Microbiology Laboratory, Department of Analytical Services, Rand Water, Vereeniging 1939, South Africa.
School of Laboratory Medicine and Medical Sciences, College of Health Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 4001, South Africa.
Viruses. 2023 Jul 27;15(8):1638. doi: 10.3390/v15081638.
Diseases that are transmitted from vertebrate animals to humans are referred to as zoonotic diseases. Although microbial agents such as bacteria and parasites are linked to zoonotic events, viruses account for a high percentage of zoonotic diseases that have emerged. Worryingly, the 21st century has seen a drastic increase in the emergence and re-emergence of viral zoonotic disease. Even though humans and animals have coexisted for millennia, anthropogenic factors have severely increased interactions between the two populations, thereby increasing the risk of disease spill-over. While drivers such as climate shifts, land exploitation and wildlife trade can directly affect the (re-)emergence of viral zoonotic disease, globalisation, geopolitics and social perceptions can directly facilitate the spread of these (re-)emerging diseases. This opinion paper discusses the "intelligent" nature of viruses and their exploitation of the anthropogenic factors driving the (re-)emergence and spread of viral zoonotic disease in a modernised and connected world.
由脊椎动物传播给人类的疾病被称为人畜共患病。尽管细菌和寄生虫等微生物与人畜共患事件有关,但病毒却占了已出现的人畜共患疾病的很大比例。令人担忧的是,21 世纪见证了病毒性人畜共患疾病的急剧增加和再次出现。尽管人类和动物已经共存了数千年,但人为因素严重增加了两者之间的相互作用,从而增加了疾病溢出的风险。虽然气候变化、土地开发和野生动物贸易等驱动因素会直接影响病毒性人畜共患疾病的(再次)出现,但全球化、地缘政治和社会认知会直接促进这些(再次)出现的疾病的传播。本观点文章讨论了病毒的“智能”性质,以及它们在现代化和互联的世界中利用人为因素来驱动病毒性人畜共患疾病的(再次)出现和传播。