Saturday, February 22, 2025 - A Chinese team has found a new bat coronavirus that carries the risk of animal-to-human transmission because it uses the same human receptor as the virus that causes COVID-19.
The study was led by Shi Zhengli – a leading virologist known as the
“batwoman” due to her extensive research on bat coronaviruses – at the
Guangzhou Laboratory along with researchers from the Guangzhou Academy of
Sciences, Wuhan University and the Wuhan Institute of Virology.
Shi is best known for her work at the Wuhan Institute, which has been at
the centre of the controversy about the origins of Covid, with one major theory
suggesting it came from a lab leak in the city.
While there is still no confirmed statement on the origin of the virus,
some studies suggest it originated in bats and jumped to humans through an
intermediate animal host. Shi has denied that the institute was to blame for
the outbreak.
The latest discovery is a new lineage of the HKU5 coronavirus first
identified in the Japanese pipistrelle bat in Hong Kong.
The new virus comes from the merbecovirus subgenus, which also includes
the virus that causes Middle East respiratory syndrome (Mers).
The virus can bind to the human angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE2),
the same receptor used by the Sars-CoV-2 virus, which causes Covid-19, to
infect cells.
“We report the discovery and isolation of a distinct lineage (lineage 2)
of HKU5-CoV, which can utilise not only bat ACE2 but also human ACE2 and
various mammalian ACE2 orthologs [– genes found in different species with a
common origin],” they wrote in a paper published in the peer-reviewed journal
Cell.
The researchers found that when the virus was isolated from bat samples
it could infect human cells as well as artificially grown masses of cell or
tissue that resembled miniaturised respiratory or intestinal organs.
“Bat merbecoviruses … pose a high risk of spillover to humans, either
through direct transmission or facilitated by intermediate hosts,” the
researchers added.
HKU5-CoV-2 not only binds to ACE2 receptors in humans but in multiple
other species, all of which could act as intermediate hosts and pass it on to
humans.
Merbecovirus includes four distinct species – the Mers coronavirus, two
found in bats and one in hedgehogs – and was added to the World Health
Organization’s list of emerging pathogens for pandemic preparedness last year.
Earlier this month Cell published a paper by a team from the University
of Washington in Seattle and Wuhan University that concluded that although the
HKU5 strain could bind to bat and other mammalian ACE2 receptors, they did not
detect “efficient” human binding.
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