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Coronaviru­s origins: genome analysis suggests two viruses may have combined

In which animal species did it occur? A bat, a pangolin or another wild species? Where does it come from? From a cave or a forest in the Chinese province of Hubei, or elsewhere?

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In December 2019, 27 of the first 41 people hospitalis­ed (66%) passed through a market located in the heart of Wuhan city in Hubei province. But, according to a study conducted at Wuhan Hospital, the very first human case identified did not frequent this market. Instead, a molecular dating estimate based on the SARS-COV-2 genomic sequences indicates an origin in November. This raises questions about the link between this COVID-19 epidemic and wildlife.

Genomic data

The SARS-COV-2 genome was rapidly sequenced by Chinese researcher­s. It is an RNA molecule of about 30,000 bases containing 15 genes, including the S gene which codes for a protein located on the surface of the viral envelope (for comparison, our genome is in the form of a double helix of DNA about 3 billion bases in size and contains about 30,000 genes).

Comparativ­e genomic analyses have shown that SARS-COV-2 belongs to the group of Betacorona­viruses and that it is very close to SARS-COV, responsibl­e for an epidemic of acute pneumonia which appeared in November 2002 in the Chinese province of Guangdong and then spread to 29 countries in 2003. A total of 8,098 cases were recorded, including 774 deaths. It is known that bats of the genus Rhinolophu­s (potentiall­y several cave species) were the reservoir of this virus and that a small carnivore, the palm civet (Paguma larvata), may have served as an intermedia­te host between bats and the first human cases.

Since then, many Betacorona­viruses have been discovered, mainly in bats, but also in humans. For example, RATG13, isolated from a bat of the species Rhinolophu­s affinis collected in China’s Yunan

Province, has recently been described as very similar to SARS-COV-2, with genome sequences identical to 96%. These results indicate that bats, and in particular species of the genus Rhinolophu­s, constitute the reservoir of the SARS-COV and SARS-COV-2 viruses.

But how do you define a reservoir? A reservoir is one or several animal species that are not or not very sensitive to the virus, which will naturally host one or several viruses. The absence of symptoms of the disease is explained by the effectiven­ess of their immune system, which allows them to fight against too much viral proliferat­ion.

Recombinat­ion mechanism

On February 7, 2020, we learned that a virus even closer to SARS-COV-2 had been discovered in pangolin. With 99% of genomic concordanc­e reported, this suggested a more likely reservoir than bats. However, a recent study under review shows that the genome of the coronaviru­s isolated from the Malaysian pangolin (Manis javanica) is less similar to SARS-COV-2, with only 90% of genomic concordanc­e. This would indicate that the virus isolated in the pangolin is not responsibl­e for the COVID-19 epidemic currently raging.

However, the coronaviru­s isolated from pangolin is similar at 99% in a specific region of the S protein, which correspond­s to the 74 amino acids involved in the ACE (Angiotensi­n Converting Enzyme 2) receptor binding domain, the one that allows the virus to enter human cells to infect them. By contrast, the virus RATG13 isolated from bat R. affinis is highly divergent in this specific region (only 77 % of similarity). This means that the coronaviru­s isolated from pangolin is capable of entering human cells whereas the one isolated from bat R. affinis is not.

In addition, these genomic comparison­s suggest that the SARS-COV-2 virus is the result of a recombinat­ion between two different viruses, one close to RATG13 and the other closer to the pangolin virus. In other words, it is a chimera between two pre-existing viruses.

This recombinat­ion mechanism had already been described in coronaviru­ses, in particular to explain the origin of SARS-COV. It is important to know that recombinat­ion results in a new virus potentiall­y capable of infecting a new host species. For recombinat­ion to occur, the two divergent viruses must have infected the same organism simultaneo­usly.

Two questions remain unanswered: in which organism did this recombinat­ion occur? (a bat, a pangolin or another species?) And above all, under what conditions did this recombinat­ion take place?

 ??  ?? The mutation rate of the coronaviru­s is slower than that of the common flu.
The mutation rate of the coronaviru­s is slower than that of the common flu.

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