LONDON—
The Zika virus currently sweeping through the Americas looks
to have hitched a ride on a plane into Brazil in 2013 and begun its invasion of
the continent from there, scientists said Thursday. In the first genome analysis of the current Zika epidemic,
which has been linked in Brazil to cases of a birth defect known as
microcephaly, researchers said the virus' introduction to the Americas almost
three years ago coincided with a 50 percent rise in air passengers from
Zika-affected areas
The strain of the virus circulating in the current outbreak
is most closely related to one from French Polynesia, the scientists said,
although it is also possible that Zika was introduced separately to the Americas
and French Polynesia from Southeast Asia.
Oliver Pybus, a biologist at Britain's Oxford University who
co-led the research with a team from Brazil's Evandro Chagas Institute, said
the findings suggested increased international travel helped the virus extend
its reach.
It is not yet clear whether the Zika virus actually causes microcephaly in babies, but the WHO and other infectious-disease experts say evidence for a causal link is growing.
For this study, Pybus' team sampled several Zika virus genomes linked to the recent Brazilian outbreak — including one from a blood donor, one from a fatal adult case, and one from a newborn baby with congenital malformations and microcephaly.
Using next-generation genetic sequencing, the researchers mapped the samples' gene codes and found there was little genetic variability among them. This suggests there was a single introduction of Zika into the Americas, probably between May and December 2013 — more than a year before virus was first reported in Brazil.
Nuno Faria, a researcher at Oxford and at the Evandro Chagas Institute who worked on this study, said these first genomic data from the Brazil outbreak provided "a good baseline for future research."
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