You may know:
~8% of human genome is made up of HERVs (human endogenous retroviruses).
They've thrown their lot in with us: we preserve them in our genome & they protect us from other viruses.
Viruses on 'Team Human'.
Pet Viruses.
HERV sequences & products shape & are shaped by our immune systems.
Our cells sometimes recognize them as internal viral invaders & express gene products related to viral immunity, the interferon pathways. This can lead to autoimmunity OR control of excessive immune activity.
A particular one, HERV-K(HML10) landed in the Major Histocompatibility Region (MHR) and is responsible for some human variation in tissue donation compatibility.
HERV-W derived syncytin-1 and syncytin-2 (modified retroviral envelope genes) are actively expressed in placenta during embryonic development & help maintain immune feto-maternal tolerance. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19407656/
Finally & most importantly, some HERVs are part of our innate resistance to viruses, directly targeting their pathogenic cousins and defending us against invaders.
Cells have a class of defenses called pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) that recognize things like double-stranded RNA or RNA/DNA hybrids, hallmarks of viral infection... but these defenses can be tricked/ knocked out by pathogenic viruses.
Say the sneaky bad guy virus (SBGV) finds a way to bind up our double-stranded RNA detector/alarm. The HERV products, normally controlled at low levels, now start to accumulate up to levels that directly trip the alarm to activate viral defenses.
Alternatively, the SBGV could go through a single-stranded RNA intermediate that doesn't trip our innate defenses to double-stranded RNA.
The HERV sequences match the bad virus just enough to form double-stranded stretches that trigger that alarm.
Our HERV's could just be coding for proteins that are part of the inner core of their self-assembly complex (gag)... which, when it encounters a bad guy virus, binds to the outer coat (capsid), trying to make an inside on the outside of the virus and inactivating it.
There are lots of other ways that our pet viruses protect us, shape and are shaped by our innate immunity to viral infection.
I think it helps to be reminded how important viruses have been in our evolution: our comrades-in-arms as well as our enemies.
Like a wolf turned guard dog, HERVs didn't so much stop being what they are: they became part of a suite of evolutionary selection tied to human survival & fitness.
It's important that we continue to study and document the impact of viruses on human health, good and bad.
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Let's talk about why mammalian red blood cells (erythrocytes) don't have nuclei.
~85% of all your cells are erythrocytes, 20-30 trillion of them in an adult.
You produce >2 million every second & they represent half of all your blood volume. So why don't they have any DNA?
We can talk about the ways that erythrocytes are optimized for transporting hemoglobin(Hb)-bound oxygen throughout our tissues:
No nuclei means no metabolism or cell machinery, so an RBC becomes just a small, flexible bag of Hb, which means they can travel down even the tiniest of blood vessels, and deliver oxygen payloads into the interstitial spaces.
Roman god 'Liber', god of the vine & male fertility, was later merged with Bacchus. He was son of Ceres, brother/consort to Libera.
Liber pater ('Free Father') was patron god of plebians, patron of male virility & boys becoming men.
A Liberalia was a festival of the cult of Liber Pater & it was celebrated when boys took manly toga virilis w phallic symbols & "a giant penis on a trolley".
Liberalia celebrated drinking, free speech & overthrow of political structures, making cult dangerous to establishment.
The point is that Liber Pater was in favor of the poor & powerless getting drunk & overthrowing leaders. He was a god of anarchy & plebian values.
In late Republic, Cicero was careful to say that "Liber was not identical to Bacchus": rebellion & equality, not chaos.
Let's talk about Barbara Jordan, Texas lawyer, politician & civil rights leader.
Born Feb 21st, 1936 in Houston's 5th Ward, daughter of a Baptist minister.
Barred from attending Univ of TX by segregation, she graduated Texas Southern University magna cum laude.
During her time at TSU (historically black university in Houston), majoring in political science & history, she led their debate team to national championship.
She graduated Boston University School of Law in 1959 with JD, taught Political Science at Tuskegee Institute in AL.
After 2 unsuccessful bids for state rep, she won a seat in Texas Senate in 1966, the 1st Black Senator since 1883, and the 1st Black woman.
Re-elected, she served until 1972, was the 1st Black Senate pro tempore, and on June 10, 1972 sworn as Governor of Texas for a single day.
If only there were some way to know what the Founding Fathers thought of vaccines and vaccine mandates?
Oh, right, they wrote extensively on the subject, and by their actions showed their commitment to public health.
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You may know the history of Washington's variolation of troops at Valley Forge, making them immune to the smallpox scourge that led to tragedy at the Battle of Quebec. The process was not without risk, but according to figures, inoculation lowered case fatality from 45% to 2%.
During the war, he also mandated quarantine for civilians and soldiers under his direction, enforced by troops and general order.