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Some species are susceptible to broad range of viruses: Study

ANI | | Posted by Tapatrisha Das, England
Feb 08, 2025 01:17 PM IST

In the study - by the University of Exeter - 35 fruit fly species were exposed to 11 different viruses of diverse types.

A study on fruit flies revealed that certain species are extremely vulnerable to a variety of viruses.

Fly species that were less affected by a certain virus also tended to respond well to related viruses.(AP/File)
Fly species that were less affected by a certain virus also tended to respond well to related viruses.(AP/File)

In the study - by the University of Exeter - 35 fruit fly species were exposed to 11 different viruses of diverse types

As expected, fly species that were less affected by a certain virus also tended to respond well to related viruses. Also read | HMPV cases in India: What is it and how does it spread? Expert shares symptoms

Findings of the study:

But the findings also show "positive correlations in susceptibility" to viruses in general. In other words, fly species that were resistant to one virus were generally resistant to others - including very different types of virus.

"Large-scale tests like this help us understand how pathogens shift to new host species, with findings broadly applicable to other animals - including humans," said Dr Ryan Imrie, now at the MRC-University of Glasgow Centre for Virus Research.

"These flies shared a common ancestor 50 million years ago, giving them equivalent diversity to mammals, and so we are asking questions over the evolutionary distances which host shifts typically occur. Lots of people are trying to predict the next pandemic.

"It's impossible to test every virus, so we need to try and understand general rules about how viruses behave in new hosts."

Professor Ben Longdon, of the Centre for Ecology and Conservation on Exeter's Penryn Campus in Cornwall, added: "Information about new viruses can partly be inferred from their relatedness to existing viruses."

"However, a small number of mutations can change that - giving new viruses very different properties than their close relatives." Also read | 5 things we know and still don't know about COVID, 5 years after it appeared

"Studies like this can help reveal the fundamental processes behind this."

Susceptibility in the study was measured by "viral load" - how much a virus had replicated and persisted two days into an infection.

Explaining why some fly species might be generally poor at resisting viruses, Dr Longdon said: "Immunity is very costly, so the highly susceptible species in our study may be ones that evolved in an environment with relatively few viruses, or species that viruses are particularly well able to hijack and successfully infect."

"We found no negative correlations (where high resistance to one virus came with low resistance to another)."

“This could suggest that, as fruit fly immune systems have evolved in response to infection, they have not resulted in 'trade-offs' where increased resistance to one virus has decreased resistance to others.”

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always seek the advice of your doctor with any questions about a medical condition.

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