A new genetic analysis of animals in the Wuhan market in 2019 may help
find COVID-19's origin
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[September 20, 2024]
By MARIA CHENG
LONDON (AP) — Scientists searching for the origins of COVID-19 have
zeroed in on a short list of animals that possibly helped spread it to
people, an effort they hope could allow them to trace the outbreak back
to its source.
Researchers analyzed genetic material gathered from the Chinese market
where the first outbreak was detected and found that the most likely
animals were racoon dogs, civet cats and bamboo rats. The scientists
suspect infected animals were first brought to the Wuhan market in late
November 2019, which then triggered the pandemic.
Michael Worobey, one of the new study’s authors, said they found which
sub-populations of animals might have transmitted the coronavirus to
humans. That may help researchers pinpoint where the virus commonly
circulates in animals, known as its natural reservoir.
“For example, with the racoon dogs, we can show that the racoon dogs
that were (at the market) … were from a sub-species that circulates more
in southern parts of China,” said Worobey, an evolutionary biologist at
the University of Arizona. Knowing that might help researchers
understand where those animals came from and where they were sold.
Scientists might then start sampling bats in the area, which are known
to be the natural reservoirs of related coronaviruses like SARS.
While the research bolsters the case that COVID-19 emerged from animals,
it does not resolve the polarized and political debate over whether the
virus instead emerged from a research lab in China.
Mark Woolhouse, a professor of infectious diseases at the University of
Edinburgh, said the new genetic analysis suggested that the pandemic
“had its evolutionary roots in the market” and that it was very unlikely
COVID-19 was infecting people before it was identified at the Huanan
market.
“It’s a significant finding and this does shift the dial more in favor
of an animal origin," Woolhouse, who was not connected to the research,
said. “But it is not conclusive.”
An expert group led by the World Health Organization concluded in 2021
that the virus probably spread to humans from animals and that a lab
leak was “extremely unlikely.” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus
later said it was “premature” to rule out a lab leak.
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An elderly patient receives an intravenous drip while using a
ventilator in the hallway of the emergency ward in Beijing,
Thursday, Jan. 5, 2023. (AP Photo/Andy Wong, File)
An AP investigation in April found the search for
the COVID origins in China has gone dark after political infighting
and missed opportunities by local and global health officials to
narrow the possibilities.
Scientists say they may never know for sure where exactly the virus
came from.
In the new study, published Thursday in the journal Cell, scientists
from Europe, the U.S. and Australia analyzed data previously
released by experts at the Chinese Center for Disease Control and
Prevention. It included 800 samples of genetic material Chinese
workers collected on Jan. 1, 2020 from the Huanan seafood market,
the day after Wuhan municipal authorities first raised the alarm
about an unknown respiratory virus.
Chinese scientists published the genetic sequences they found last
year, but did not identify any of the animals possibly infected with
the coronavirus. In the new analysis, researchers used a technique
that can identify specific organisms from any mixture of genetic
material collected in the environment.
Worobey said the information provides “a snapshot of what was (at
the market) before the pandemic began” and that genetic analyses
like theirs “helps to fill in the blanks of how the virus might have
first started spreading.”
Woolhouse said the new study, while significant, left some critical
issues unanswered.
“There is no question COVID was circulating at that market, which
was full of animals,” he said. “The question that still remains is
how it got there in the first place.”
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