Authors
Simon John Anthony, K Gilardi, VD Menachery, Tracey Goldstein, B Ssebide, R Mbabazi, Isamara Navarrete-Macias, E Liang, H Wells, A Hicks, Alexandra Petrosov, DK Byarugaba, K Debbink, KH Dinnon, T Scobey, SH Randell, BL Yount, M Cranfield, CK Johnson, RS Baric, W Ian Lipkin, Jonna AK Mazet
Publication date
2017/5/3
Journal
MBio
Volume
8
Issue
2
Pages
10.1128/mbio. 00373-17
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Description
The evolutionary origins of Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) coronavirus (MERS-CoV) are unknown. Current evidence suggests that insectivorous bats are likely to be the original source, as several 2c CoVs have been described from various species in the family Vespertilionidae. Here, we describe a MERS-like CoV identified from a Pipistrellus cf. hesperidus bat sampled in Uganda (strain PREDICT/PDF-2180), further supporting the hypothesis that bats are the evolutionary source of MERS-CoV. Phylogenetic analysis showed that PREDICT/PDF-2180 is closely related to MERS-CoV across much of its genome, consistent with a common ancestry; however, the spike protein was highly divergent (46% amino acid identity), suggesting that the two viruses may have different receptor binding properties. Indeed, several amino acid substitutions were identified in key binding residues that were predicted to …
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