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Does the dangerous new Middle East coronavirus have an African origin?

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​The MERS-coronavirus is regarded as a dangerous novel pathogen: Almost 50 people have died from infection with the virus since it was first discovered in 2012. To date all cases are connected with the Arabian peninsula. 

Scientists from South Africa and Germany have now detected a virus in the faeces of a South African bat that is genetically more closely related to MERS-CoV than any other known virus. The scientists therefore believe that African bats may play a role in the evolution of MERS-CoV predecessor viruses. Their results have just been published online in the journal "Emerging Infectious Diseases".

Infection with the novel "Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus" or MERS-CoV has been diagnosed in 90 patients so far, half of whom have died. In severe cases, patients develop pneumonia and acute kidney failure. All cases so far are – sometimes indirectly through infected family members or close contacts – connected with the Arabian peninsula.

A collaboration of researchers from the University of Stellenbosch, several other South African institutions and the Institute of Virology in Bonn, Germany, have recently found evidence that MERS-CoV could possibly originate from bats occurring in southern Africa. The South African scientists, headed by Prof. Wolfgang Preiser, tested faecal material from a total of 62 bats from 13 different species and, in collaboration with their colleagues in Bonn, investigated the genetic material of the viruses that they found.

In a faecal sample from a bat of the species Neoromicia cf. zuluensis they found a virus that is genetically more closely related to MERS-CoV than any other known virus. They believe that MERS-CoV may originally come from bats and may have reached the human population via other animals acting as intermediate hosts.

Search for MERS-CoV progenitor should include Africa
This finding was made in one individual bat only, but nevertheless serves as an important pointer. When searching for the origin of MERS-CoV, Africa should be taken into account in addition to the Arabian peninsula. This work is as important as searching for treatment, because once the origin and modes of spreading are known, the risk for human beings can be minimised. An example for the spread of MERS-CoV could be Rift Valley fever that, coming from East Africa, caused outbreaks in Saudi Arabia and Yemen in 2000.

Further studies of bats and potential interim hosts are urgently needed to elucidate the origin of MERS-CoV. Finding a closely related virus in a bat does not mean that human beings can become infected directly through exposure to the bats. It should not be misunderstood as indicating a health risk from bats and does by no means justify their persecution; on the contrary, bats provide value to ecosystems in several respects and should enjoy strict protection. It is however likely that bats are the natural hosts for the virus, and that human infections are the result of contact with other animals such as camels acting as intermediate hosts. At this stage there is probably also direct human-to-human transmission.

Publication: Close Relative of Human Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus in South African Bat, Journal "Emerging Infectious Diseases", DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3201/eid1910.130946
Internet: http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/19/10/13-0946_article.htm
THIS PAPER WILL BE PLACED UNDER "Expedited Articles" ON THE JOURNAL START PAGE http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/

Contact:

Prof Wolfgang Preiser
Division of Medical Virology
University of Stellenbosch / NHLS Tygerberg
Tel. +27 21 938 9353
E-Mail: preiser@sun.ac.za 

Dr Jan Felix Drexler
Institute for Virology
Bonn University Hospital
Tel. +49 228 28711697
E-Mail: drexler@virology-bonn.de

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Author: Mandi Barnard
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Visibly Featured: SU Main; Medicine and Health Sciences
Published Date: 7/25/2013
Visibly Featured Approved: SU Main Snippet; Article List; Medicine and Health Sciences Carousel; ​
GUID Original Article: 2E4CE421-4690-48AC-935D-3EF691215296
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Opsomming: Wetenskaplikes van Suid-Afrika en Duitsland het 'n virus in die mis van 'n Suid-Afrikaanse vlermuis ontdek wat geneties baie nouer verbind is aan MERS-CoV, wat beskou word as 'n gevaarlike nuwe patogeen, as enige ander virus.
Summary: Scientists from South Africa and Germany have detected a virus in the faeces of a South African bat that is genetically more closely related to MERS-CoV, regarded as a dangerous novel pathogen, than any other known virus.

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