Link of a ubiquitous human coronavirus to dromedary camels

The four human coronaviruses (HCoVs) are globally endemic respiratory pathogens. The Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) coronavirus (CoV) is an emerging CoV with a known zoonotic source in dromedary camels. Little is known about the origins of endemic HCoVs. Studying these viruses’ evolutionary...

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Autores principales: Corman, V.M., Eckerle, I., Memish, Z.A., Liljander, Anne M., Dijkman, R., Jonsdottir, H., Ngeiywa, K.J.Z.J., Kamau, E., Younan, M., Al Masri, M., Assiri, A., Gluecks, Ilona V., Musa, B.E., Meyer, B., Müller, M.A., Hilali, Mosaad, Bornstein, S., Wernery, U., Thiel, V., Jores, Joerg, Drexler, J.F., Drosten, C.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: National Academy of Sciences 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77264
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author Corman, V.M.
Eckerle, I.
Memish, Z.A.
Liljander, Anne M.
Dijkman, R.
Jonsdottir, H.
Ngeiywa, K.J.Z.J.
Kamau, E.
Younan, M.
Al Masri, M.
Assiri, A.
Gluecks, Ilona V.
Musa, B.E.
Meyer, B.
Müller, M.A.
Hilali, Mosaad
Bornstein, S.
Wernery, U.
Thiel, V.
Jores, Joerg
Drexler, J.F.
Drosten, C.
author_browse Al Masri, M.
Assiri, A.
Bornstein, S.
Corman, V.M.
Dijkman, R.
Drexler, J.F.
Drosten, C.
Eckerle, I.
Gluecks, Ilona V.
Hilali, Mosaad
Jonsdottir, H.
Jores, Joerg
Kamau, E.
Liljander, Anne M.
Memish, Z.A.
Meyer, B.
Musa, B.E.
Müller, M.A.
Ngeiywa, K.J.Z.J.
Thiel, V.
Wernery, U.
Younan, M.
author_facet Corman, V.M.
Eckerle, I.
Memish, Z.A.
Liljander, Anne M.
Dijkman, R.
Jonsdottir, H.
Ngeiywa, K.J.Z.J.
Kamau, E.
Younan, M.
Al Masri, M.
Assiri, A.
Gluecks, Ilona V.
Musa, B.E.
Meyer, B.
Müller, M.A.
Hilali, Mosaad
Bornstein, S.
Wernery, U.
Thiel, V.
Jores, Joerg
Drexler, J.F.
Drosten, C.
author_sort Corman, V.M.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The four human coronaviruses (HCoVs) are globally endemic respiratory pathogens. The Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) coronavirus (CoV) is an emerging CoV with a known zoonotic source in dromedary camels. Little is known about the origins of endemic HCoVs. Studying these viruses’ evolutionary history could provide important insight into CoV emergence. In tests of MERS-CoV–infected dromedaries, we found viruses related to an HCoV, known as HCoV-229E, in 5.6% of 1,033 animals. Human- and dromedary-derived viruses are each monophyletic, suggesting ecological isolation. One gene of dromedary viruses exists in two versions in camels, full length and deleted, whereas only the deleted version exists in humans. The deletion increased in size over a succession starting from camelid viruses via old human viruses to contemporary human viruses. Live isolates of dromedary 229E viruses were obtained and studied to assess human infection risks. The viruses used the human entry receptor aminopeptidase N and replicated in human hepatoma cells, suggesting a principal ability to cause human infections. However, inefficient replication in several mucosa-derived cell lines and airway epithelial cultures suggested lack of adaptation to the human host. Dromedary viruses were as sensitive to the human type I interferon response as HCoV-229E. Antibodies in human sera neutralized dromedary-derived viruses, suggesting population immunity against dromedary viruses. Although no current epidemic risk seems to emanate from these viruses, evolutionary inference suggests that the endemic human virus HCoV-229E may constitute a descendant of camelid-associated viruses. HCoV-229E evolution provides a scenario for MERS-CoV emergence.
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spelling CGSpace772642024-10-17T09:47:53Z Link of a ubiquitous human coronavirus to dromedary camels Corman, V.M. Eckerle, I. Memish, Z.A. Liljander, Anne M. Dijkman, R. Jonsdottir, H. Ngeiywa, K.J.Z.J. Kamau, E. Younan, M. Al Masri, M. Assiri, A. Gluecks, Ilona V. Musa, B.E. Meyer, B. Müller, M.A. Hilali, Mosaad Bornstein, S. Wernery, U. Thiel, V. Jores, Joerg Drexler, J.F. Drosten, C. camels animal diseases zoonoses The four human coronaviruses (HCoVs) are globally endemic respiratory pathogens. The Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) coronavirus (CoV) is an emerging CoV with a known zoonotic source in dromedary camels. Little is known about the origins of endemic HCoVs. Studying these viruses’ evolutionary history could provide important insight into CoV emergence. In tests of MERS-CoV–infected dromedaries, we found viruses related to an HCoV, known as HCoV-229E, in 5.6% of 1,033 animals. Human- and dromedary-derived viruses are each monophyletic, suggesting ecological isolation. One gene of dromedary viruses exists in two versions in camels, full length and deleted, whereas only the deleted version exists in humans. The deletion increased in size over a succession starting from camelid viruses via old human viruses to contemporary human viruses. Live isolates of dromedary 229E viruses were obtained and studied to assess human infection risks. The viruses used the human entry receptor aminopeptidase N and replicated in human hepatoma cells, suggesting a principal ability to cause human infections. However, inefficient replication in several mucosa-derived cell lines and airway epithelial cultures suggested lack of adaptation to the human host. Dromedary viruses were as sensitive to the human type I interferon response as HCoV-229E. Antibodies in human sera neutralized dromedary-derived viruses, suggesting population immunity against dromedary viruses. Although no current epidemic risk seems to emanate from these viruses, evolutionary inference suggests that the endemic human virus HCoV-229E may constitute a descendant of camelid-associated viruses. HCoV-229E evolution provides a scenario for MERS-CoV emergence. 2016-08-30 2016-10-13T07:08:41Z 2016-10-13T07:08:41Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77264 en Open Access National Academy of Sciences Corman, V.M., Eckerle, I., Memish, Z.A., Liljander, A.M., Dijkman, R., Jonsdottir, H., Ngeiywa, K.J.Z.J., Kamau, E., Younan, M., Al Masri, M., Assiri, A., Gluecks, I., Musa, B.E., Meyer, B., Müller, M.A., Hilali, M., Bornstein, S., Wernery, U., Thiel, V., Jores, J., Drexler, J.F. and Drosten, C. 2016. Link of a ubiquitous human coronavirus to dromedary camels. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 113(35): 9864–9869.
spellingShingle camels
animal diseases
zoonoses
Corman, V.M.
Eckerle, I.
Memish, Z.A.
Liljander, Anne M.
Dijkman, R.
Jonsdottir, H.
Ngeiywa, K.J.Z.J.
Kamau, E.
Younan, M.
Al Masri, M.
Assiri, A.
Gluecks, Ilona V.
Musa, B.E.
Meyer, B.
Müller, M.A.
Hilali, Mosaad
Bornstein, S.
Wernery, U.
Thiel, V.
Jores, Joerg
Drexler, J.F.
Drosten, C.
Link of a ubiquitous human coronavirus to dromedary camels
title Link of a ubiquitous human coronavirus to dromedary camels
title_full Link of a ubiquitous human coronavirus to dromedary camels
title_fullStr Link of a ubiquitous human coronavirus to dromedary camels
title_full_unstemmed Link of a ubiquitous human coronavirus to dromedary camels
title_short Link of a ubiquitous human coronavirus to dromedary camels
title_sort link of a ubiquitous human coronavirus to dromedary camels
topic camels
animal diseases
zoonoses
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77264
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