Showing posts with label Spillover. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spillover. Show all posts

Friday, September 20, 2013

The Lancet: Transmission And Evolution Of MERS-CoV In Saudi Arabia

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Coronavirus – Credit CDC PHIL

 


# 7795

 

This Lancet study, which was embargoed until early yesterday evening, has already generated a good deal of knowledgeable commentary, so rather than re-inventing the wheel, I’ll provide links and excerpts from the study, the press release, Dr. Ian Mackay’s commentary, and CIDRAP’s coverage.

 

First stop, the Lancet study, which – using genomic analysis - finds evidence of multiple spillovers of MERS from an (as yet, unknown) animal host into the human population in Saudi Arabia.

 

 

Copyright © 2013 Cotten et al. Open Access article distributed under the terms of CC BY-NC-ND Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

The Lancet, Early Online Publication, 20 September 2013

doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(13)61887-5

Transmission and evolution of the Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus in Saudi Arabia: a descriptive genomic study

Matthew Cotten PhD b , Simon J Watson PhD b , Prof Paul Kellam PhD b m , Abdullah A Al-Rabeeah FRCS a, Hatem Q Makhdoom PhD c, Abdullah Assiri MD a, Jaffar A Al-Tawfiq MD d, Rafat F Alhakeem MD a, Hossam Madani PhD c, Fahad A AlRabiah MD g, Sami Al Hajjar MD g, Wafa N Al-nassir MD h, Ali Albarrak MD i, Hesham Flemban MD j, Hanan H Balkhy MD k, Sarah Alsubaie MD l, Anne L Palser PhD b, Astrid Gall Dr Med Vet b, Rachael Bashford-Rogers MChem b, Prof Andrew Rambaut Prof e f, Prof Alimuddin I Zumla FRCP a m n , Prof Ziad A Memish FRCP

Summary

Background

Since June, 2012, Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) has, worldwide, caused 104 infections in people including 49 deaths, with 82 cases and 41 deaths reported from Saudi Arabia. In addition to confirming diagnosis, we generated the MERS-CoV genomic sequences obtained directly from patient samples to provide important information on MERS-CoV transmission, evolution, and origin.

Methods

Full genome deep sequencing was done on nucleic acid extracted directly from PCR-confirmed clinical samples. Viral genomes were obtained from 21 MERS cases of which 13 had 100%, four 85—95%, and four 30—50% genome coverage. Phylogenetic analysis of the 21 sequences, combined with nine published MERS-CoV genomes, was done.

Findings

Three distinct MERS-CoV genotypes were identified in Riyadh. Phylogeographic analyses suggest the MERS-CoV zoonotic reservoir is geographically disperse. Selection analysis of the MERS-CoV genomes reveals the expected accumulation of genetic diversity including changes in the S protein. The genetic diversity in the Al-Hasa cluster suggests that the hospital outbreak might have had more than one virus introduction.

Interpretation

We present the largest number of MERS-CoV genomes (21) described so far. MERS-CoV full genome sequences provide greater detail in tracking transmission. Multiple introductions of MERS-CoV are identified and suggest lower R0 values. Transmission within Saudi Arabia is consistent with either movement of an animal reservoir, animal products, or movement of infected people. Further definition of the exposures responsible for the sporadic introductions of MERS-CoV into human populations is urgently needed.

 

The press release, from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, provides more background and detail (excerpts follow).

 

 

Genome sequencing identifies multiple chains of MERS Co-V infection in humans

Genome sequencing has identified several infection transmission chains of the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV) in humans. The study published in the Lancet, which produced the largest number of MERS-CoV genomes described to date, provides evidence that MERS-CoV transmission patterns are more complicated than previously considered.

<SNIP>

The findings suggest that human-to-human transmission is more complicated than expected, and indicates that additional sources of the virus, either human or animal, are involved. One possibility is that there may be undetected (and possibly asymptomatic) people who could be carrying and spreading the virus.

 

"The genome differences we discovered in some infected people were too great to be explained by replication errors occurring in the virus as it is passed from human to human during a single chain of infection," explained Professor Paul Kellam, senior author from the Sanger Institute. "Instead our findings suggest that different lineages of the virus have originated from the virus jumping across to humans from an animal source a number of times."

 

As yet no animal with MERS-CoV has been identified in the Middle East or elsewhere and studies based on small sequence fragments suggest that a common ancestor of the virus may have existed in bats many years ago. Field studies of all the likely reservoir species, including camels, bats, goats, sheep, dogs, cats, rodents and others in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and other middle-eastern countries are on-going.

(Continue . . .)

 

 

Next stop, Ian Mackay’s Virology Down Under Blog, where we get a virologist’s take on these findings, and a concise bullet list of the highlights (I’ve only included the first 3 of 8).

 

Molecular epidemiology of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV)

And a newcomer to the MERS-CoV birthday celebrations! What great timing to have this released today.
The
Lancet paper accompanying those recent partial and full genome sequences has been released form its cage. It's a collaborative effort by authors affiliated with the Global Centre for Mass Gatherings Medicine (Ministry of Health Saudi Arabia), Welcome Trust Sanger Institute (United Kingdom) and many other locations.


A few highlights of the largest MERS-CoV molecular epidemiology study to date, which includes some great transmission figures and trees (hat tip to the graphics people at Lancet):

  • Genetic diversity analyses 3 distinct genotypes were identified from human cases in Riyadh
  • The Al-Ahsa hospital cluster may have had more than 1 viral introduction
  • Other clusters and stand alone cases can be represented as distinct genotypes of MERS-CoV, possibly indicating multiple different virus acquisitions from different sources

(Continue . . . .)

 

 

And last, but certainly not least, Robert Roos and Lisa Schnirring produced a report for CIDRAP news last night, that provides an excellent overview for us.

 

Study suggests multiple MERS-CoV introductions

Robert Roos | News Editor | CIDRAP News

Sep 19, 2013

One of the big mysteries about the Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) is whether it jumped from animals to humans just once or has made that jump a number of times. A study released today indicates that the second scenario seems more likely, given the genetic diversity in virus samples from 21 Saudi Arabian patients.

Researchers from Saudi Arabia, the United Kingdom, and the United States sequenced the genomes of the 21 isolates and found too much diversity to support the idea that the virus crossed from animals to humans just once and then traveled from person to person to spark all the other cases, according to their report in The Lancet and related press releases.

The findings also suggest that human-to-human transmission is more complicated than expected and raise the possibility that people with undetected infections are spreading the virus, the authors say.

(Continue . . .)

Tuesday, January 08, 2013

EID Book Review - Spillover: Animal Infections and the Next Human Pandemic

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Link to book on Amazon (excerpts available online)

 


# 6834

 

In 2012, award winning author and Rhodes Scholar David Quammen published his 10th book on science, titled  Spillover: Animal Infections and the Next Human Pandemic. Quammen, whose first book was published in 1970, also has five books of fiction, along with many magazine articles in his resume.

 

Today, the CDC’s EID Journal has a short, but very complementary review of his book, Spillover.  I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention that reviews on Amazon have been superlative as well, and Spillover has made more than one Top 10 books of 2012 lists. 

 

First the EID review, then I’ll return with more.

Books and Media

Spillover: Animal Infection and the Next Human Pandemic

Article Contents

David Quammen
W.W. Norton & Company, Ltd., New York, New York, USA, 2012
ISBN: 978-0-393-06680-7
Pages: 487; Price: US $28.95

Spillover is a single event during which a pathogen from 1 species moves into another species; such movement can result in an outbreak. In 9 chapters, David Quammen chronicles various spillover events by using personal anecdotes and multiple stories to recount these events for the expert and novice alike. He frames the events within an ecologic sense of the pathogen, the host, and the increasing human population. He focuses recurrently on the NBO (next big one) and how, if HIV or Ebola virus were more easily transmissible, no one would remain to read his book.

 

Quammen’s analogies are superb. Instead of trying to turn the reader into a scientist with dry explanations, he uses analogies that have universal relevance. For viral morphology, Ebola and Hendra virions together would resemble a “capellini in a light sauce of capers.” Mathematical modeling can be appreciated in translation, just as Dostoevsky can be appreciated in translation instead of in the original Russian. Quammen compares combining specific antibodies with their virus to splashing holy water on a witch. Regarding airborne transmission, he says that pathogens can “waft into a nearby village as easily as the pleasant, autumnal smell of smoke from a pile of leaves.” Throughout the book, the subjects of human and animal diseases are “. . . strands of one braided cord.”

 

The last chapter, “It Depends,” is particularly sobering. If, in an ecologic sense, an outbreak is a rapid and explosive increase in the abundance of a particular species, then maybe humans are the current outbreak in the world. We have become a dense forest; tinder is dry; and the NBO is around the corner.

 

Who should read this book? Anyone interested in science can enjoy it—those who make their living at the bench, teach, or study—and anyone just looking for a good read.

Corrie BrownComments to Author

Author affiliation: Author affiliation: University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA

 

 

Spillover also received a glowing endorsement from Ed Yong when he was at Discover Magazine (see Spillover, by David Quammen – a recommended read), and I can wholeheartedly recommend it myself.

 

For more on David’s book, and the threats posed by zoonotic disease spillovers, we turn to a Minnesota NPR radio interview recorded last September. It runs 30 minutes, and is well worth the time.

 

 

David Quammen on 'Spillover,' the next worldwide pandemic

11:20 AM, September 24, 2012