Literature detail

Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus quasispecies that include homologues of human isolates revealed through whole-genome analysis and virus cultured from dromedary camels in Saudi Arabia.

Thomas Briese Nischay Mishra Komal Jain Iyad S Zalmout Omar J Jabado William B Karesh Peter Daszak Osama B Mohammed Abdulaziz N Alagaili W Ian Lipkin
PMID 24781747 2014 mBio eng epublish
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Article

Publication summary

ABSTRACT Complete Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) genome sequences were obtained from nasal swabs of dromedary camels sampled in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia through direct analysis of nucleic acid extracts or following virus isolation in cell culture. Consensus dromedary MERS-CoV genome sequences were the same with either template source and identical to published human MERS-CoV sequences. However, in contrast to individual human cases, where only clonal genomic sequences are reported, detailed population analyses revealed the presence of more than one genomic variant in individual dromedaries. If humans are truly infected only with clonal virus populations, we must entertain a model for interspecies transmission of MERS-CoV wherein only specific genotypes are capable of passing bottleneck selection. IMPORTANCE In most cases of Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS), the route for human infection with the causative agent, MERS coronavirus (MERS-CoV), is unknown. Antibodies to and viral nucleic acids of MERS-CoV have been found in dromedaries, suggesting the possibility that they may serve as a reservoir or vector for human infection. However, neither whole viral genomic sequence nor infectious virus has been isolated from dromedaries or other animals in Saudi Arabia. Here, we report recovery of MERS-CoV from nasal swabs of dromedaries, demonstrate that MERS-CoV whole-genome consensus sequences from dromedaries and humans are indistinguishable, and show that dromedaries can be simultaneously infected with more than one MERS-CoV. Together with data indicating widespread dromedary infection in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, these findings support the plausibility of a role for dromedaries in human infection.

Genome, Viral Animals Camelus Computational Biology Coronavirus Infections High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing Humans Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus Molecular Sequence Data Phylogeny RNA, Viral Saudi Arabia

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

3 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.88
Key finding

Whole-genome and population-level analyses showed that MERS-CoV from dromedary camels in Saudi Arabia are genomically identical to human MERS-CoV and exist as quasispecies within camels, supporting genotype-level evolution and host transmission bottleneck.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Complete Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) genome sequences were obtained from nasal swabs of dromedary camels sampled in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Consensus dromedary MERS-CoV genome sequences were identical to published human MERS-CoV sequences, and detailed population analyses revealed the presence of more than one genomic variant in individual dromedaries.

Genes or proteins
whole genome
Analysis methods
whole-genome sequencing; population analysis; comparative genome analysis
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

MERS-CoV isolated from dromedary camels showed genome sequences identical to human MERS-CoV, indicating camel-to-human spillover of MERS-CoV in Saudi Arabia.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

We report recovery of MERS-CoV from nasal swabs of dromedaries, demonstrate that MERS-CoV whole-genome consensus sequences from dromedaries and humans are indistinguishable, and show that dromedaries can be simultaneously infected with more than one MERS-CoV. Together with data indicating widespread dromedary infection in Saudi Arabia, these findings support the plausibility of a role for dromedaries in human infection.

Method
whole-genome sequencing; virus isolation
Study design
genomic surveillance
Transmission direction
animal-to-human
Geographic raw
Saudi Arabia
Country inferred
Saudi Arabia
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

MERS-CoV was detected and sequenced from nasal swabs of dromedary camels in Saudi Arabia, providing genomic evidence of viral infection in animal hosts related to human cases.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

Complete Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) genome sequences were obtained from nasal swabs of dromedary camels sampled in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia through direct analysis of nucleic acid extracts or following virus isolation in cell culture.

Method
whole-genome sequencing; virus isolation; nucleic acid analysis
Sample type
nasal swabs
Geographic raw
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
Country inferred
Saudi Arabia