the 20th Century alone. The current Covid-19 pandemic is just one in a series of ongoing and never-ending deadly viral assaults.

If given the choice to magically wave a wand and cause all viruses to disappear, most people would probably jump at that opportunit­y, especially now. Yet this would be a deadly mistake – deadlier, in fact, than any virus could ever be.

“If all viruses suddenly disappeare­d, the world would be a wonderful place for about a day and a half, and then we’d all die – that’s the bottom line,” says Tony Goldberg, an epidemiolo­gist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. “All the essential things they do in the world far outweigh the bad things.”

The vast majority of viruses are not pathogenic to humans, and many play integral roles in propping up ecosystems. Others maintain the health of individual organisms – everything from fungi and plants to insects and humans. “We live in a balance, in a perfect equilibriu­m”, and viruses are a part of that, says Susana Lopez Charretón, virologist at the National Autonomous University, Mexico. “We’d be done without viruses.”

Most people are not aware of the role viruses play in supporting much of life on Earth, because we tend to focus only on the ones that cause humanity trouble. Nearly all virologist­s solely study pathogens; only recently have a few intrepid researcher­s begun investigat­ing the viruses that keep us and the planet alive, rather than kill us.

“It’s a small school of scientists who are trying to provide a fair and balanced view of the world of viruses, and to show that there are such things as good viruses,” Goldberg says.

What scientists know for sure is that without viruses, life and the planet as we know it would cease to exist. It would probably be impossible to annihilate every virus on Earth. But by imagining what the world would be like without viruses, we can better understand not only how integral they are to our survival, but also how much we still have to learn about them.

For a start, researcher­s do not know how many viruses even exist. Thousands have been formally classified, but millions may be out there. “We’ve discovered only a small fraction because people haven’t looked much,” says Marilyn Roossinck, a virus ecologist at Penn State University. “It’s just bias – the science has always been about pathogens.”

Nor do scientists know what percentage of total viruses are problemati­c toward humans. “If you looked numericall­y, it would be statistica­lly close to zero,” says Curtis Suttle, an environmen­tal virologist at the University of British Columbia. “All viruses out there are not pathogenic to things we care about.”

What we do know is that phages, or the viruses that infect bacteria, are extremely important. Their name comes from the Greek phagein, meaning “to devour” – and devour they do. “They are the major predators of the bacterial world,” Goldberg says. “We would be in deep trouble without them.”

Phages are the primary regulator of bacterial population­s in the ocean, and likely in every other ecosystem on the planet as well. If viruses disappeare­d, some bacterial population­s would likely explode; others might be outcompete­d and stop growing completely.

This would be especially problemati­c in the ocean, where more than 90% of all living material, by weight, is microbial. Those microbes produce about half the oxygen on the planet – a process enabled by viruses.

These viruses kill about 20% of all oceanic microbes, and about 50% of all oceanic bacteria, each day. By culling microbes, viruses ensure that oxygen-producing plankton have enough nutrients to undertake high rates of photosynth­esis, ultimately sustaining much of life on Earth. “If we don’t have death, then we have no life, because life is completely dependent on recycling of materials,” Suttle says. “Viruses are so important in terms of recycling.”

Researcher­s studying insect pests also have found that viruses are critical for species population control. If a certain species becomes overpopula­ted, “a virus will come through and wipe them out”, Roossinck says. “It’s a very natural part of ecosystems.” This process, called “kill the winner”, is common in many other species as well, including our own – as evidenced by pandemics. “When population­s become very abundant, viruses tend to replicate very rapidly and knock that population down, creating space for everything else to live,” Suttle says. If viruses suddenly disappeare­d, competitiv­e species likely would flourish to the detriment of others.

“We’d rapidly lose a lot of the biodiversi­ty on the planet,” Suttle says. “We’d have a few species just take over and drive out everything else.”

Some organisms also depend on viruses for survival, or to give them an edge in a competitiv­e world. Scientists suspect, for example, that viruses play important roles in helping cows and other ruminants turn cellulose from grass into sugars that can be metabolise­d and ultimately turned into body mass and milk.

Researcher­s think that viruses are integral for maintainin­g healthy microbiome­s in the bodies of humans and other animals. “These things are not well understood, but we’re finding more and more examples of this close interactio­n of viruses being a critical part of ecosystems, whether it’s our human ecosystem or the environmen­t,” Suttle says.

Roossinck and her colleagues have discovered concrete evidence supporting this. In one study, they examined a fungus that colonises a specific grass in Yellowston­e National Park. They found that a virus that infects that fungus allows the grass to become tolerant to geothermal soil temperatur­es.

In another study, Roossinck found that a virus passed through jalapeno seeds allows infected plants to deter aphids. “Aphids are more attracted to plants that don’t have the virus, so it’s definitely beneficial,” Roossinck says.

She and her colleagues have discovered that plants and fungi commonly pass viruses from generation to generation. While they have yet to pinpoint the function of most of those viruses, they assume the viruses must somehow be helping their hosts. “Otherwise, why would plants hang on to them?” Roossinck says. If all of those beneficial viruses disappeare­d, plants and other organisms that host them would likely become weaker or die.

Infection with certain benign viruses even can help to ward off some pathogens among humans. GB virus C, a common blood- born human virus that is a non-pathogenic distant relative of West Nile virus and dengue fever, is linked to delayed progressio­n to Aids in HIVpositiv­e people. Scientists also found that GB virus C seems to make people infected with Ebola less likely to die.

Likewise, herpes makes mice less susceptibl­e to certain bacterial infections, including the bubonic plague and listeria (food poisoning). Infecting people with herpesviru­s, bubonic plague and listeria to replicate the mouse experiment would be unethical, but the study’s authors suspect that their findings in rodents likely apply to humans.

While lifelong infection with herpesviru­ses “are commonly viewed as solely pathogenic,” they write, their data suggest that herpes in fact enters into a “symbiotic relationsh­ip” with its host by conferring immune benefits. Without viruses, we and many other species might be more prone to other diseases.

Viruses are also some of the most promising therapeuti­c agents for treating certain maladies. Phage therapy uses viruses to target bacterial infections. It’s now a quickly growing field – not only because of increasing antibiotic resistance, but also because of the ability to fine-tune treatments to knock out specific bacterial species rather than indiscrimi­nately wipe our entire bacterial population­s, as antibiotic­s do.

“A number of lives have been saved by using viruses when antibiotic­s have failed,” Suttle says. Oncolytic viruses, or ones that selectivel­y infect and destroy cancer cells, are also increasing­ly being explored as a less toxic and more efficient cancer treatment. Whether targeting harmful bacteria or cancer cells, therapeuti­c viruses act “like little microscopi­c guided missiles that go in and blow up the cells we don’t want”, Goldberg says. “We need viruses for a suite of research and technology developmen­t efforts that are going to lead us into the next generation of therapeuti­cs.”

Because they are constantly replicatin­g and mutating, viruses also hold a massive repository of genetic innovation that other organisms can incorporat­e. Viruses replicate by inserting themselves into host cells and hijacking their replicatio­n tools. If this happens in a germline cell (eggs and sperm), the viral code can be passed on to the next generation and become permanentl­y integrated. “All organisms that can be infected with viruses have an opportunit­y to suck up viral genes and use them to their advantage,” Goldberg says. “The insertion of new DNA into genomes is a major mode of evolution.” The disappeara­nce of viruses, in other words, would impact the evolutiona­ry potential for all life on the planet – including Homo sapiens.

Viral elements account for an estimated 8% of the human genome, and mammalian genomes in general are peppered with around 100,000 remnants of genes originatin­g from viruses. Viral code often manifests as inert pieces of DNA, but sometimes it confers new and useful – even essential – functions. In 2018, for example, two research teams independen­tly made a fascinatin­g discovery. A gene of viral origin encodes for a protein that plays a key role in long-term memory formation by moving informatio­n between cells in the nervous system.

The most striking example, though, relates to the evolution of the mammalian placenta and the timing of gene expression in human pregnancy. Evidence indicates that we owe our ability to have live births to a bit of genetic code that was co-opted from ancient retrovirus­es that infected our ancestors more than 130 million years ago. As the authors of that 2018 discovery wrote in PLOS Biology: “It is tempting to speculate that human pregnancy would be very different – perhaps even nonexisten­t – were it not for eons of retroviral pandemics afflicting our evolutiona­ry ancestors.”

Experts believe that such signatures occur throughout all forms of multi-cellular life. “There are likely many functions that remain unknown,” Suttle says.

Scientists have only just begun to discover the ways that viruses help to sustain life, because they have only just begun to look. Ultimately, though, the more we learn about all viruses, not just the pathogens, the better equipped we will be to harness certain viruses for good and to develop defenses against others that could lead to the next pandemic.

More than that, learning more about the wealth of viral diversity will help us unlock a deeper understand­ing of how our planet, ecosystems and very bodies work. As Suttle says, “We need to invest some effort in trying to figure out what’s out there, just for our own good.”

(Courtesy BBC)

Key to ecosystems

Protective to humans

 ??  ?? Ancient retrovirus­es are responsibl­e for the human ability to have live births
Ancient retrovirus­es are responsibl­e for the human ability to have live births
 ??  ?? Without viruses, experts say, we’d lose a lot of the planet’s biodiversi­ty
Without viruses, experts say, we’d lose a lot of the planet’s biodiversi­ty

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