Sun.Star Davao

EVEN EMBRYOS SUSCEPTIBL­E TO CORONAVIRU­S

- PNA

ANKARA – Shedding more light into how early an individual could contract the novel coronaviru­s, scientists on Wednesday suggested that it might be as early as during the second week of pregnancy.

Embryos could be susceptibl­e to coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) if the mother gets sick, potentiall­y affecting the fate of the pregnancy, Professors Magda Zernicka-Goetz and David Glover from the University of Cambridge and the California Institute of Technology said in a new study published at the Royal Society’s journal Open Biology.

Questions concerning the potential effects on fetal health and successful pregnancy for those infected with SARS-CoV-2, which causes Covid-19 disease, remain largely unanswered, the scientists said in the body abstract of their study, which motivated them to dig deeper into the examinatio­n of human pre-gastrulati­on embryos.

Amid conflictin­g clinical reports that have emerged regarding coronaviru­s infection in newborns whose mothers were infected, the new study explained that the stages of early embryo developmen­t are complex and delicate, and vulnerable to viral infections.

“Despite the remarkable plasticity of the embryo, it is particular­ly vulnerable at this time with about 60 percent of pregnancie­s failing during these first 14 days of developmen­t,” it said.

The potential of viral infection through the transmissi­on of SARS-CoV-2 during early pregnancy via maternal blood, the study suggested, can have implicatio­ns for the success of implantati­on, future placental, and fetal health.

The researcher­s found patterns of expression of the genes ACE2, which provide the genetic code for the SARS-CoV-2 receptor, and TMPRSS2, which provides the code for a molecule that cleaves both the viral spike protein and the ACE2 receptor, allowing infection to occur. These genes were expressed during key stages of the embryo’s developmen­t.

The death toll worldwide from the novel coronaviru­s rose to over 701,300 on Wednesday, according to a running tally by the US-based Johns Hopkins University.

Data showed the total number of cases worldwide exceeded 18.57 million, with 11.16 million recoveries. /

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