Description of the bacterium
Bacillus anthracis is a rod-size gram-positive bacterium of size about 1 by 6 microns. It was the first bacterium ever to be shown to cause disease, by Robert Koch in 1877. The bacteria normally rest in spore form in the soil, and can survive for decades in this state. Once taken in by an herbivore, the bacteria start multiplying inside the animal and eventually kill it, then continue to reproduce in the carcass. Once they run out of nutrients there, they revert back to the dormant spore state.
The infection of herbivores (and humans) proceeds as follows: the spore is located and engulfed by scavenger cells of the immune system specialized to deal with invaders. Inside the scavenger cell, the spore turns into a bacillus, multiplies, and eventually bursts the cell, releasing bacilli into the bloodstream. There they release a protein toxin which has macrophages as its principal target. The toxin has two components: edema factor and lethal factor. Edema factor inactivates macrophages so that they cannot participate in the fight against the infection; lethal factor causes the macrophage to make TNF-alpha and interleukin-1-beta, both normal components of the immune system used to induce an inflammatory reaction. The excessive inflammation throughout the body ultimately leads to septic shock and death.
The virulence of a strain of anthrax is dependent on its enclosing capsule and its toxin; the two are determined by different genes.
Biological warfare
Spores of this bacteria can be used in biological warfare. US Army personnel are now routinely vaccinated prior to active service in places where biological attacks are considered a threat. The anthrax vaccine, produced by BioPort Corporation, contains no live bacteria, and is approximately 93% effective in preventing infection. Anthrax vaccination is one of many factors suspected of causing Gulf War syndrome.
British tests in 1942 contaminated Gruinard Island in Scotland with anthrax spores, and rendered it unusable for the following 48 years. An accidental release of anthrax in a research lab at Fort Detrick in Frederick, Maryland in the United States led to the permanent sealing of a building with plastics and glues.
The simplest method of obtaining an anthrax sample would be to get it from an animal killed by anthrax; this source is rare in developed countries but common in underdeveloped countries.
Cultivating anthrax spores takes minimal equipment and about a first-year collegiate microbiological education. However, to make an aerosol form of anthrax suitable for biological warfare requires extensive training and highly developed equipment. The major problem is to prevent the spores from forming clumps too large for effective infection.
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