Scimex: A international team of researchers has managed to track down the
origins of the Ebola virus, separately for Guinea, Sierra Leone and
Liberia, and narrow down the timing at which the virus was transmitted
across borders. They did this by analysing genetic differences in virus
DNA from patient samples collected in Guinea during the outbreak and
worked out, for example, that the Ebola virus from Guinea probably
spilled over into Sierra Leone in April or early May 2014.
New insights into the genetic evolution of the ongoing Ebola virus outbreak in West Africa are reported in Nature this
week. The analysis shows how different lineages of the virus evolved
and spread in West Africa, between Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia.
The current Ebola virus outbreak has been traced back to transmission
from a bat to an infant in Guinea in December 2013, from which it spread
throughout Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia. The origin of the
particular virus in each country and the time of transmission have been
unclear, but the new information presented by Miles Carroll and
colleagues helps to address these questions. They analyse 179 new virus
sequences from patient samples collected in Guinea between March 2014
and January 2015. The study pinpoints the origins of the virus in each
affected country and narrows down the timing at which each particular
virus was transmitted; for example, they find that the Ebola virus from
Guinea probably spilled over into Sierra Leone in April or early May
2014.
To date there have been over 27,000 reported cases and over 11,000
deaths attributed to the ongoing Ebola virus outbreak. Data from this
new analysis could be used to assess how effective control measures have
been and helps us to understand how the current outbreak has been
evolving.