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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Life beyond eradication: veterinary viruses in basic science.

Journal:
Archives of virology. Supplementum
Year:
1999
Authors:
Enquist, L W
Affiliation:
Department of Molecular Biology · United States

Plain-English summary

This research discusses how studying veterinary viruses, like the pseudorabies virus (PRV), can help scientists understand basic biological problems, even if it doesn't lead directly to practical solutions like vaccines or treatments. While some researchers focus on viruses that cause diseases and how to eliminate them, others believe that exploring these viruses can lead to important discoveries in biology. The author shares recent experiments with PRV to show how these veterinary viruses can be useful for scientific research. Overall, the study emphasizes the value of basic science in understanding complex biological issues.

Abstract

To some, the focus of research in virology entails the search for solutions of practical problems. By definition then, attention is limited to those viruses that cause disease or to exploitation of some aspect of virology to a practical end (e.g., antiviral drugs or vaccines). Once a disease is cured, or the agent eradicated, it is time to move on to something else. To others, virology offers the opportunity to study fundamental problems in biology. Work on these problems may offer no obvious practical justification; it is an affliction of the terminally curious, perhaps with the outside hope that something "useful" will come of it. To do this so-called "basic science", one must find the most tractable system to solve the problem, not the system that has "relevance" to disease. I have found that veterinary viruses offer a variety of opportunities to study relevant problems at the fundamental level. To illustrate this point, I describe some recent experiments in my laboratory using pseudorabies virus (PRV), a swine herpesvirus.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10470272/