Scientists said on Wednesday they had found evidence that SARS-like coronaviruses can jump straight from a type of Chinese bat to humans without the need for an intermediary animal “host.”
The find has “enormous implications” for public health control, with potentially pandemic viruses present, right now, in bats in China that could cause another outbreak, the authors of the study published in the journal Nature said.
“Even worse, we don’t know how lethal these viruses would be if such an outbreak erupted,” co-author Peter Daszak of the EcoHealth Alliance, a New York-based research group, said in a statement.
Bats have long been thought to be the origin of the SARS coronavirus (CoV) outbreak that killed hundreds of people in Asia 10 years ago, but other SARS-like viruses found in bats lacked the genetic ability to “bind” to human cells for infection.
SARS had also been found in civet cats in wildlife markets in China and many scientists believed they were a necessary intermediary host for the bat virus to mutate into a form able to target humans.
“Our current paper shows that this isn’t necessary — we have found SARS-like coronaviruses in Chinese horseshoe bats that are much more closely related to human SARS and that can use the human cell receptor,” Daszak said by e-mail. “That means they could emerge directly from bats to people anywhere there is contact with this species of Chinese bat, not just in the wildlife markets where civets are also found.”
A receptor is a molecule on the surface of a human cell that receives chemical signals via a spike protein on the surface of a virus — a kind of lock and key mechanism — but not all viruses have the key to unlock just any cell.
The study authors said their findings constituted the strongest evidence yet that SARS itself may have originated in bats.
“I think it’s the most likely hypothesis for how SARS emerged — that bats carrying viruses similar to our new CoVs were in the market, and infected both civets and people at the same time,” Daszak said.
The results underlined the importance of continued surveillance of viruses in bats to pre-emptively identify ones that could cross species, the team from China, Australia, Singapore and the US said.
“It is not uncommon for bats to be a food source for many people in China and other parts of Asia, so the risk is substantial,” an EcoHealth Alliance statement said.
Horseshoe bats are also used in Chinese medicine.
The Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) which first appeared in September last year and has claimed 62 lives worldwide, is also believed to originate in bats — in Saudi Arabia.
“Our work shows that bats are important reservoirs of a number of viruses, including MERS, and we should be more careful about how we interact with bats — let’s give them the natural space for their habitat, conserve them, and avoid hunting and trading in bats — this is good for conservation and good for our health,” Daszak said.
The results published in Nature were based on a genetic analysis of virus samples taken over the course of a year from members of a horseshoe bat colony in the southwestern Chinese city of Kunming.
Daszak said the team had managed to isolate and cultivate one of the viruses live in the laboratory, which will be used to work on a possible vaccine.
“The biggest threat for a pandemic now is not SARS itself, because that outbreak happened and ended. The biggest threat is for something similar to SARS to emerge from wildlife and start off a new SARS-like pandemic,” he said.
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