Evoking similarities to HIV, the authors call on the global health community to be vigilant.
A previously unknown family of viruses already circulating in wild African primates and known to cause fatal Ebola-like symptoms in some monkeys has ‘spilled’ to humans, according to a new study. ready to do”. This study by the University of Colorado Boulder was published online in the journal. cell September 30.
“This animal virus has found a way to enter human cells, replicate itself, and evade some of the key immune mechanisms that are expected to protect us from animal viruses. — Sarah Sawyer
Although such ateriviruses are already considered to be a significant threat to macaque monkeys, no human infections have been reported so far. What’s more, it’s unclear how it would affect people if the virus jumped across species.
However, while evoking similarities to HIV (its precursor originated in African monkeys), the authors also call for caution: By currently monitoring arteriviruses in both animals and humans, the world’s health communities could potentially avert another pandemic, they said. .
“This animal virus has found a way to enter human cells, replicate itself, and evade some of the key immune mechanisms that are expected to protect us from animal viruses. said senior author Sara Sawyer. She is Professor of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology at her CU Boulder. “We should pay attention to that.”
Thousands of endemic viruses circulate among animals worldwide, and most of them do not cause symptoms in their hosts. It wreaks havoc on naive immune systems that have no experience fighting it off. These include Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) in 2012, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (SARS-CoV) in 2003,[{” attribute=””>SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that causes COVID-19) in 2020.
For 15 years, Sawyer’s lab has used laboratory techniques and tissue samples from wildlife from around the globe to investigate which animal viruses may be prone to jump to humans.
For the latest study, she and first author Cody Warren, then a postdoctoral fellow at the BioFrontiers Institute at CU, zeroed in on arteriviruses. These are common among pigs and horses but understudied among nonhuman primates. Specifically, they looked at simian hemorrhagic fever virus (SHFV), which causes a lethal disease similar to the Ebola virus disease. Dating back to the 1960s, it has been causing deadly outbreaks in captive macaque colonies.
According to the research, a molecule, or receptor, called CD163, is crucial to the biology of simian arteriviruses, enabling the virus to invade and cause infection of target cells. Through a series of laboratory experiments, the scientists discovered, much to their surprise, that the virus was also remarkably skilled at latching on to the human version of CD163, getting inside human cells, and quickly making copies of itself.
Like human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and its precursor simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV), simian arteriviruses also appear to attack immune cells. This means they can disable key defense mechanisms and take hold in the body long-term.
“Just because we haven’t diagnosed a human arterivirus infection yet doesn’t mean that no human has been exposed. We haven’t been looking.” — Cody Warren
“The similarities are profound between this virus and the simian viruses that gave rise to the HIV pandemic,” said Warren. He is now an assistant professor in the College of Veterinary Medicine at The Ohio State University.
The authors stress that another pandemic is not imminent, and the public should not be alarmed.
However, they do suggest that the global health community prioritize the further study of simian arteriviruses and develop blood antibody tests for them. They should also consider surveillance of human populations with close contact with animal carriers.
An expansive variety of African monkeys already carry high viral loads of diverse arteriviruses, often without symptoms. Additionally, some species frequently interact with humans and are known to bite and scratch people.
“Just because we haven’t diagnosed a human arterivirus infection yet doesn’t mean that no human has been exposed. We haven’t been looking,” said Warren.
Warren and Sawyer note that in the 1970s, no one had heard of HIV either.
Scientists now know that HIV likely originated from SIVs infecting nonhuman primates in Africa, likely jumping to humans sometime in the early 1900s.
When it began killing young men in the United States in the 1980s, no serology test existed, and no treatments were in the works.
Sawyer said there is no guarantee that these simian arteriviruses will jump to humans. But one thing is for sure: More viruses will jump to humans, and they will cause disease.
“COVID is just the latest in a long string of spillover events from animals to humans, some of which have erupted into global catastrophes,” Sawyer said. “Our hope is that by raising awareness of the viruses that we should be looking out for, we can get ahead of this so that if human infections begin to occur, we’re on it quickly.”
Reference: “Primate hemorrhagic fever-causing arteriviruses are poised for spillover to humans” by Cody J. Warren, Shuiqing Yu, Douglas K. Peters, Arturo Barbachano-Guerrero, Qing Yang, Bridget L. Burris, Gabriella Worwa, I-Chueh Huang, Gregory K. Wilkerson, Tony L. Goldberg, Jens H. Kuhn and Sara L. Sawyer, 30 September 2022, Cell.
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2022.09.022