Researcher finds there could be up to 200 cold viruses

October 19, 2009

(PhysOrg.com) -- Bad news for the immune system: New research has boosted the number of likely common-cold viruses waiting to make you miserable from the long-accepted 100 to perhaps double that number.

James Gern, MD, of the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health is leading the UW site for a nationwide study trying to identify rhinoviruses and figure out how to grow them in tissue cultures to study their biology. Up until now, scientists had identified about 100 cold viruses.

But Gern says the new research has found there may be just as many unidentified rhinoviruses out there to make you sick.

"Instead of 100 viruses, there are at least 150 and perhaps as many as 200 cold viruses," says Gern, professor of medicine and an specialist at the School of Medicine and Public Health.

"The common cold can cause serious problems for people with asthma and other chronic lung diseases, not just sniffling and sneezing symptoms in otherwise healthy people," says Gern. "This virus can affect the chest as well as the nose in susceptible people, including infants and the elderly."

For the past 50 years, researchers have studied two classes of viruses responsible for a total of about 100 versions of the cold. Two years ago, after development of molecular techniques to look at the viral genome, researchers found a third class of rhinoviruses.

"There's at least one big difference between the classes of rhinoviruses: The first two can be grown in cell cultures, but we haven't figured out how to grow rhinoviruses in the third class," says Gern. "The goal of the current study is to identify all the new rhinoviruses and find a way to culture them for research."

Gern says the study could greatly improve the chances of finding a cure for the common cold.

"It looks a lot better than it did two years ago," said Gern. "When we identify the new group of viruses that has a different biology, it gives us a target. With the discovery of these new viruses, we're starting to learn how they grow, and now it seems like we could have a good shot at learning now to inhibit them. This research could provide new targets for therapies directed at the common cold, and also cold-induced worsening ofor chronic lung diseases such as asthma."

Provided by University of Wisconsin School of Medicine


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