Anthony Simon J, Johnson Christine K, Greig Denise J, Kramer Sarah, Che Xiaoyu, Wells Heather, Hicks Allison L, Joly Damien O, Wolfe Nathan D, Daszak Peter, Karesh William, Lipkin W I, Morse Stephen S, Mazet Jonna A K, Goldstein Tracey
Center for Infection and Immunity, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, 722 West 168 Street, New York, NY 10032, USA.
Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, 722 West 168 Street, New York, NY 10032, USA.
Virus Evol. 2017 Jun 12;3(1):vex012. doi: 10.1093/ve/vex012. eCollection 2017 Jan.
Since the emergence of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (SARS-CoV) and Middle East Respiratory Syndrom Coronavirus (MERS-CoV) it has become increasingly clear that bats are important reservoirs of CoVs. Despite this, only 6% of all CoV sequences in GenBank are from bats. The remaining 94% largely consist of known pathogens of public health or agricultural significance, indicating that current research effort is heavily biased towards describing known diseases rather than the 'pre-emergent' diversity in bats. Our study addresses this critical gap, and focuses on resource poor countries where the risk of zoonotic emergence is believed to be highest. We surveyed the diversity of CoVs in multiple host taxa from twenty countries to explore the factors driving viral diversity at a global scale. We identified sequences representing 100 discrete phylogenetic clusters, ninety-one of which were found in bats, and used ecological and epidemiologic analyses to show that patterns of CoV diversity correlate with those of bat diversity. This cements bats as the major evolutionary reservoirs and ecological drivers of CoV diversity. Co-phylogenetic reconciliation analysis was also used to show that host switching has contributed to CoV evolution, and a preliminary analysis suggests that regional variation exists in the dynamics of this process. Overall our study represents a model for exploring global viral diversity and advances our fundamental understanding of CoV biodiversity and the potential risk factors associated with zoonotic emergence.
自严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒(SARS-CoV)和中东呼吸综合征冠状病毒(MERS-CoV)出现以来,越来越明显的是蝙蝠是冠状病毒的重要宿主。尽管如此,GenBank中所有冠状病毒序列中只有6%来自蝙蝠。其余94%主要由具有公共卫生或农业意义的已知病原体组成,这表明目前的研究工作严重偏向于描述已知疾病,而不是蝙蝠中“即将出现”的多样性。我们的研究填补了这一关键空白,并聚焦于据信人畜共患病出现风险最高的资源匮乏国家。我们调查了来自20个国家的多个宿主类群中的冠状病毒多样性,以探索在全球范围内驱动病毒多样性的因素。我们鉴定出代表100个离散系统发育簇的序列,其中91个在蝙蝠中发现,并通过生态和流行病学分析表明冠状病毒多样性模式与蝙蝠多样性模式相关。这巩固了蝙蝠作为冠状病毒多样性的主要进化宿主和生态驱动因素的地位。共系统发育和解分析还用于表明宿主转换促进了冠状病毒的进化,初步分析表明这一过程的动态存在区域差异。总体而言,我们的研究代表了探索全球病毒多样性的一个模型,并推进了我们对冠状病毒生物多样性以及与人畜共患病出现相关的潜在风险因素的基本理解。