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About:
Coronaviruses in bats from Mexico
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An Entity of Type :
schema:ScholarlyArticle
, within Data Space :
covidontheweb.inria.fr
associated with source
document(s)
Type:
Academic Article
research paper
schema:ScholarlyArticle
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type
Academic Article
research paper
schema:ScholarlyArticle
isDefinedBy
Covid-on-the-Web dataset
has title
Coronaviruses in bats from Mexico
Creator
Aguirre, A
Anthony, S
Daszak, P
Goldstein, T
Liang, E
Lipkin, W
Navarrete-Macias, I
Epstein, J
Zambrana-Torrelio, C
Medellín, R
Ojeda-Flores, R
Rico-Chá, O
Rostal, M
Sanchez-Leon, M
Sotomayor-Bonilla, J
Suzá, G
Tipps, T
Vila-Flores, R
Source
Medline; PMC
abstract
Bats are reservoirs for a wide range of human pathogens including Nipah, Hendra, rabies, Ebola, Marburg and severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (CoV). The recent implication of a novel beta (β)-CoV as the cause of fatal respiratory disease in the Middle East emphasizes the importance of surveillance for CoVs that have potential to move from bats into the human population. In a screen of 606 bats from 42 different species in Campeche, Chiapas and Mexico City we identified 13 distinct CoVs. Nine were alpha (α)-CoVs; four were β-CoVs. Twelve were novel. Analyses of these viruses in the context of their hosts and ecological habitat indicated that host species is a strong selective driver in CoV evolution, even in allopatric populations separated by significant geographical distance; and that a single species/genus of bat can contain multiple CoVs. A β-CoV with 96.5 % amino acid identity to the β-CoV associated with human disease in the Middle East was found in a Nyctinomops laticaudatus bat, suggesting that efforts to identify the viral reservoir should include surveillance of the bat families Molossidae/Vespertilionidae, or the closely related Nycteridae/Emballonuridae. While it is important to investigate unknown viral diversity in bats, it is also important to remember that the majority of viruses they carry will not pose any clinical risk, and bats should not be stigmatized ubiquitously as significant threats to public health.
has issue date
2013-05-01
(
xsd:dateTime
)
bibo:doi
10.1099/vir.0.049759-0
bibo:pmid
23364191
has license
bronze-oa
sha1sum (hex)
5d124f2e6431d19f4e01c4974bffb7c9df595559
schema:url
https://doi.org/10.1099/vir.0.049759-0
resource representing a document's title
Coronaviruses in bats from Mexico
has PubMed Central identifier
PMC3709589
has PubMed identifier
23364191
schema:publication
Journal of General Virology
resource representing a document's body
covid:5d124f2e6431d19f4e01c4974bffb7c9df595559#body_text
is
schema:about
of
named entity 'MAJORITY'
named entity 'GEOGRAPHICAL'
named entity 'SINGLE'
named entity 'severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus'
named entity 'Mexico City'
named entity 'bat'
named entity 'Nyctinomops laticaudatus'
named entity 'Vespertilionidae'
named entity 'genus'
named entity 'allopatric'
named entity 'respiratory disease'
named entity 'human pathogens'
named entity 'Emballonuridae'
named entity 'Ebola'
named entity 'Molossidae'
named entity 'amino acid'
named entity 'evolution'
named entity 'Carollia'
named entity 'molossid'
named entity 'Jackwood'
named entity 'Myotis'
named entity 'genomes'
named entity 'bioMérieux'
named entity 'phylogenetic analysis'
named entity 'severe acute respiratory syndrome'
named entity 'sequenced'
named entity 'Mexico'
named entity 'Mexico'
named entity 'Nearctic'
named entity 'genus'
named entity 'species richness'
named entity 'Carollia sowelli'
named entity 'Rhinolophus'
named entity 'North American'
named entity 'asymptomatic'
named entity 'bat'
named entity 'genus'
named entity 'neotropics'
named entity 'Gammacoronavirus'
named entity 'diversity index'
named entity 'species richness'
named entity 'genus'
named entity 'purifying selection'
named entity 'Middle East'
named entity 'bat'
named entity 'Philippines'
named entity 'polyadenylated'
named entity 'Asia'
named entity 'Asia'
named entity 'speciation'
named entity 'Myotis ricketti'
named entity 'clades'
named entity 'Rhinolophus'
named entity 'amino acid'
named entity 'Mexico City'
named entity 'mammals'
named entity 'Chiapas'
named entity 'Rhinolophus sinicus'
named entity 'respiratory illness'
named entity 'Myotis lucifugus'
named entity 'SARS'
named entity 'Colorado'
named entity 'CLUSTAL'
named entity 'Molossidae'
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