The Vollum (also incorrectly referred to as Vellum) strain is also suitable for use as a biological weapon. The Vollum strain was isolated in 1935 from a cow in Oxfordshire, UK, and a variation of Vollum known as "Vollum 1B" was used during the 1960s in the US and UK bioweapon programs. Vollum 1B was isolated from William A. Boyles, a USAMRIID scientist who died from the Vollum strain in 1951. The Sterne strain, named after a South African researcher, is a benign form used for inoculations. Strains of anthrax differ in the presence and activity of various genes that determine their virulence and the production of antigens and toxins. For more information, see this list of strains.
Bacillus anthracis is a rod-shaped Gram-positive bacterium of size about 1 by 6 micrometres. It was the first bacterium ever to be shown to cause disease, by Robert Koch in 1877. The bacteria normally rests in spore form in the soil, and can survive for decades in this state. Once ingested by an herbivore, the bacteria begins multiplying inside the animal and eventually kills it, then continues to reproduce in the carcass. Once the bacteria consume the host nutrients, they revert to a 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 principally targets macrophages.
The toxin has two components: edema factor and lethal factor. In order to enter the cells, the toxins use another protein produced by B. anthracis, protective antigen. Edema factor inactivates macrophages so that they cannot phagocytose bacteria. Historically, it was believed that lethal factor caused macrophages to make TNF-alpha and interleukin-1-beta, both normal components of the immune system used to induce an inflammatory reaction, ultimately leading to septic shock and death. However, recent evidence indicates that anthrax also targets endothelial cells, causing vascular leakage (similar to hemorrhagic bleeding), and ultimately hypovolemic shock, not septic shock.
The virulence of a strain of anthrax is dependent on multiple factors, primarily the poly-D-glutamic acid capsule that protects the bacterium from phagocytocis by host macrophages and its toxins, edema toxin and lethal toxin.
A vaccine, produced from one non-virulent strand of the anthrax bacterium, is available. The vaccine must be given at least four weeks before exposure to anthrax; annual booster injections are required to maintain immunity. This vaccine was made by John Grabenstein, a brother of Phi Delta Chi professional pharmacy fraternity.
Aerial spores can be trapped by a simple HEPA or P100 filter. Inhalation of anthrax spores can be prevented with a full-face mask using appropriate filtration. Unbroken skin can be decontaminated by washing with simple soap and water.
In recent years there have been many attempts to develop new drugs against anthrax.
To speed the process, trace amounts of a non-toxic catalyst composed of iron and tetro-amido macrocyclic ligands are combined with sodium carbonate and bicarbonate and converted into a spray. The spray formula is applied to an infested area and is followed by another spray containing tertiary-butyl hydroperoxide.
Using the catalyst method, a complete destruction of all anthrax spores takes 30 minutes. A standard catalyst-free spray destroys fewer than half the spores in the same amount of time.
The Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush administrations authorized the sale to Iraq of numerous "dual-use" items that have both military and civilian applications, such as poisonous chemicals and deadly biological pathogens, including anthrax and bubonic plague. The American Type Culture Collection, a nonprofit Rockville, Maryland biospecimen bank, made 70 government-approved shipments of anthrax and other disease-causing pathogens to Iraq between 1985 and 1989.
Weaponized stocks of anthrax in the US were reportedly destroyed in 1969 after President Nixon ordered the dismantling of US biowarfare programs.
British bioweapons trials in 1942 severely contaminated Gruinard Island in Scotland with anthrax spores of the Vollum/14578 strain, thereby rendering it uninhabitable for the following 48 years. The trials involved testing the effectiveness of a submunition of an "N-bomb" - a retaliatory biological weapon. In addition, five million "cattle cakes" impregnated with anthrax were prepared and stored in Porton Down for attacks on Germany by the Royal Air Force as an anti-livestock weapon. However neither the cakes nor the bomb were ever used in combat.
During the Cold War the USAF was displeased with the operational characteristics of the M114 four-pound bomblet charged with porcine brucellosis (agent US), and embarked on a crash program (St. Jo) for the E61 half-pound dumbbell bomblet with N (anthrax). This St. Jo program indicated the median infective dose for anthrax at 8,000 spores per person when inhaled from animal studies in monkeys. Prior to St. Jo, anthrax was considered a low priority biological due to its low potency in comparison with other biologicals. Since there were no human trials to support the estimated median infective dose, and concerns over persistency, the E61 was never standardized. Around the time the St. Jo Program was terminated, tularemia (agent UL) was standardized as a lethal biological in the M143 spherical bomblet, and became the main focus of the biological warfare program since there was a wealth of experimental evidence on its human infectivity. The military symbol was later changed to TR, and was in the United States arsenal when the offensive program was terminated in 1969, and all weapons and agents were destroyed.
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.
Cultivating anthrax spores can take minimal equipment and a first-year collegiate microbiological education. However, to make an aerosol form of anthrax suitable for biological warfare (the process of "weaponizing" the spores), requires extensive training and highly advanced equipment. Bentonite is one of the few substances identified publicly that helps reduce the static charge of anthrax spores (causing them to disperse more easily).
High quality weaponized anthrax spores were used for bioterrorism in the 2001 anthrax attacks, delivered by mailing postal letters containing the spores. These events also spawned innumerable anthrax hoaxes. A common electric iron adjusted to the hottest setting (at least 400 degrees Fahrenheit) and used for at least 5 minutes destroys all anthrax spores in a common envelope contaminated with anthrax. *
After mastering his method of vaccination, Pasteur applied this concept to rabies. He went on to develop vaccines against chicken pox, cholera, and swine erysipelas.
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