
#18,990
Although influenza A has historically been the cause of most major respiratory pandemics, three times between 2002 and 2020 we watched as (3 different) novel coronaviruses emerged from the wild, and threatened a global health crisis.
- First, in 2002, SARS-CoV (see SARS & Remembrance) spread hidden in China for months before it burst on the international scene. Luckily, its inability to spread asymptomatically - and strict quarantines - limited its impact.
- Ten years later (2012) another coronavirus - MERS-CoV - began spilling over from camels on the Arabian Peninsula, and then spreading (primarily in hospitals) from human-to-human (see Ziad Memish: Two MERS-CoV Hospital Super Spreading Studies).
- While deadlier than SARS-CoV, MERS-CoV never quite achieved the same level of transmission, and so outbreaks have remained limited. Still, thousands have been confirmed infected, and roughly 35% have proven fatal.
- And of course in 2020, a novel coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) sparked the worst human pandemic in over 100 years. While estimates vary, many experts put the number of deaths in the tens of millions.
All of which suggests a new, more virulent COVID variant, or a more transmissible MERS-CoV mutation, could still be in our future (see Health Sci Rpts: Pathogenicity and Potential Role of MERS-CoV in the Emergence of “Disease X”).
Preprint: A Divergent Betacoronavirus with a Functional Furin Cleavage Site in South American Bats
J. of Infection: Novel Coronaviruses Identified in Livestock
Viruses: Novel Rodent Coronavirus-like Virus Detected Among Beef Cattle with Respiratory Disease in Mexico
Nature: Study on Sentinel Hosts for Surveillance of Future COVID-19-like Outbreaks
Today we've a short, but somewhat technical commentary on recently identified ACE2-using merbecoviruses - like HKU5-CoV-2 - which may represent potential future coronavirus pandemic threats.
Interestingly, this article suggests that prior COVID-19 infection is unlikely provide meaningful antibody protection against these HKU5-like merbecoviruses, reporting that sera from people who had SARS‑CoV‑2 did not neutralize HKU5 in vitro.
While the serum from patients with a previous SARS-CoV-2 infection contained antibodies that failed to neutralise HKU5-CoV, three of 28 patients with a past MERS-CoV infection harboured antibodies that neutralised HKU5-CoV.7 This finding highlights the vast antigenic differences between merbecoviruses and sarbecoviruses, which likely stem from structural changes in the spike protein.
Due to its technically dense content, I've elected to post the link and a very brief excerpt. Follow the link to read it in its entirety. I'll have a bit more after the break.
Marcus G Maha,c ∙ Neha Dikshita,c ∙ Ramona Alikiiteaga Gutierreza,b ∙ David Chien Lyea,b,c,d,e,f ∙ Lin-Fa Wanga,c,g linfa.wang@duke-nus.edu.sgPublished December 12, 2025DOI: 10.1016/j.lanmic.2025.101308 External LinkCopyright: © 2025 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.User License: Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0)Merbecovirus is a subgenus within the genus Betacoronavirus that is genetically distinct from Sarbecovirus (eg, SARS-CoV-2). Recently, a few merbecoviruses isolated from the bat genus Pipistrellus were characterised and shown to have the ability to bind to angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) as an entry receptor.
These merbecoviruses include HKU5-CoV isolated from Hong Kong,1 HKU5-CoV-2 isolated from China,2 PnNL2018b isolated from the Netherlands,3 and MOW15-22 isolated from Russia.3
This unexpected ability to bind to ACE2 was first observed in the African bat merbecoviruses NeoCoV and PDF-2180.4 Furthermore, these bat merbecoviruses bind only to ACE2, whereas the prototype merbecovirus MERS-CoV binds only to dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP4).
(SNIP)
Coronaviruses will continue to remain a threat to public health. In this view, the scientific community can better prepare the world through the formation of the CORC-CoV, which fosters increased global cooperation, in line with the newly minted pandemic agreement. The comprehensive road map being developed by the CORC-CoV will also serve to engage funders towards supporting global efforts to overcome the identified primary research challenges and address key needs essential for advancements in the field of coronavirus research. Most importantly, the road map will help to drive priority research activities in preparation for the next coronavirus pandemic that could occur at any time.
While we've heard a lot of voices urging stepped up surveillance, reporting, and pandemic preparedness in the wake of the last crisis (see WPRO Table-Top Exercise Crystal: A `Bovine' Novel Flu Outbreak Scenario), it is far less clear whether anyone in power is truly listening.
Special interests, economic concerns, and the desire for short-term political gains all appear to cancel out - or marginalize - those voices.

