首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Researchers who picked up and analyzed wild chimp droppings said on Thursday they had shown how the AIDS virus originated in wil
Researchers who picked up and analyzed wild chimp droppings said on Thursday they had shown how the AIDS virus originated in wil
admin
2011-02-11
53
问题
Researchers who picked up and analyzed wild chimp droppings said on Thursday they had shown how the AIDS virus originated in wild apes in Cameroon and then spread in humans across Africa and eventually the world. Their study, published in the journal Science, supports other studies that suggest people somehow caught the deadly human immunodeficiency ,virus (HIV) from chimpanzees, perhaps by killing and eating them.
"It says that the chimpanzee group that gave rise to HIV… this chimp community resides in Cameroon," said Beatrice Hahn of the University of Alabama, who led the study. "But that doesn’t mean the epidemic originated there because it didn’t," Hahn, who has been studying the genetic origin of HIV for years, said in a telephone interview.
"We actually know where the epidemic took off. The epidemic took off in Kinshasa, in Brazzaville." Kinshasa is in the Democratic Republic Congo, formerly Zaire, and faces Brazzaville, in Congo, across the Congo River. Studies have traced HIV to a man who gave a blood sample in 1959 in Kinshasa, then called Leopoldville. Later analysis found the AIDS viros.
In people, HIV leads to AIDS but chimps have a version called simian immune deficiency virus (SIV) that causes them no harm. Humans are the only animals naturally susceptible to HIV. AIDS was only identified 25 years ago. The virus now infects 40 million people around the world and has killed 25 million. Spread in blood, sexual contact and from mother to child during birth or breastfeeding, HIV has no cure and there is no vaccine, although drug cocktails can control it.
And like so many new infections, AIDS appears to have been passed to humans from animals they slaughtered. SIV has been found in captive chimps but Hahn wanted to show it could be found in the wild too. Her international team got the cooperation of the government in Cameroon and they hired skilled trackers.
"The chimps in that area are hunted. It’s certainly impossible to see them. It is hard to track them and find these materials," she said. But the trackers managed to collect 599 samples of droppings. Hahn’s lab found DNA, identified each individual chimp and then found evidence of the virus.
"We went to 10 field sites and we found evidence of infection in five. We were able to identify a total of 16 infected chimps and, we were able to get viral sequences from all of them," Hahn said. Up to 35 percent of the apes in some communities were infected. Not only that, they could find different varieties, called clades, of the virus.
"We found some of the clades were really, really very closely related to the human virus and others were not," she said. Chimps separated by a fiver were infected with different clades, Hahn said. And a river may have carded the virus into the human population. "So how do you get from southern Cameroon to the Democratic Republic of Congo?" Hahn asked. "Some human must have done so. There is a river that goes from that southeastern comer of Cameroon down to the Congo River."
Ivory and hardwood traders used the Sangha River in the 1930s, when the original to-human transmission is believed to have happened. Haha’s study suggests the virus passed from chimpanzees to people more than once. "We don’t really know how these transmissions occurred," Hahn said.
"We know that you don’t get it potting a chimp, or from a toilet seat, just like you can’t get HIV from a toilet seat. It requires exposure to infected blood and infected body fluids. So if you get bitten by an angry chimp while you are hunting it, which could do it."
Hahn’s study only applies the H1V group M, which is the main strain of the virus responsible for the AIDS pandemic. "It’s quite possible that still other (chimpanzee SIV) lineages exist that could pose risks for human infection and prove problematic for HIV diagnostic and vaccines," her team wrote.
The word "lineage" in the last paragraph means
选项
A、transmission.
B、catastrophe.
C、strain.
D、virus.
答案
C
解析
根据该词前面的other可知该句应与前一句并列,上文提到HIV的M群是导致艾滋病传染的主要菌株(main strain of the virus),再结合修饰lineages的定语从句that could pose risks…,可知lineage在此处是strain之意,故选C。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/62YO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
Youthisnotatimeoflife;itisastateofmind;itisnotamatterofrosycheeks,redlipsandsuppleknees;itisamatter
SteveandYaserfirstmetintheirchemistryclassofanAmericanuniversity.YaserwasaninternationalstudentfromJordan.He
SteveandYaserfirstmetintheirchemistryclassofanAmericanuniversity.YaserwasaninternationalstudentfromJordan.He
Ihavenostatisticsonthis,butconversationwithfriendsanddozensofperson-on-the-streetinterviewsIsawandheardlastm
A、MichaelChang.B、PeteSampras.C、SergeiBrugeraD、JacobHasicC听力材料中提到MichaelChang和Jimcourier为“formerFrenchOpenChampions”
Since1971theCanadiangovernmenthasadoptedpolicyof______,recognizingthatculturalpluralismwithinabilingualframewor
ThismonthSingaporepassedabillthatwouldgivelegalteethtothemoralobligationtosupportone’sparents.CalledtheMain
Researchersinvestigatingbrainsizeandmentalabilitysaytheirworkoffersevidencethateducationprotectsthemindfromthe
ItisdifficultforanagencyasoldasJ.WalterThompson,whichwillmm140nextyear,torecordsomefirstsatsovenerablea
A、Civilians.B、Students.C、Governmentofficials.D、Policeofficers.A
随机试题
下列属大体积混凝土温度裂缝的是()。
升华指一个人将受挫后的心理压抑向符合社会规范的、具有建设性意义的方向抒发的心理反应。根据上述定义,下列属于升华的是:
ZA-312型大钩的起重量是()。
胃溃疡底部最常见动脉内血栓机化,该处血栓形成的最主要机制是()
根据《劳动防护用品监督管理规定》的有关规定,劳动防护用品生产企业所生产的特种劳动防护用品,必须取得特种劳动防护用品(),否则不得生产和销售。
下列不属于基金管理人后台部门的是()。Ⅰ.清算部门Ⅱ.投资部门Ⅲ.研究部门Ⅳ.产品研发部门
有一种捉猴子的陷阱,即把椰子挖空,然后用绳子绑起来,接在树上或固定在地上,椰子上留了一个小洞,洞里放了一些食物。洞口大小恰好只能让猴子空着手伸进去,而无法握着拳头伸出来,于是猴子闻香而来,将它的手伸进去抓食物,理所当然地,紧握的拳头便缩不出洞口,当猎人来时
某些经济学家是大学数学系的毕业生。因此,某些大学数学系的毕业生是对企业经营很有研究的人。下列哪项如果为真,则能够保证上述论断的正确?
ROM主要用于永久保存路由器的开机诊断程序、()和()软件。
AnewWorldBankstudysaysinternationalmigrationhelpsreducepovertyindevelopingnations.Atthesametime,however,many
最新回复
(
0
)