A pneumonia outbreak associated with a new coronavirus of probable bat origin

Peng Zhou(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xing‐Lou Yang(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), Chao-Lin Huang(Wuhan City Chinese Medicine Hospital), Huidong Chen(Wuhan City Chinese Medicine Hospital), 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), Mei-Qin Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ying Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xu-Rui Shen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xi Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xiao-Shuang Zheng(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Kai Zhao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Quan-Jiao 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), Fa-Xian Zhan(Hubei Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention), Yanyi Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Gengfu Xiao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zheng‐Li Shi(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Nature
February 3, 2020
Cited by 23,312Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Since the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) 18 years ago, a large number of SARS-related coronaviruses (SARSr-CoVs) have been discovered in their natural reservoir host, bats 1–4 . Previous studies have shown that some bat SARSr-CoVs have the potential to infect humans 5–7 . Here we report the identification and characterization of a new coronavirus (2019-nCoV), which caused an epidemic of acute respiratory syndrome in humans in Wuhan, China. The epidemic, which started on 12 December 2019, had caused 2,794 laboratory-confirmed infections including 80 deaths by 26 January 2020. Full-length genome sequences were obtained from five patients at an early stage of the outbreak. The sequences are almost identical and share 79.6% sequence identity to SARS-CoV. Furthermore, we show that 2019-nCoV is 96% identical at the whole-genome level to a bat coronavirus. Pairwise protein sequence analysis of seven conserved non-structural proteins domains show that this virus belongs to the species of . In addition, 2019-nCoV virus isolated from the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid of a critically ill patient could be neutralized by sera from several patients. Notably, we confirmed that 2019-nCoV uses the same cell entry receptor—angiotensin converting enzyme II (ACE2)—as SARS-CoV.


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