Discovery of a novel coronavirus associated with the recent pneumonia outbreak in humans and its potential bat origin

Peng Zhou(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xing‐Lou Yang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xian-Guang Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xian-Guang Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ben Hu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Lei Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Wei Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Hao-Rui Si(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yan Zhu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Bei Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Chaolin Huang(Jinyintan Hospital), Hui-Dong Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jing Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yun Luo(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Hua Guo(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ren-Di Jiang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Meiqin Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ying Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xu-Rui Shen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xi Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xi Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xiao-Shuang Zheng(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Kai Zhao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Quanjiao Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Fēi Dèng(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Linlin Liu(Hubei Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention), Bing Yan(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Faxian Zhan(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yan‐Yi Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Gengfu Xiao(Wuhan Institute of Virology), Zheng‐Li Shi(Wuhan Institute of Virology)
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
January 23, 2020
Cited by 732Open Access
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Abstract

Since the SARS outbreak 18 years ago, a large number of severe acute respiratory syndrome related coronaviruses (SARSr-CoV) have been discovered in their natural reservoir host, bats. Previous studies indicated that some of those bat SARSr-CoVs have the potential to infect humans. Here we report the identification and characterization of a novel coronavirus (nCoV-2019) which caused an epidemic of acute respiratory syndrome in humans, in Wuhan, China. The epidemic, started from December 12th, 2019, has caused 198 laboratory confirmed infections with three fatal cases by January 20th, 2020. Full-length genome sequences were obtained from five patients at the early stage of the outbreak. They are almost identical to each other and share 79.5% sequence identify to SARS-CoV. Furthermore, it was found that nCoV-2019 is 96% identical at the whole genome level to a bat coronavirus. The pairwise protein sequence analysis of seven conserved non-structural proteins show that this virus belongs to the species of SARSr-CoV. The nCoV-2019 virus was then isolated from the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid of a critically ill patient, which can be neutralized by sera from several patients. Importantly, we have confirmed that this novel CoV uses the same cell entry receptor, ACE2, as SARS-CoV.


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