Studies offer further evidence that the coronavirus pandemic began in animals in Wuhan market
Two preprint studies posted Saturday offer further evidence that the coronavirus originated in animals and spread to humans in late 2019 at the Huanan Seafood Market in Wuhan, China.
One of the studies
-- neither of which has been peer-reviewed or published in a
professional journal -- used spatial analysis to show that the earliest
known Covid-19 cases, diagnosed in December 2019, were centered on the
market. The researchers also report that environmental samples that
tested positive for the virus, SARS-CoV-2, were strongly associated with
live-animal vendors.
The other study
says the two major viral lineages were the result of at least two
events in which the virus crossed species into humans. The first
transmission most likely happened in late November or early December
2019, the researchers say, and the other lineage was probably introduced
within weeks of the first event.
Experts
have roundly condemned the theory of a laboratory origin for the virus,
saying that there's no proof of such origins or of a leak. Many of the
researchers behind the new studies were also participants in a review published last summer that said the pandemic almost certainly originated with an animal, probably at a wildlife market.
The
new studies take this area of research "to a new level" and are the
strongest evidence yet that the pandemic had animal-related (or
zoonotic) origins, Michael Worobey, a professor and head of ecology and
evolutionary biology at the University of Arizona, told CNN. Worobey was
lead author on the geographical study and co-author on the other paper.
He
called the findings "game, set and match" for the theory that the
pandemic originated in a lab. "It's no longer something that makes sense
to imagine that this started any other way."
Worobey
likened the pattern of the coronavirus' initial spread to a firework,
with the market at its center. The explosion started in late 2019, but
the pattern had changed completely by January or February 2020, the
hallmark of a virus "seeping into the local community."
The
study notes that "December 2019 Covid-19 cases were geographically
distributed unexpectedly near to, and centered on, the Huanan market,
irrespective of whether or not they worked at, had visited or were
knowingly linked to someone who had visited this market in late 2019.
Furthermore, of those cases epidemiologically linked to the market, the
overwhelming majority were specifically linked to the western section of
the Huanan market, where most of the live-mammal vendors were located."
When
researchers tested surfaces at the market for the virus' genetic
material, there was one stall with the most positives, including in a
cage where one researcher had previously seen mammals called raccoon
dogs being kept.
The
findings are "as close to having the virus in an animal as you can
get," Robert Garry, a professor of microbiology and immunology at Tulane
Medical School, told CNN.
Garry
was co-author on the study that found at least two zoonotic or
animal-transmission events. It notes that the pandemic began with two
major viral lineages, called A and B, although it says there were
probably even more forms of the virus "that failed to establish in
humans." Lineage B is the more common of the two and the only one that
had previously been found at the market, but the study says lineage A
was also circulating around the area early in the outbreak.
The
virus most likely started with at least two animal transmissions, with a
raccoon dog or another mammal serving as the intermediate host before
it spread to humans, the study says.
When
considered along with reports of SARS-CoV-2 infection in animals like
big cats, deer and hamsters, this shows that "this is a virus that just
doesn't care what it replicates in," Garry said.
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Garry
and Worobey say the studies show the urgent need to pay attention to
situations in which animals and humans interact closely on a daily
basis. "We need to do a better job of farming and regulating these wild
animals," Garry said, and "invest in infrastructure in places where
viruses spill over."
Worobey
also said human surveillance is crucial to preventing future pandemics,
adding that experts and officials should be better at detecting cases
of respiratory disease with no clear cause, isolating patients and
sequencing viruses. "This is not the last time this happens," he said.
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