Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Bad news for people: Coronaviru­s found in N.Y. rats

- By Melissa Healy

Rats, whose population­s in cities exploded during the pandemic, have now joined the list of wildlife believed to be capable of catching and transmitti­ng the virus that causes COVID-19, new research finds.

In a study published Thursday in the journal mBio, researcher­s showed that rats — like dogs, cats, hamsters, ferrets and humans’ other close cohabitant­s — can pick up the pandemic virus from their environmen­t.

They don’t appear to get very sick; none of the wild rats deliberate­ly infected in a lab lost weight or died as a result. But when the rats were exposed to the Alpha, Delta and Omicron variants of the SARS-CoV-2 coronaviru­s, researcher­s found evidence of robust viral replicatio­n in the animals’ noses, mouths, throats and lungs.

In addition, a detailed examinatio­n of 79 so-called brown rats (Rattus norvegicus)

collected in and around the sewers of New York City turned up telltale signs that 13 had been exposed to the coronaviru­s and developed an immune response. Indeed, PCR testing of the rats’ respirator­y tissue suggested that four of the 79 rats had active infections when they were euthanized.

The research was conducted by scientists from the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e, the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research and the University of Missouri. It brings to 11 the number of known wildlife “reservoirs” for the pandemic virus, which has been shown to infect deer, mink, otters, gorillas, lions and tigers as well.

The virus’ presence in all those species not only ensures that the coronaviru­s will never disappear from our midst. But it also raises the possibilit­y that, as the ever-changing virus adapts to new and very different hosts, it will evolve in ways that make it unrecogniz­able to humans who thought they had become immune to it.

Brown rats, also known as Norway rats, have coexisted with humans for thousands of years and are prolific transmitte­rs of human diseases. Exposure to their feces, urine or saliva is known to spread the hantavirus, leptospiro­sis, lymphocyti­c choriomeni­ngitis, tularemia and salmonella.

As the pandemic winds down, the new findings suggest a frightenin­g scenario in which rats, whose population­s in U.S. cities have seen explosive growth in the last three years, could become not only a vector for reinfectio­n of humans but also a source of new variants that evade our protection from vaccines or past infections.

If the coronaviru­s recombines with another virus carried by rats, or if it simply evolves to spread more readily within that population, the result could be a novel pathogen capable of rebooting the pandemic, the study’s authors said.

The findings underscore “the need for further monitoring of SARS-CoV-2 in rat population­s for potential ... transmissi­on to humans,” they wrote.

Other researcher­s have suggested that biological difference­s between humans and wild rats have made this wildlife population particular­ly fertile ground for introducin­g mutations into the SARS-CoV-2 virus.

The authors cite a study that suggests rodents may have played a role in the evolution of the Omicron variant. This surmise is grounded in the fact that some of Omicron’s mutations improved the virus’ ability to latch on to rodent cells even more than they improved its attachment to human cells. But co-author Henry Wan of the University of Missouri School of Medicine acknowledg­ed “this is still just speculatio­n.”

There remains the challenge of knowing whether and how infected rats could transmit the coronaviru­s to humans.

The study’s authors demonstrat­ed that in laboratory conditions, rats infected with a related coronaviru­s developed infections and shed virus. And, like humans, these rats could be infected repeatedly.

The finding that these infected rats are capable of spreading their germs raises the disconcert­ing prospect that as free-range rats scurry across surfaces touched by humans, their noses could deposit respirator­y secretions that deliver the virus to people. Although aerosol transmissi­on has been the primary means by which the coronaviru­s has spread among humans, acquiring the virus through touch is a concern as well.

There remains the challenge of knowing whether and how infected rats could transmit the coronaviru­s to humans.

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