Researchers from Russia, Germany, and France said the biological risk of reanimating the viruses they studied was "totally negligible" due to the strains they targeted, mainly those capable of infecting amoeba microbes.
Researchers who revived nearly two dozen viruses have claimed that climate change due to global warming is rapidly thawing the ancient permafrost, which may pose a new threat to humans. The researchers also revived a virus under a lake more than 48,500 years ago.
It is reportedly said that the researchers examined ancient samples collected from permafrost in the Siberia region of Russia. They revived and characterized 13 new pathogens, what they termed "zombie viruses," and found that they remained infectious despite spending many millennia trapped in the frozen ground.
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Pandoravirus Yedoma, the oldest virus is known to be 48,500 years old, which breaks the previous record held by a 30,000-year-old virus that was uncovered by the same team in 2013.
Scientists have long warned that the thawing of permafrost due to atmospheric warming will worsen climate change by freeing previously trapped greenhouse gases like methane. But its effect on dormant pathogens is less well understood.
Meanwhile, researchers from Russia, Germany, and France said the biological risk of reanimating the viruses they studied was "totally negligible" due to the strains they targeted, mainly those capable of infecting amoeba microbes.
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They also said that The potential revival of a virus that could infect animals or humans is much more problematic, they said, warning that their work can be extrapolated to show the danger is real.
"It is thus likely that ancient permafrost will release these unknown viruses upon thawing," they wrote in an article posted to the preprint repository bioRxiv that hasn't yet been peer-reviewed.