Crameri Gary, Durr Peter A, Barr Jennifer, Yu Meng, Graham Kerryne, Williams Owen J, Kayali Ghazi, Smith David, Peiris Malik, Mackenzie John S, Wang Lin-Fa
CSIRO Australian Animal Health Laboratory, Geelong, Australia.
Earlville Veterinary Surgery, Cairns, Australia.
One Health. 2015 Nov 2;1:76-82. doi: 10.1016/j.onehlt.2015.10.003. eCollection 2015 Dec.
Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) infections continue to be a serious emerging disease problem internationally with well over 1000 cases and a major outbreak outside of the Middle East region. While the hypothesis that dromedary camels are the likely major source of MERS-CoV infection in humans is gaining acceptance, conjecture continues over the original natural reservoir host(s) and specifically the role of bats in the emergence of the virus. Dromedary camels were imported to Australia, principally between 1880 and 1907 and have since become a large feral population inhabiting extensive parts of the continent. Here we report that during a focussed surveillance study, no serological evidence was found for the presence of MERS-CoV in the camels in the Australian population. This finding presents various hypotheses about the timing of the emergence and spread of MERS-CoV throughout populations of camels in Africa and Asia, which can be partially resolved by testing sera from camels from the original source region, which we have inferred was mainly northwestern Pakistan. In addition, we identify bat species which overlap (or neighbour) the range of the Australian camel population with a higher likelihood of carrying CoVs of the same lineage as MERS-CoV. Both of these proposed follow-on studies are examples of "proactive surveillance", a concept that has particular relevance to a One Health approach to emerging zoonotic diseases with a complex epidemiology and aetiology.
中东呼吸综合征冠状病毒(MERS-CoV)感染在国际上仍然是一个严重的新出现的疾病问题,病例超过1000例,并且在中东地区以外还出现了一次大爆发。虽然单峰骆驼可能是人类MERS-CoV感染主要来源这一假说正逐渐被接受,但关于该病毒最初的自然宿主,特别是蝙蝠在病毒出现过程中所起的作用,仍存在猜测。单峰骆驼于1880年至1907年间被引入澳大利亚,此后成为一个庞大的野生种群,分布在澳大利亚大陆的大片地区。在此我们报告,在一项重点监测研究中,未在澳大利亚单峰骆驼种群中发现存在MERS-CoV的血清学证据。这一发现提出了关于MERS-CoV在非洲和亚洲骆驼种群中出现和传播时间的各种假说,通过检测来自最初来源地区(我们推断主要是巴基斯坦西北部)骆驼的血清可以部分解决这些假说。此外,我们确定了与澳大利亚骆驼种群分布范围重叠(或相邻)、携带与MERS-CoV同谱系冠状病毒可能性更高的蝙蝠种类。这两项提议的后续研究都是“主动监测”的实例,“主动监测”这一概念与针对具有复杂流行病学和病因学的新出现人畜共患病的“同一健康”方法特别相关。