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NNadir

(33,512 posts)
Thu May 7, 2020, 09:12 AM May 2020

Profile of a killer: the complex biology powering the coronavirus pandemic.

The following news item from the scientific journal Nature is open sourced and written for general consumption:

Profile of a killer: the complex biology powering the coronavirus pandemic

Scientists are piecing together how SARS-CoV-2 operates, where it came from and what it might do next — but pressing questions remain about the source of COVID-19.

(David Cyranoski, Nature 581, 22-26 (2020))

Some brief excerpts:

n 1912, German veterinarians puzzled over the case of a feverish cat with an enormously swollen belly. That is now thought to be the first reported example of the debilitating power of a coronavirus. Veterinarians didn’t know it at the time, but coronaviruses were also giving chickens bronchitis, and pigs an intestinal disease that killed almost every piglet under two weeks old.

The link between these pathogens remained hidden until the 1960s, when researchers in the United Kingdom and the United States isolated two viruses with crown-like structures causing common colds in humans. Scientists soon noticed that the viruses identified in sick animals had the same bristly structure, studded with spiky protein protrusions. Under electron microscopes, these viruses resembled the solar corona, which led researchers in 1968 to coin the term coronaviruses for the entire group.

It was a family of dynamic killers: dog coronaviruses could harm cats, the cat coronavirus could ravage pig intestines. Researchers thought that coronaviruses caused only mild symptoms in humans, until the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in 2003 revealed how easily these versatile viruses could kill people...

...Bad family.


Of the viruses that attack humans, coronaviruses are big. At 125 nanometres in diameter, they are also relatively large for the viruses that use RNA to replicate, the group that accounts for most newly emerging diseases. But coronaviruses really stand out for their genomes. With 30,000 genetic bases, coronaviruses have the largest genomes of all RNA viruses. Their genomes are more than three times as big as those of HIV and hepatitis C, and more than twice influenza’s.

Coronaviruses are also one of the few RNA viruses with a genomic proofreading mechanism — which keeps the virus from accumulating mutations that could weaken it. That ability might be why common antivirals such as ribavirin, which can thwart viruses such as hepatitis C, have failed to subdue SARS-CoV-2...


When two bad families, the Trump family and the Corona Virus family interact, there's hell to pay.

It's worth a read; it's short and not overly technical.

7 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Profile of a killer: the complex biology powering the coronavirus pandemic. (Original Post) NNadir May 2020 OP
yes. easy to comprehend. thanks riversedge May 2020 #1
Good article. FM123 May 2020 #2
Extremely helpful. Answers a lot of questions. Mike 03 May 2020 #3
I'm not familiar with any literature on it being blood borne but it certainly seems possible... NNadir May 2020 #7
Thx Shanti Mama May 2020 #4
Every Disaster Movie ... Las Vegas Mixx May 2020 #5
K & R! Bookmarked. lastlib May 2020 #6

FM123

(10,053 posts)
2. Good article.
Thu May 7, 2020, 09:32 AM
May 2020

Interesting: But coronaviruses have a special trick that gives them a deadly dynamism: they frequently recombine, swapping chunks of their RNA with other coronaviruses.

Mike 03

(16,616 posts)
3. Extremely helpful. Answers a lot of questions.
Thu May 7, 2020, 09:38 AM
May 2020

This paragraph:

Damage to the kidney, liver and spleen observed in people with COVID-19 suggests that the virus can be carried in the blood and infect various organs or tissues, says Guan Wei-jie, a pulmonologist at the Guangzhou Institute of Respiratory Health at Guangzhou Medical University, China, an institution lauded for its role in combating SARS and COVID-19. The virus might be able to infect various organs or tissues wherever the blood supply reaches, says Guan.


Does this mean COVID-19 could possibly be a bloodborne virus (in addition to being a respiratory virus)? Most of what I've read recently says it is not, so maybe this blood-travel happens in rare instances. The question sometimes arises when people are asking about donating blood.

NNadir

(33,512 posts)
7. I'm not familiar with any literature on it being blood borne but it certainly seems possible...
Thu May 7, 2020, 04:57 PM
May 2020

...not only from the text here, but also from the fact that the lung infections are very severe and lung tissue is rich with capillary veins.

I would imagine it could pass through some lesions, and I believe I've heard of people coughing up blood.

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