Lewis Goodall 10am - 12pm
Coronavirus likely caused by 'stray dogs eating bat meat', study says
15 April 2020, 08:50
A new study has found that the coronavirus pandemic may have been caused by stray dogs eating bat meat.
Professor Xuhua Xia, from the University of Ottawa's biology department has said that stray dogs are likely to be the intermediate hosts of Covid-19 between bats and humans.
His study states that the new human form of coronavirus and its closest relative, the disease found in bats, most probably infected the intestines of dogs and then evolved to infect humans.
Follow our coronavirus liveblog here
Professor Xia made the conclusions after studying coronavirus signatures across different species.
Humans and mammals can fight viruses through a key antiviral protein called Zap which prevents the infection from multiplying, while regions of DNA called CpG dinucleotides direct the immune system to attack the virus.
But single-strand coronaviruses can avoid the body's natural defences by reducing CpG, in a similar fashion to HIV.
In his study, Prof Xia analysed all betacoronavirus genomes deposited into the open access GenBank database.
Only genomes from canine coronaviruses, which have already caused a highly contagious intestinal disease worldwide in dogs, have similar genomic values, according to the study.
He said that Sars-CoV-2 and its closest known relative, a bat coronavirus (BatCoV RaTG13), which shares 96% sequence similarity, have the lowest amount of CpG among its close coronavirus relatives.
Dogs also have coronaviruses which affect their respiratory systems as well as their digestive systems, but the digestive kind has much lower CpG values, the paper notes.
The cellular receptor for Sars-CoV-2 entry into the cell is called ACE2, which is "pervasively expressed in the human digestive system ... with relatively low expression in the lung", the study says.
70-year-old Coronavirus survivor says people who don’t follow the government‘s advice are ‘daft’
It adds: "This is consistent with the interpretation that the low CpG in Sars-CoV-2 was acquired by the ancestor of Sars-CoV-2 evolving in mammalian digestive systems.
"The interpretation is further corroborated by a recent report that a high proportion of Covid-19 patients also suffer from digestive discomfort.
"In fact, 48.5% presented with digestive symptoms as their chief complaint.
"In particular, live Sars-CoV-2 virus was isolated from the stool of a Covid-19 patient. In this context, it is significant that BatCoV RaTG13 ... was isolated from a fecal swab.
"These observations are consistent with the hypothesis that Sars-CoV-2 has evolved in mammalian intestine or tissues associated with the intestine."
Coronavirus: What is the government's strategy to lift lockdown?
Listen & subscribe: Global Player | Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Spotify
However, the paper was criticised by professor James Wood, head of the department of Veterinary Medicine and researcher in infection dynamics at the University of Cambridge.
He said: "I find it difficult to understand how the author has been able to conclude anything from this study, or to hypothesise much, let alone that the virus causing Covid-19 may have evolved through dogs.
"There is far too much inference and far too little direct data. I do not see anything in this paper to support this supposition and am concerned that this paper has been published in this journal.
"I do not believe that any dog owners should be concerned as a result of this work."
Prof Xia said: "Our observations have allowed the formation of a new hypothesis for the origin and initial transmission of Sars-CoV-2.
"The ancestor of Sars-CoV-2 and its nearest relative, a bat coronavirus, infected the intestine of canids, most likely resulting in a rapid evolution of the virus in canids and its jump into humans.
"This suggests the importance of monitoring Sars-like coronaviruses in feral dogs in the fight against Sars-CoV-2."
Nearly two million people have contracted Sars-CoV-2 since it first appeared at a seafood market in Wuhan, China, in late 2019, according to a global tracker by Johns Hopkins University.
More than 120,000 people have died after developing Covid-19, the disease caused by the virus.