Revision as of 02:55, 26 November 2007 editDonreed (talk | contribs)7,544 edits →In fiction← Previous edit | Revision as of 02:59, 26 November 2007 edit undoDonreed (talk | contribs)7,544 edits →In fictionNext edit → | ||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
In '']'', the pharmaceutical corporation BioCyte engineered a chimera virus in order to create a need for the vaccine ], which they had also created. The vaccine is only effective within twenty hours of exposure. | In '']'', the pharmaceutical corporation BioCyte engineered a chimera virus in order to create a need for the vaccine ], which they had also created. The vaccine is only effective within twenty hours of exposure. | ||
In ''],'' ] posits a plot by a biotech billionaire to wipe out humanity, using a strain of the ] virus altered by addition of ] genes. (A previous ] attack, in ''],'' had failed because | In ''],'' ] posits a plot by a biotech billionaire to wipe out humanity, using a strain of the ] virus altered by addition of ] genes. | ||
(A previous ] attack, in ''],'' had failed because | |||
* the Ebola virus quickly spreads through a small population, killing everyone, then "burns out" when it runs out of hosts. Ebola has caused a number of small outbreaks but no large ]. | * the Ebola virus quickly spreads through a small population, killing everyone, then "burns out" when it runs out of hosts. Ebola has caused a number of small outbreaks but no large ]. | ||
* The U.S. Government launched an effective ] |
* The U.S. Government had launched an effective ] response—led by the ] and epidemiologists from ]—which contained each outbreak and quarantined all patients. Despite ingenious use of ]s to spread the virus at a number of large ]s, dozens died—not millions.) | ||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 02:59, 26 November 2007
A chimera virus is defined by the United States Department of Agriculture Center for Veterinary Biologics as a "new hybrid microorganism created by joining nucleic acid fragments from two or more different microorganisms in which each of at least two of the fragments contain essential genes necessary for replication." The term chimera already referred to an individual organism whose body contained cell populations from different zygotes or an organism that developed from portions of different embryos.
See also
In fiction
In Mission: Impossible II, the pharmaceutical corporation BioCyte engineered a chimera virus in order to create a need for the vaccine Bellerophon, which they had also created. The vaccine is only effective within twenty hours of exposure.
In Rainbow 6, Tom Clancy posits a plot by a biotech billionaire to wipe out humanity, using a strain of the Ebola virus altered by addition of colon cancer genes.
(A previous biological warfare attack, in Executive Orders, had failed because
- the Ebola virus quickly spreads through a small population, killing everyone, then "burns out" when it runs out of hosts. Ebola has caused a number of small outbreaks but no large epidemic.
- The U.S. Government had launched an effective public health response—led by the CDC and epidemiologists from Johns Hopkins—which contained each outbreak and quarantined all patients. Despite ingenious use of aerosols to spread the virus at a number of large trade shows, dozens died—not millions.)