Public healthWorld public health authorities alarmed about a new coronavirus related to viruses from bats

Published 21 November 2012

The virus which is causing alarm among global public health authorities after it killed a man in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia earlier this year and is now linked to two other cases of disease, is a novel type of coronavirus most closely related to viruses found in bats, according to a genetic analysis

A schematic of a coronavirus, cause of SARS // Source: alnawafeth.com

The virus which is causing alarm among global public health authorities after it killed a man in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia earlier this year and is now linked to two other cases of disease, is a novel type of coronavirus most closely related to viruses found in bats, according to a genetic analysis published today in mBio, the online journal of the American Society for Microbiology. Researchers studied the genome of the HCoV-EMC/2012 virus in detail to learn about its relatedness to other viruses and about possible sources. The results of the sequencing and analysis could be used to develop diagnostic methods and possibly in creating therapies and vaccines if they are eventually needed for this emerging disease.

 “The virus is most closely related to viruses in bats found in Asia, and there are no human viruses closely related to it,” says Ron Fouchier of the Erasmus Medical Center in the Netherlands, who headed up the study. “Therefore, we speculate that it comes from an animal source.”

An American Society for Microbiology release reports that the case in Saudi Arabia earlier this year, in which a 60-year-old man suffered from acute pneumonia and renal failure before his death, reminded public health authorities around the world of the threat posed by coronaviruses, a group that includes the the SARS virus, a pathogen that emerged in 2002 and eventually lead to the deaths of more than 900 people.

The HCoV-EMC/2012 virus is under increasing scrutiny today as two other patients suffering from infections with similar viruses have been identified. Since the patient in Saudi Arabia died in June, an individual from Qatar has been diagnosed with a very similar condition and is currently being cared for at a hospital in London. The full genomic sequence of the virus from that patient was made available on 13 November, and Fouchier says it is a very close match with the HCoV-EMC/2012 virus sequence he analyzed in the mBio paper, showing only ninety-nine single nucleotide differences (in an unpublished analysis).

“That makes it clear they are the same species. Ninety-nine nucleotides on the full genome amounts to only 0.3 – 0.4 percent difference,” says Fouchier.  “That, of course raises new questions.”

Now a third case of illness from this new virus has been identified, this time in Saudi Arabia again, but the genome sequence of that virus is not yet available.

The genome of the HCoV-EMC/2012 virus that is the focus