key: cord- - y j j authors: adney, danielle r.; bielefeldt-ohmann, helle; hartwig, airn e.; bowen, richard a. title: infection, replication, and transmission of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in alpacas date: - - journal: emerg infect dis doi: . /eid . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: y j j middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus is a recently emerged pathogen associated with severe human disease. zoonotic spillover from camels appears to play a major role in transmission. because of logistic difficulties in working with dromedaries in containment, a more manageable animal model would be desirable. we report shedding and transmission of this virus in experimentally infected alpacas (n = ) or those infected by contact (n = ). infectious virus was detected in all infected animals and in of in-contact animals. all alpacas seroconverted and were rechallenged days after the original infection. experimentally infected animals were protected against reinfection, and those infected by contact were partially protected. necropsy specimens from immunologically naive animals (n = ) obtained on day postinfection showed virus in the upper respiratory tract. these data demonstrate efficient virus replication and animal-to-animal transmission and indicate that alpacas might be useful surrogates for camels in laboratory studies. middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus is a recently emerged pathogen associated with severe human disease. zoonotic spillover from camels appears to play a major role in transmission. because of logistic difficulties in working with dromedaries in containment, a more manageable animal model would be desirable. we report shedding and transmission of this virus in experimentally infected alpacas (n = ) or those infected by contact (n = ). infectious virus was detected in all infected animals and in of in-contact animals. all alpacas seroconverted and were rechallenged days after the original infection. experimentally infected animals were protected against reinfection, and those infected by contact were partially protected. necropsy specimens from immunologically naive animals (n = ) obtained on day postinfection showed virus in the upper respiratory tract. these data demonstrate efficient virus replication and animal-to-animal transmission and indicate that alpacas might be useful surrogates for camels in laboratory studies. cov) was first detected in samples from a man in saudi arabia who had severe respiratory disease in ( ) . since its identification, > , cases of infection have been documented, and the case-fatality rate is ≈ % ( ) . although efficient human-to-human transmission has been documented, zoonotic spillover probably plays a major role in human infection ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . dromedary camels were identified early after recognition of the virus as a possible reservoir host for the disease, although not all patients report contact with camels. numerous investigators have reported the presence of mers-cov rna or infectious virus in nasal swab specimens of dromedary camels in saudi arabia ( , , ( ) ( ) ( ) , qatar ( , ( ) ( ) ( ) , oman ( ) , the united arab emirates ( ), nigeria ( ) , and egypt ( ) . in some areas of the middle east and africa, nearly % of animals tested were serologically positive for mers-cov, which suggested widespread circulation among camel populations ( , , ) . historical samples contained specific antibodies against mers-cov as long ago as , which indicated that mers-cov has been circulating much longer than originally believed ( , ) . young animals appear to be at a greater risk for productive infection, and handling practices, such as weaning or shipping animals, might play a major role in animal-to-animal transmission. many dromedary camels tested had high antibody titers. these results support field data suggesting that young animals become infected, and their immune responses probably are repeatedly boosted by subsequent exposure to the virus ( ) . however, it is currently unknown whether these repeated exposures result in productive infection or whether antibodies generated from a previous infection are protective. we have previously demonstrated that dromedary camels can be experimentally infected with mers-cov and found that mild upper respiratory tract disease associated with shedding copious amounts of virus by nasal secretions develops during the first week after infection ( ) . however, because of the cost of dromedaries, their size, and the requirement for specialized facilities to conduct such studies, it would be useful to identify alternative animal models that respond similarly to infection with mers-cov. we report characterization of an alpaca model of mers-cov infection in which we evaluated virus shedding and pathology, transmission by contact, and protective immunity weeks after initial infection. results indicate that alpacas might be a useful substitute for dromedary camels in certain types of mers-cov experiments. animal experiments were approved by the animal care and use committee of colorado state university. every effort was made to minimize stress and pain of the animals. animals were infected with a low-passage human isolate of mers-cov (strain hcov-emc/ ). this strain was propagated in vero e cells cultured in dulbecco modified eagle medium as described ( ) . nine locally bred alpacas were obtained by private sale for use in this study. animals were allowed to acclimate to the facility for week before infection and were fed hay ad libitum. one day before infection, animals were subcutaneously injected with an identification and temperaturesensing transponder (lifechip; destron fearing, dallas/ fort worth airport, tx, usa), and their body temperatures were monitored throughout the study. alpacas a -a were housed together and experimentally infected by intranasal instillation of pfu of mers-cov diluted in sterile phosphate-buffered saline ( ml/nare). two days later, alpacas a -a were introduced into the same room as alpacas a -a and housed together for the duration of the study. nasal swab specimens were collected by inserting and rotating sterile swabs into both nares, immediately placed in virus transport medium, and frozen until assay. blood was collected weekly into serum-separating tubes for detection of neutralizing antibodies. animals a -a were held in the facility for days postinfection, and all animals were then reinfected intranasally with pfu of mers-cov. three additional alpacas (a -a ) were also infected to serve as infection controls and evaluate tissue distribution of virus replication. nasal swab specimens were collected daily from all animals for days, at which time animals a -a were humanely euthanized. tissues collected at necropsy for detection of infectious virus from these animals included nasal turbinates, trachea, larynx, and all lung lobes. these samples plus additional samples, including brain, kidney, liver, skeletal muscle, heart, spleen, bladder, mesenteric lymph node, submandibular lymph node, and mediastinal lymph node, were fixed in formalin for histopathologic and immunohistochemical analysis. nasal swab specimens and serum samples collected from alpacas a -a were sampled for weeks after the second infection, and then these animals were then humanely euthanized. tissues were fixed in % neutral-buffered formalin for > days and embedded in paraffin. tissue sections were stained with hematoxylin and eosin and evaluated by a veterinary pathologist (h.b.-o.). immunohistochemical analysis was preformed to detect mers-cov antigen by using a rabbit polyclonal antiserum against hcov-emc/ antigen (diluted : , ) as a primary antibody as described ( ). mers-cov was titrated from nasal swab specimens in virus transport medium and homogenized tissue by plaque assay as described for camels ( ) . a -ml volume of virus transport medium was considered a - dilution, and -fold serial dilutions were prepared in ba medium. neutralizing antibodies were detected by plaque reduction neutralization test (prnt) as described, and seropositive animals were identified by using a % neutralization cutoff ( ) . field studies and experimental infections suggest that mild respiratory disease associated with nasal discharge develops in mers-cov-infected camels ( , , ) . similar to dromedaries, none of the alpacas had any appreciable increase in body temperature during challenge or rechallenge ( figure ). unlike dromedary camels, none of the alpacas emerging infectious diseases • www.cdc.gov/eid • vol. , no. , june had any observable nasal discharge over the course of infection. all alpacas maintained consistent activity level, temperament, and food intake throughout the study. nasal swab specimens were collected from infected animals immediately before challenge, on days - postinfection, and on day postinfection. all experimentally infected animals (a -a ) had detectable infectious virus on day postinfection but had stopped shedding virus by day postinfection (figure , panels a, b) . the co-housed animals (a -a ) were placed in the room with the infected animals days after initial virus infection. nasal swab specimens were collected from co-housed animals on days - after infection of animals a -a , and then times/ week through day . infectious virus was detected from animal a during days - and from animal a only on day . we did not isolate infectious virus from animal a (figure , panel a). although infectious virus was detected in animal a on day , infectious virus was not detected in animal a until day (figure , panel a) . we speculate that animal a became infected by contact with animal a after animals a -a had cleared their infections, which suggested that transmission is linked to intimate animal contact, rather than to aerosol transmission. to test whether previous infection was protective against subsequent virus challenge, all original study animals (a -a ) were allowed to clear their infections and rechallenged by intranasal infection on day postinfection. challenge was also performed with immunologically naïve alpacas (a -a ) (infection controls). the immunologically naive animals became infected and shed virus during days - postinfection, at which time they were euthanized. the animals that became infected through contact (a -a ) shed minimal virus between days - after rechallenge, but not on days - . in contrast, animals that had been experimentally infected were completely protected against rechallenge and did not shed detectable quantities of virus ( figure , panels c, d). serum was collected weekly and tested for neutralizing antibodies against mers-cov. all experimentally infected animals (a -a ) had detectable levels of antibodies beginning on day (table) . although infectious virus was isolated only from of the co-housed animals, these animals had neutralizing antibodies detected first on day (animals a and a ) or day (animal a ) (table) . nasal turbinate, upper trachea, lower trachea, larynx, and all lung lobes were sampled at necropsy from alpacas a , a , and a and tested for infectious virus by using a plaque assay. virus was detected in the nasal turbinates, larynx, and trachea of the alpacas but not in any of the lung lobes tested (figure ). gross lesions were not observed at necropsy in any of the alpacas. however, microscopic analysis of formaldehydefixed tissue sections from animals a -a showed mild squamous metaplasia of the epithelium of the turbinates in animal a (figure , panel a) and rare foci of mucosal erosion accompanied by minimal-to-mild subepithelial infiltration of neutrophils and macrophages and fewer lymphocytes ( figure , panel c). all animals also had follicular hypertrophy and hyperplasia of the draining lymph nodes, which suggested immune activation. immunohistochemical analysis detected rare, scattered, virus antigen-positive cells in respiratory epithelium of turbinates (figure , panel b ) and in rare cells interpreted to be intraepithelial leukocytes. virus antigen was not detected in any of the other tissues examined. animals a and a had histopathologic evidence of mild encephalitis with perivascular infiltrates of lymphocytes and monocytes and mild gliosis (figure , panel d) . we did not assay brain tissue for virus, either by isolation or pcr, because of the high potential of contamination from the nasal cavity during extraction. brain tissue was negative for virus by immunohistochemical analysis, but the etiology of the encephalitis observed remains unknown and might have been unrelated to mers-cov infection. many difficulties are associated with high containment experiments involving dromedary camels. thus, additional animal models are necessary for mers-cov research. because of their greater availability in the united states and smaller size, we tested an alpaca model. we report an alpaca model of mers-cov infection in camelids and analysis of animal-to-animal transmission and reinfection dynamics. infected alpacas shed considerable quantities of infectious virus nasally, although at lower concentrations than those reported for dromedary camels ( , ) . in addition, none of the infected alpacas had a noticeable nasal discharge, which is distinctly different from what has been observed in camels and might explain the relatively low efficiency of contact transmission we observed with alpacas. , antibody titer a a a a a a < < < < < < < < < < *alpacas a -a were experimentally infected, and alpacas a -a were co-housed with infected alpacas. titers were determined by using a % cutoff. infectious virus was detected in nasal swab specimens from of alpacas co-housed with experimentally infected animals, and each of the co-housed animals had neutralizing antibodies against mers-cov, which indicated virus transmission. the antibody titers observed approximate those seen for infected dromedaries with the exception of a , whose antibodies titers remained low until after rechallenge ( ) . finally, experimentally infected alpacas were completely protected against subsequent virus rechallenge, and contact-infected alpaca were only partially protected. these results suggest that infection can easily spread among closely grouped camelids infected with mers-cov. camels are frequently moved within the middle east for grazing, camel shows, and races. such movement enables mixing and close mingling of animals and could play a major role in mers-cov transmission among animals and to handlers. khalafalla et al. reported that animals bound for slaughter were held in a livestock market for several days, transferred to an abattoir, and kept for up to hours before slaughter ( ) . our data suggest that these handling practices could promote animal-to-animal virus transmission and that at the time of slaughter virus could potentially be transmitted to slaughterhouse workers. a major question related to the pathogenesis of mers-cov infection in camels, and of great relevance to vaccination strategies, is whether animals that have been infected are resistant to reinfection and virus shedding and, if so, for how long. our experimentally infected animals were completely protected against rechallenge days later, which suggests that sterilizing immunity can be achieved. however, the animals that were infected through contact (animals a -a ) shed infectious virus after reinfection, albeit at much lower levels than infected control animals (animals a -a ). although not tested in the present study, it might be surmised that the in-contact animals would have acquired sterilizing immunity from the second (booster) infection. these results support field data that suggest that young animals become infected and probably receive booster infections; most older animals have acquired immunity and are not susceptible to infection and virus shedding ( ) . this finding also highlights the possibility that widespread vaccination of dromedary camels could result in a major decrease in virus transmission to humans. to date, neutralizing antibodies against mers-cov have not been detected in camelids outside africa or the middle east. however, if virus were to be introduced into immunologically naive camelid populations, it probably would be readily transmitted among animals. many new world camelids are valued for their fiber, and such transmission might devastate fiber-related industries ( ) . thus, as travel-associated cases of mers-cov infection continue to be documented, human-to-human virus transmission and possible human-to-animal virus transmission should be monitored. this study had several limitations. each of the experimental groups had only animals, which limited our ability to perform statistical analyses. in addition, we evaluated protective immunity weeks after the original infection, which is a relatively short period and does not fully recapitulate seasonal exposures. thus, further studies are necessary to better understand duration of immunity in camels and alpacas. note added in proof: crameri et al. also report experimental infection and response to rechallenge of alpacas with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in this issue of emerging infectious diseases ( ) . isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) evidence for camel-to-human transmission of mers coronavirus human infection with mers coronavirus after exposure to infected camels, saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in dromedary camels: an outbreak investigation asymptomatic mers-cov infection in humans possibly linked to infected dromedaries imported from oman to united arab emirates occupational exposure to dromedaries and risk for mers-cov infection mers coronavirus in dromedary camel herd, saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in dromedary camels in saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus quasispecies that include homologues of human isolates revealed through wholegenome analysis and virus cultured from dromedary camels in saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) rna and neutralising antibodies in milk collected according to local customs from dromedary camels isolation of mers coronavirus from a dromedary camel high proportion of mers-cov shedding dromedaries at slaughterhouse with a potential epidemiological link to human cases middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in dromedary camels prevalence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in dromedary camels in abu dhabi emirate middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in dromedary camels in nigeria mers coronaviruses in dromedary camels antibodies against mers coronavirus in dromedary camels antibodies against mers coronavirus in dromedary camels mers coronavirus neutralizing antibodies in camels replication and shedding of mers-cov in upper respiratory tract of inoculated dromedary camels infection with mers-cov causes lethal pneumonia in the common marmoset dynamics of passive immunity to west nile virus in domestic chickens an orthopoxvirus-based vaccine reduces virus excretion after mers-cov infection in dromedary camels mers-cov in upper respiratory tract and lungs of dromedary camels acute middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in livestock dromedaries medicine and surgery of camelids experimental infection and response to rechallenge of alpacas with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus we thank erasmus medical center (rotterdam, the netherlands) for proving virus isolate hcov-emc/ and vincent munster and the rocky mountain laboratories for providing the rabbit antiserum against mers-cov. key: cord- - rfbmi q authors: nan title: news date: - - journal: aust vet j doi: . /avj. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: rfbmi q nan please email emma.malcolm@ava.com.au a small version of your photo and confirm that you also have a high resolution to send us. final images have to be in crystal-clear focus, at a minimum of dpi and at least mm at the longest edge. for us to publish an image on the cover it needs to be at least x mm at dpi. we had some lovely photographs that we couldn't publish this year because they were taken on a camera phone and the resolution was too low. as good as phone cameras can be, many still aren't going to be able to take a photograph that is high resolution enough to print at a reasonable size. so get your 'old fashioned' digital camera out! if you would like to try to take a cover shot, keep in mind that we have to be able to add the avj masthead at the top and highlights down one or both sides. it's also important to send us an accurate description of the photo, otherwise we might get eagle-eyed members calling to tell us we've got our cows confused -thank you robert mills. where to on welfare? julia nicholls, president f ootage of australian animals being mistreated during slaughter in kuwait, jordan and gaza prompted our members to respond in various ways to the confronting images and to ask what the ava is doing in response. it was hard not to be moved and horrified by the footage, and members have questioned the currency of our policies and position statements on live animal export and humane slaughter. the details of what ava can do are relevant to the debate; we can only comment and question. these breaches of the exporter supply chain assurance system are being investigated, export of animals to gaza is suspended and the department of agriculture keeps us informed of developments in this regard. enormous efforts have been made to improve the welfare of exported animals and it is remarkable that so much has changed for the better in destination countries given that australia has no jurisdictional control. despite this, i appreciate that there are many of us who would like to see an end to live export and others whose livelihood depends on the trade. our membership reflects the diversity of opinion of australian society and this makes it difficult for the ava to take sides in some circumstances. our membership is diverse, but our opinions are reinforced by a deeper knowledge of animal science and physiology. the ava can and does comment on issues of the day relevant to our expertise, and our profile and influence are steadily increasing. we have invested significantly in our public affairs program, which includes setting goals and tracking our achievements on behalf of members. however, i think many members overestimate the ava's ability to influence public opinion and bring about change. just because we are best qualified to comment doesn't mean that we enjoy the most attentive listeners to those comments! part of the art of advocacy is to understand what you can change, as well as how you can change it. there are many animal welfare issues of concern to both the community and members. what are the most important ones for our members and the long-term benefits for animals? how do we reflect your views and represent you to stakeholders and politicians? is there a common thread or philosophy on animal welfare across all members? can we better articulate a more robust and satisfying basis for the ava's policy and advocacy work on animal welfare issues? these are the questions we are hoping to explore and develop further within our public affairs program over the next year. stay tuned to ava communications for opportunities to be part of the conversation. other veterinary associations are doing a range of activities in relation to animal welfare issues. late last year, the american veterinary medical association held a forum called 'the conversation' , which involved veterinarians, ethicists and animal scientists who presented on the scientific, social, political, market, and legal aspects of how and why animal welfare decisions are made. the papers and discussion are being collated into a resource. the nzva has an animal welfare strategy with a stand-alone vision: "our members, using a science-based and ethically principled approach to the humane treatment of animals in new zealand, are respected and recognised for their leadership and educative role in animal welfare and well-being" and mission: "to enable and promote our membership as having the knowledge, skills and leadership in the field of animal welfare and wellbeing". the strategy also emphasises the need to be proactive in relation to animal welfare. the canadian veterinary medical association (cvma) has an animal welfare committee whose purpose is to advocate and promote animal welfare within the animal industry, to government and the public, and to advise the cvma on animal welfare issues and develop pertinent position statements. animal welfare advocacy is a priority of the cvma. should ava hold a conversation-type event? should we have a stand-alone strategy? should we have a welfare committee? perhaps all of these? i'd be interested to hear your thoughts in the discussion forums or as a comment on this article on the website. finally, i wish each and every one of you a very enjoyable festive season, filled with catching up with friends and family and not too many calls on your work time. this is a time of year when we take stock and reflect on the past while making resolutions for the next year. the ava is no different and we are looking ahead to planning our new -year strategy for - in the first months of next year. this will involve input from as many of you as possible, so start thinking about what you expect from your association. i wish you all the best for in your work and personal lives, may you find that elusive balance and continue to enjoy your chosen profession. financial products and services described in this document are provided by boq specialist bank limited abn (boq specialist). boq specialist is a wholly owned subsidiary of bank of queensland limited abn (boq). boq and boq specialist are both authorised deposit taking institutions in their own right. neither boq nor boq specialist guarantees or otherwise supports the obligations or performance of each other or of each other's products. the issuer of these products is boq specialist afsl and australian credit licence . all finance is subject to our credit assessment criteria. terms and conditions, fees and charges and eligibility criteria apply. equipment and fit-out finance / home loans / commercial property finance / car finance / practice purchase loans / smsf lending and deposits / transactional banking and overdrafts / savings and deposits / foreign exchange stress, insomnia, anxiety. we're expert in handling these conditions. veterinary professionals know just how important it is to put an owner's mind at ease. it takes expertise to understand the problem and the ability to clearly explain the options to patient and owner. at boq specialist, we operate in much the same way. over the last years, we've developed a profound understanding of how the veterinary profession works. you are our area of expertise and we've developed an extensive range of products to meet your banking and finance needs. so, if there's anything on your mind talk to us, and then enjoy a good night's sleep. visit us at boqspecialist.com.au/ava or speak to our financial specialists on . boqs e ducation is the cornerstone of every profession. the ava has close ties to australia's veterinary schools and we provide input where appropriate to help universities produce the veterinarians of the future. as you know if you read these columns, one of the ava's key strategic priorities is workforce planning. we want to develop and advocate for good evidence-based policies that will provide the right number of veterinarians, with the right skills, in the right places, to meet australia's need for veterinary services into the future. when the commonwealth government announced significant changes to higher education in the may budget, we were concerned that this could affect the veterinary workforce. after more analysis, our modelling showed that the proposed changes had dire implications for the debt accrued by a veterinary student and its repayment. our detailed submission to the senate inquiry into the legislation was followed by an invitation to speak at a public hearing. national strategy manager, dr debbie neutze, spoke passionately and persuasively about the potential effects on the profession and answered a range of questions about the profession. the submission we made to the senate and the communications we've been sending to the media have emphasised that veterinarians provide services that no-one else can provide. these include essential services to biosecurity, public health and food safety. the higher education changes in the proposed bill, we believe, could create unintended and inequitable outcomes for the veterinary profession that threaten those vital services. the changes will affect veterinary students more than other student groups because of the length of study and the high cost of delivering the course combined with the significantly lower average lifetime earnings than graduates of comparable courses. we are already witnessing market distortions that will potentially affect the viability of the veterinary profession and its ability to provide essential services. our view is that that the proposed changes to higher education are almost certain to distort the market further. at the time of writing, the senate had not voted on the bill. we are expecting the vote to happen at the beginning of december -close to the time you'll be reading this article. however, we anticipate at least one favourable outcome -the interest rate increases are unlikely to be passed. because of the attention ava focussed on this aspect, particularly for female graduates, we can claim some of the credit for this amendment. over the past few weeks, ava president julia nicholls and i have been meeting with each veterinary school dean or head to discuss our position on the proposed changes. whatever the outcome of the proposed higher education changes, it is critical that we maintain open and honest dialogue with the universities and educators. our meetings have been very positive and i'd like to thank each of the deans for their time and candour. early next year, we are looking forward to reporting on the workforce modelling we've been doing throughout this year. the stock and flow model of the veterinary workforce currently in preparation will analyse both supply and demand factors for veterinary services. the ultimate aim is to create policies that are relevant to the current political and policy environment to ensure a healthy future for the profession. we want to ensure appropriate levels of supply and demand for both current and future veterinarians, and also ensure student debt doesn't become something that veterinarians have to service for decades in their careers. the number and skills of new entrants to the workforce will be part of this analysis, so we anticipate further cooperation and conversations with the veterinary school deans as we respond to the workforce modelling findings. the only person who is educated is the one who has learned how to learn and change. international veterinary, biomedical and business journals at your fingertips ebola, dogs and a vaccine i n october, a nurse in spain tested positive for ebola virus after caring for an infected patient in hospital. people who were in contact with this nurse were quarantined, and the madrid regional government obtained a court order to euthanase her pet dog against her wishes, on the grounds that available scientific information could not rule out a risk of contagion. wsava is strongly of the view that available technology should allow for testing and quarantine, rather than automatic euthanasia of exposed animals. professor michael day, chairman of the wsava's one health committee, noted: "zoonotic diseases, particularly those transmitted through pets, are concerning to the pet-owning public, but there have been no scientific reports indicating that ebola virus has been isolated from or directly transmitted by dogs." the virus that causes ebola is not airborne and can only be spread through direct contact with the bodily fluids of an infected person who is showing symptoms or who has died. dogs appear to be the first animal species shown to be naturally and asymptomatically infected by ebola virus. during the - ebola outbreak in gabon, one group sampled dogs, following the observation that several dogs were highly exposed to ebola virus by eating infected dead animals. dogs were screened using ebola virus-specific immunoglobulin (ig) g assay, antigen detection, and viral pcr. the serological report showed a significant positive association between seroprevalence and the distances to the ebola virusepidemic area, with seroprevalence up to . % in dogs from villages with both infected animal carcasses and human cases. the authors did not detect any circulating ebola antigens or viral dna sequences (tested by pcr), and were unable to isolate any virus. they suggest that this indicated either old, transient ebola infection of the tested dogs, or antigenic stimulation. none of these highly exposed dogs during the outbreak showed any clinical signs. it is possible that dogs may excrete infectious viral particles in urine, faeces, and saliva for a short period before virus clearance, as observed experimentally in other animals. further work on experimental canine infection is needed to establish the potential human risk of ebola virus-infected dogs, including the mechanisms of viral excretion. the main concern in west africa is infection via fruit bats and non-human primates, and by eating bush meat that may include fruit bats and primates infected with ebola. a house pet that may potentially be exposed in developed countries represents a very different scenario to those in epidemic west africa. early human testing of an investigational ebola vaccine co-developed by the national institute of allergy and infectious diseases (niaid) and glaxosmithkline (gsk) began in early september. initial data on safety and immunogenicity (the capacity to generate an immune response) from clinical trials of the niaid/gsk ebola vaccine are expected by the end of . human testing of a second ebola vaccine candidate is under way at the national institutes of health's clinical center in bethesda, maryland. one group is conducting a trial to evaluate the vaccine, called vsv-zebov, for safety and its ability to generate an immune system response in healthy adults who are given two intramuscular doses. this nih phase placebo-controlled clinical trial of the vsv-zebov vaccine candidate will enrol healthy adults. enrolment at each dosing level is staggered, so interim safety assessments of vaccinated individuals can be conducted. vsv-zebov is based in part on a genetically engineered version of vesicular stomatitis virus (vsv), which primarily affects rodents, cattle, swine and horses. the gene for the outer protein of the vesicular stomatitis virus has been replaced with a segment of the gene for the outer protein of the zaire ebola virus species, and the vaccine cannot cause a vaccinated individual to become infected with ebola. a second group at the walter reed army institute of research is simultaneously testing the vaccine candidate as a single dose, to evaluate in real time the safety profile at different dosages and compare the immune responses induced by one injection versus two injections. initial safety and immune response data on the vsv-zebov vaccine are expected by the end of . this vaccine candidate was developed by researchers at the public health agency of canada's national microbiology laboratory, and has been developed from preclinical to clinical testing stage remarkably quickly. this story can be compared to the extraordinary work of dr deborah middleton's group, which developed the hendra virus vaccine so quickly in australia. medivet animal health, a world leader in veterinary regenerative medicine, has a comprehensive product offering for animals including stem cell therapy, platelet rich plasma and nanofiber technologies, amongst others. • improves the quality of life of your patients t he ava is seeking nominations for its board. can you join the leadership crew and help to steer the profession? here are some tips and information to help you decide if joining the ava board might be the right thing for you. the ava has nine directors. six are elected directly by the general membership and three are nominated and appointed by the three largest special interest groups (cattle, equine and asava). each director has a -year term, with a maximum of two successive terms. the president, vice president and treasurer are elected each year by the board. nominations are invited for two elected positions on the board of directors for a -year term to take office in may . these elected positions in are in addition to a position to be nominated by asava. the first requirement is that candidates have prior experience as an office holder within a special interest group or division committee. "to be a good board member, you need to be a good listener and then you need to take the information given to you and be a good advocate for the profession, " dr gilkerson said. some additional skills and experience that are useful include being a member of community organisations, being a member of other boards and committees, a commitment to animal health and welfare, and the ability to prepare reports for the ava board. with a lot of the work involving the ava's groups and committees, communication and team work are key skills to bring to the ava board. "it helps to be patient, diplomatic and to communicate clearly. directors need to have a broad knowledge of the different groups within the ava and how they work together, " board member dr robert johnson said. "if you are interested in helping our profession, joining the board is a great way to do that. you soon learn what matters to your fellow members, and it is a privilege to be a voice for them. " the board has a charter and a code of conduct that outline the expectations and operational details of the board. all election candidates need to agree to abide by the charter, the code and the ava constitution before their nominations are accepted. directors have legal responsibility for the australian veterinary association limited (acn ) under the corporations act and they undertake mandatory training to help them understand and fulfil their legal responsibilities. these include ensuring that the ava complies with all aspects of the law, risks are managed appropriately and all parts of the organisation are doing what they should be doing for the benefit of members. the board sets the direction for the ava, makes the big strategic decisions and ensures effective risk management. the board appoints the chief executive officer and is responsible for managing his or her performance. the ceo is responsible for managing the ava's employees and ensuring the board's strategy is realised. if you haven't already, you can put some faces to names by viewing a video of the ava board meeting earlier this year: http://ow.ly/e rmf. t he object of the ava's animal welfare trust (awt) is to provide small grants for research, education or promotion and action programs that lead to improvements in the welfare and wellbeing of animals. in october , awt's grants committee critically evaluated and ranked eight worthy research proposals involving a range of species. awt trustees accepted the committee's recommendations and offered two grants for the following research projects. yu zhang, phd candidate, university of queensland this project focuses on how ammonia accumulation affects sheep's feed intake during simulated sea export by studying their physiology, behaviour and emotional state. as the largest live export industry in the world, livestock shipments from australia mostly involve sheep, especially to the middle east. during a voyage, ammonia is released from their excreta, which accumulates as a pad that the sheep have to lie on. ammonia especially accumulates when there is insufficient ventilation, high temperatures and humidity. this is a recognised welfare problem and causes sheep to stand more, feed and ruminate less, hold their heads high for fresher air and suffer conjunctivitis. the university of queensland recently conducted research on gaseous ammonia accumulation on livestock ships that has been used by rspca to seek the establishment of legal limits. however, it is unknown how sheep's feed intake is affected by ammonia on ships. using a simulation, the research objectives are to: • understand how high concentrations of gaseous ammonia affect feed intake • study the sheep's emotional state after exposure to gaseous ammonia. project results will increase our understanding of the welfare implications of long-distance sheep export. in the longer term, they will contribute to modification of sea transport standards to improve sheep welfare and reduce lower returns caused by weight loss. outcomes may also help improve welfare issues associated with ammonia accumulation in intensive farming. effect of shearing in pre-embarkation feedlots on sheep feeding behaviour before export awt will fund an honours project under associate professor anne barnes at murdoch university. inappetence late in feedlotting has been shown to increase the risk of shipboard death and consistent feed intake is the key to preventing shipboard deaths from inanition and salmonellosis. therefore, any interference with consistent intake might have poor health and welfare outcomes. sheep exported live from australia are required to spend time in registered premises before shipping. during this time they are fed pelleted feed similar to that provided on the ship so that they can adapt to it, which may take several days. some sheep may never adapt to the different feed, leading to inappetence, which is associated with salmonellosis and eventual starvation. disruption and moving may delay feed adaptation, increasing the risk of inappetence and disease at the feedlot and/or on board. sheep are often shorn during their pre-embarkation preparation to limit wool cover and enhance heat loss. there are no specific standards for the timing of shearing in sheds in relation to the time of embarkation. previous studies report that short periods of restraint, isolation and shearing are acute stressors for sheep. superimposing these on animals undergoing adaptation to a novel environment and feed could affect their continued intake of feed. the research objective is to determine whether moving and handling sheep for shearing at the pre-embarkation feedlot interferes with their feeding pattern. video footage of the sheep's initial entry to the shed, after shearing and before exit will be analysed using qualitative behavioural assessment (qba). using this, observers score descriptors of how animals behave to create an integrated measure of behaviour for comparison of treatments. qba scores are correlated to physiology and ethology and are a non-invasive means of assessing livestock welfare. project results will provide guidance for the industry on whether and when shearing should take place during pre-embarkation. it will inform best practice in the intensive sheep industry regarding the effects of shearing on feeding behaviour during feedlotting. outcomes of both projects will be disseminated via refereed journals, conference presentations and advice to industry. of the european countries that provided data over this timespan, observed decreases ranging from . % to %. "these latest figures, which suggest a positive trend in terms of the responsible use of antibiotics in animals in europe, are highly welcome, " explains david mackay, the head of the ema's division on veterinary medicines. "however, the report also shows that there is scope for further decrease. "measures to promote the rational use of antibiotics in animals need to continue as part of the european commission's action plan against antimicrobial resistance, " he said. public health authorities worldwide are confronted with increasing levels of resistance to antibiotics in humans and animals and are engaged in actions at various levels to fight this issue. the responsible use of antibiotics is a key factor to minimise the risk of resistance. the ava has been working closely with the australian department of agriculture and human health groups to join this global campaign to promote responsible use of antibiotics. • national programs and campaigns on the responsible use of antimicrobials • restrictions on the use of certain antimicrobials • increased awareness of the threat of antimicrobial resistance • reduction targets for the use of antimicrobials in animal production in certain member states • fluctuations in size and types of animal populations. while additional analysis is needed to confirm the main reasons for this decline, the reduction in the use of antibiotics is a positive sign. l ife for women was very different when judith went to school. she had dreamed of being a veterinarian while spending her school holidays on her uncle's property in guyra. attending a private girls' school in the s and early s put her at a disadvantage for pursuing a career as a veterinarian, as physics and chemistry were not deemed important areas of study for young girls. luckily, she was able to do biology and latin, which were approved prerequisites for veterinary science at the time. "my school leaving certificate marks were good enough to receive a commonwealth scholarship to study at the university of sydney, " she said. "i accepted it and indicated that i planned to study veterinary science. "i was called for an interview at which it was strongly recommended that i use the scholarship to do an arts degree, particularly as i was so disadvantaged, not having studied physics or chemistry. "i stood firm -i had my scholarship and i had my opportunity, " she said. in her first year at vet school, she was the only woman and for whatever reason, her male counterparts decided to elect her as the year representative. this role gave her valuable contact with staff through vet school meetings and allowed her greater access to the vet school area of the university than other first years who had very limited access because they were 'lumped in' with medicine and science students. "i loved the vet school building; the people, the work, the smells and the lifestyle. "elbert was a good teacher, and would be a boss i enjoyed and respected but to my horror he went on holiday a few days after i started work… "how to make a nervous wreck of a new graduate!" "in those early days i remember monitoring a sick heifer in my backyard, which died and whose autopsy revealed one of the early cases of sbe. calvings were chain and rope pull jobs, distemper was rife and haemonchus in lambs was devastating, " she said. after marrying rod, the couple moved to armidale. he had become a jackaroo after deciding not to complete veterinary science. the local veterinarian, dr joe o'brien, had heard that she was coming. "very soon after arrival, joe arrived on my doorstep, announced who he was, checked who i was and asked why the [expletive] was i sitting up reading a book when there was vet work to be done?" "i learnt much from joe, who calls a spade a spade and was an innovative, real-thinking vet and excellent surgeon. we had an excellent ava branch and meeting up with colleagues was a vital way for us all to learn and share information, " she said. however, the erratic hours and unpredictable life of a veterinarian in general practice and marriage were not sitting well and she reluctantly applied for a lecturing position in rural science at the university of new england. everything looked great until the fur started to grow. a siamese with a fluffy hindleg with the fur growing the wrong way made a good talking point," australian veterinary journal volume , no , december news n "i was told that as a female i was not a likely long-term proposition for the lecturing position in parasitology. prejudice withstanding, i became demonstrator in anatomy, histology and parasitology and enrolled to do my phd, working on ovine brucellosis. "i enjoyed the teaching, but research and the experimental work were not really my thing. i yearned for general practice over those years, and by the time i submitted my thesis, i had four children. "further experimental work was requested from a biochemist examiner of my thesis. so, i decided to call it quits. this was a huge decision as i had invested so much time and my 'no more research' stand represented failure. but i took great delight in being a mother and knew that my priorities would always be with family, " she said. the tb and brucellosis eradication scheme gave dr grieve her next veterinary venture. "i was often working with four children and a surrogate grandmother as baby sitter travelling to remote properties and 'interesting' yards, like one that was constructed of iron bedheads. "over this time i made good friends with many of the land holders and found myself doing more small jobs and bringing the odd cat or dog back with me to return on the next visit having done whatever treatment it required, " she said. dr grieve's next career move was to buy an old building, which she moved to her property and set up a small surgery. "with my children at the local school, i met more of the locals and built up my small practice, and then had another baby. "mixed practice hours didn't work with school hours and i started having to exploit friends and neighbours for school pick-ups and drop-offs. to prioritise my children, it became obvious that i should be keeping close to home (and the school) by doing small animal and 'anything that could be brought to the surgery' work, with limited local large animal cases, " she said. w ith ava special interest groups (sigs), there's one for everyone. you bring your own expertise, skills and experience to join others with similar interests to exchange ideas, inspire and support each other. here's a rundown of the different sig opportunities available to ava members. our largest sigs are for veterinarians working with cattle (acv), horses (eva) and small animals (asava) and in practice management (avapm). "you can really benefit from connecting with your like-minded veterinarians through the ava's sigs, " ava president julia nicholls said. "the big sigs offer outstanding value if you're involved in these areas. they keep you on the cutting-edge of your field by providing you with a range of member benefits. from clinical journals, to tailored continuing professional development and a novel strain of coronavirus that causes a rapid onset of severe respiratory disease in humans was first identified in saudi arabia in . as of november , the world health organization (who) has been notified of laboratoryconfirmed human cases of mers-cov, including at least related deaths. the virus appears to be circulating widely throughout the arabian peninsula, and travel-related cases have been reported in europe, africa, asia and the united states. there have been no cases reported in australia. mers-cov is genetically and biologically distinct from other known coronaviruses such as the virus causing severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) in humans. it is considered to be a serious public health threat, because the infection can cause severe disease in humans and coronaviruses may adapt to new hosts and become more easily transmittable between humans. the epidemiology of mers-cov infection is not yet fully understood. similar strains of mers-cov have been identified in samples taken from camels and humans in the middle east and in some cases there has been an association between infections in humans and camels, suggesting that camels are a likely primary source of the mers-cov infection in humans. viruses genetically related to mers-cov have also been detected in bat species around the world, and a fragment of viral genetic material matching the mers-cov was found in one bat from saudi arabia. however according to the world organisation for animal health (oie), the current evidence does not indicate a direct link between bats and mers-cov in humans and further research is warranted. other species of animals, including sheep, goats, cattle, water buffalo and wild birds, have tested negative for the presence of antibodies to mers-cov. nevertheless, owing to the relatively small sample sizes, the results of these studies cannot exclude infection in other animal species. the oie, who and fao emphasise that joint human health and animal health investigations are needed to develop a better understanding of the overall epidemiology of mers and the role of camels and potentially other animal species in the maintenance and transmission of mers-cov. clusters of confirmed human cases have occurred in healthcare settings and households, but there is no evidence of sustained human to human transmission in the community. immunocompromised persons and those with diabetes, cancer and chronic lung disease are considered at high risk of severe disease from mers-cov infection. the who recommends that as a general precaution anyone visiting farms or other places where camels are present should practise general hygiene measures, including regular hand washing before and after touching animals, avoiding contact with sick animals and following food hygiene practices. for latest information on mers-cov, visit the who website: www.who.int/ resolutions are generally of two types -special resolutions and ordinary resolutions. any resolution to amend the ava constitution requires a special resolution. in order to be passed special resolutions require the approval of at least % of the members entitled to vote on that resolution. ordinary resolutions are for matters relating to the accounts or reports of officers of the ava. in order to be passed an ordinary resolution requires the approval of a simple majority of more than % of members entitled to vote on the resolution. the wording of a proposed resolution may require amendment after submission (in consultation with the proposers of the resolution). this is to ensure the resolution is in an acceptable form and provides sufficient clarity, particularly if the resolution involves an amendment to the ava constitution. before submitting a resolution, please contact the company secretary who may assist with preparation of an acceptable form of wording of the resolution. it is also appropriate to discuss any proposed resolution with a wide range of members prior to formally lodging it with the company secretary to ensure that the proposed wording of the resolution clearly conveys your objectives. all proposed resolutions will be considered by the ava board, and if they are of the view they are in the best interests of the ava, put to the annual general meeting. for more information contact john robb, company secretary at ava national office on or corporate@ava.com.au. chief executive officer comment on this article at www.ava.com.au/ member communications, information resources and guidelines, client-centred materials and accredited programs, your sig keeps you at the forefront of your field. "the collegiality that comes with joining your sig is invaluable. it provides you with support, and enables you to support your colleagues, inspires new ways of thinking and doing things, and may even provide some much needed light relief from time to time, " she said. not involved with cows, horses, small animals or practice management? then we have boutique sigs to cater for nearly everyone. these sigs have fewer members but no less collegiality or passion for their work. most communicate with members via email or through the ava's discussion forums. like the larger sigs, these smaller ones bring together leading veterinarians in a particular field to exchange knowledge and support each other. "the ava's sigs are representative of the diversity within our profession, " dr nicholls said. "whether these smaller sigs represent your daily working activity or they cover something that you're interested in, it's well worth the nominal investment to connect with your colleagues in these groups, " she said. learn the ins and outs of all the unusual and exotic pets or explore some new territory through the acupuncture or integrative medicine group. the public health vets share important information about government issues, while the animal welfare and ethics group explores the philosophical and practical aspects of welfare. the behaviour and dental groups are growing quickly as practitioners understand the value of broadening their skills and knowledge into new areas to meet the demands of modern practice. pig, sheep, reproductive, alpaca, greyhound and poultry vets are active in creating networks and sharing the latest information within their defined fields of practice. conservation biologists come together to explore the latest in wildlife health, disease and management and species conservation. the education and research sig represents veterinarians working in educational institutions and research bodies, while the history group produces the australian veterinary history record, which chronicles the rich and diverse history of veterinary medicine in australia. you can view the array of sigs on offer at www.ava.com.au/about-us/who-does-what/groups. w ith the christmas holiday season fast approaching, it's a good time to stop and think about the forthcoming social events that will be organised within workplaces for staff, clients and visitors. such celebrations provide a great opportunity to bond with colleagues and clients, as you can get to know them more in an informal setting. it's not an opportunity to lower your conduct standards such that you end up embarrassed to turn up to work on monday. together with employees, employers have a responsibility to take all reasonable steps to ensure the safety and health of all who attend work-related functions. this includes a duty of care under work (occupational) health and safety, a range of antidiscrimination legislation, including provision for dealing with sexual and racial harassment, and the criminal code, which includes assault of either of a physical or verbal nature. all of which promote an environment free of discrimination, harassment, bullying and violence, whether or not the function is held offsite or onsite. we have all heard those embarrassing stories of staff doing things they should not have done at christmas parties, only to find photos that you did not want people to see on social media and the professional and social fallout that comes from such posts. this should be enough to make you stop and think about the photo you would prefer to see of yourself on social media. although there are great advantages and value to holding workrelated functions, there are also risks, which, if not managed appropriately, can quickly turn a joyous and enriching time into a nightmare. as many social functions are provided as an extension of the workplace, it is important that employees are aware of the inappropriate behaviour that can surface, especially when functions are highly charged with alcohol. if you're planning to attend an upcoming work function, be aware that you have a responsibility to take reasonable precautions for your own health and safety and that of others. you are expected to conduct yourself in a respectable manner that leaves the workplace function free from harassment and other offensive behaviour. avoid becoming intoxicated to the point where your behaviour causes risks to health and safety. such behaviour includes unwanted touching and kissing, derogatory comments and humour, violence, inappropriate gifts and send-ups, oversharing and illegal drug taking. strategies to minimise the risk of staff social functions getting out of control may include the following: • before the function, remind all staff of company policies and standards of behaviour in relation to drugs, smoking and alcohol, dress code, bullying and harassment, particularly sexual harassment • discourage excessive drinking and remind all staff of the dangers of drink-driving • take reasonable steps to ensure the consumption of alcohol is limited and make sure non-alcoholic drinks are also available • ensure staff make arrangements to get home safely • provide plenty of food, especially when serving alcohol • have set start and finish times for the function • have a grievance handling procedure in place to deal with any complaints, should they arise • remind management and senior staff that they are role models for expected appropriate behaviour • raise staff awareness of the consequences of breaching of company policy, such as warnings and possible dismissal. the best functions are those that are well thought out and fundamentally underpinned by clear, concise and reasonable policies, procedures and expectations in relation to the acceptable codes of conduct of all who attend. such planning will go a long way to making sure the work function is successful and enjoyed by all. comment on this article at www.ava.com.au/ the material contained in this article is general comment and is not intended as advice on any particular matter. no reader should act or fail to act on the basis of any material contained herein. the material contained in this publication should not be relied on as a substitute for legal or professional advice on any particular matter. the veterinary nurse council of australia and hill's pet nutrition presented the award, which recognises qualified veterinary nurses employed within a veterinary clinic, who provide exceptional service and deliver the highest possible standard of patient care. editor in chief t ri-solfen (t-s) was developed in response to animal welfare concerns about the animal husbandry practice of mulesing of lambs intended for wool production. many woolproducing sheep are excessively wrinkly in the breech area, which predisposes them to blowfly strike. removal of this wrinkly skin in the breech area by a process known as 'mulesing' produces a plainer skin profile, which in turn mitigates the occurrence of flystrike. the active ingredients of t-s are the local anaesthetics lignocaine (lig) and bupivacaine (bup), together with adrenaline as a vasoconstrictor and the antiseptic cetrimide. these are formulated together in t-s and the product is used as a post-mulesing dressing in lambs. the recommended age for mulesing lambs is - weeks, with the maximum age allowed under the present commonwealth government model code of practice for welfare of animals being months. mulesing is only carried out on young sheep that are destined for wool production. in reality, any concerns about residues from the four actives contained in t-s would be essentially zero, as any traces would have disappeared long before the sheep entered the human food chain. the interval between application and slaughter in almost all cases is likely to be many years, with some sheep dying or being used for pet food. to further reduce human health concerns, all four active ingredients were chosen by the developers because they already had widespread and safe use in human and veterinary medicine. three of the active components are used topically in humans, and lig and bup are also administered parenterally. the hazard is known and is essentially zero. the australian medicines handbook (amh) recommends that the maximum single injected dose of lig in humans is mg/kg body weight (bw) when used alone or mg/kg bw when administered with adrenaline. the injected dose for bup with or without adrenaline is recommended at mg/kg bw. the amh also lists a number of human preparations of lig used in the nasopharyngeal area or gastrointestinal tract, which results in oral intake of lig. the amh does not recognise therapeutic doses of lig or bup in humans as a particular hazard. lig and bup do not persist in mammals because they are rapidly metabolised, particularly in the liver. the plasma halflives of lig and bup in all species are very short (range - minutes), depending on the species, age, dose and route of administration. the metabolic pathways are common to humans and other mammalian species, including sheep, cattle and pigs. excretion of parent compounds and their metabolites is rapid and predominantly in the urine. , metabolism results in degradation of the compounds, which is responsible for the loss of local anaesthetic action. the australian office of chemical safety has reviewed the toxicology and occupational safety of t-s and established an acceptable daily intake (adi) for its active ingredients: . mg/ kg bw/day for lig, . mg/kg bw/day for bup and . mg/kg bw/day for cetrimide. an adi for adrenaline was not set because residues are not expected to be measurable above endogenous levels normally found in the tissues. the biotransformation of lig and bup produces , -xylidine as a minor metabolite that has been shown to be a weak mutagenic agent in vitro and to have genotoxic characteristics in vivo. this metabolite produced nasal tumours in a -year oral toxicity study in rats receiving daily doses of the metabolite equivalent to mg/kg bw/day. the incidence of these tumours was dosedependent and there was no significant increase in nasal tumours at either of the two lower dose rates of and mg/kg bw/ day. in this rat study it was reported that some of the , -xylidine evaporated from the feed and was inhaled by the rats throughout the study period. the nasopharangeal anatomy of rats is unlike that of humans, which leads to differences in the amount and distribution of inhaled materials. rodents are also obligate nose breathers with a highly efficient nasal filtering capacity. a further complication in rats is spontaneous respiratory infections and their sequelae. rats appear to be uniquely susceptible to chronic inflammation and tumours from insoluble cytotoxic particles. , overall, this makes the rat an unsuitable model for predicting the significance of chemicals on the induction of nasal tumours in humans. the unique characteristics of the rat and the volatility of the , -xylidine make it difficult to place any significance on the appearance of nasal tumours in the chronic rat study. the results of the -year rat study using , -xylidine have been extensively reviewed and it is accepted that this metabolite of lig and bup does not represent a hazard to human health. , the end result is that when meat-producing animals are treated with t-s, the possibility of , -xylidine residues being present and causing problems in humans is not an issue. furthermore, human pharmaco-vigilance studies over a long period have not revealed any reports of carcinogenicity following the widespread therapeutic use of lig or bup. the lower limits for finding or detecting (lod) lig and bup and their metabolites in tissues and bodily fluids using contemporary mass spectrometric based methods are in the range of - ng/ml or gram. the regulatory methods actually used to measure the amount of residues in meat and offal have limits of quantification (loq) of . mg/kg for bup, . mg/kg for lig and . mg/kg for cetrimide. in the case of t-s, in order to keep residues of lig, bup and cetrimide as low as practicable, the australian pesticides and veterinary medicines authority (apvma) originally used the loqs for these active constituents to set the maximum residue limit (mrl). continued on page n australian veterinary journal volume , no , december news n based on published methods of calculation and data, , if the adi for lig of . mg/kg bw/day is used, the acceptable intake of lig and its metabolites is . mg/day for a -kg human ( . x = . ). similarly, the acceptable intake of bup plus metabolites is . mg/day. thus, the total acceptable maximum daily intake of the parent local anaesthetics and their metabolites, expressed as parent drug is . mg ( . + . = . ) for a -kg human. the standard intake of meat is a total of . kg/day, made up of the sum of muscle, liver, kidney and fat. the most conservative mrl set for either of the local anaesthetics is for bup at . mg/ kg meat. therefore, the highest acceptable daily consumption of meat from treated animals can be estimated by dividing the total acceptable drug intake of . mg by the conservative maximum amount of drug permitted in . kg meat of . mg. this results in a theoretical maximum daily intake of kg of meat, which would be unrealistic. it must also be stressed that adis and the resultant mrls are levels for regulatory action and are not human health levels. in the case of lig and bup for t-s, the adis have been calculated using -fold safety factors. this means that the occasional consumption of meat containing residues that marginally exceed the mrl does not translate into a human health hazard. the management of any risks associated with the use of t-s for mulesing lambs has been achieved by standard regulatory procedures. the risk of residues in food and the associated risk to trade have been addressed by the apvma. the active ingredients are included in table of the australian maximum residue limit standard, where substances for which mrls are not necessary are listed. the entry for t-s in the mrl standard also contains the qualifier "as a component in a post-mulesing treatment of lambs that are kept for wool production". as a further safeguard, a meat withholding period (whp) of days after treatment has been established. at this time, more than million sheep have been treated with t-s and there have been no reported residue violations in australia, or in any other country. the safety of t-s has also been assessed by the australian national drugs and poisons scheduling committee and as a result has recently been placed in schedule , which identifies t-s as having "low potential for causing harm, the extent of which can be reduced through the use of appropriate packaging with simple warnings and safety directions on the label". the proposed new australian animal welfare standards include the requirement for pain relief for many routine animal husbandry practices in sheep and cattle. the result of these proposed changes will be to place ongoing pressure to make it a requirement to provide pain relief in sheep and cattle undergoing procedures such as castration, dehorning and tail docking. additional pressures to improve farm animal welfare are also being applied by processors of human food and by consumers of animal products. in order to meet these welfare requirements, there is a need for products, such as t-s, that can provide pain relief and infection control. however, as a consequence of these pressures, there have been reports of the use of t-s for purposes other than mulesing of lambs, which is the only registered use at this time. although it may be possible for a veterinary practitioner to use t-s 'off-label' for individual animals, this usage pattern was never intended to accommodate the mass medication of foodproducing animals. there is currently development work under way to provide data to support the extension of the registration of t-s to support other husbandry procedures in livestock. such work should provide a registered product that will meet the new and additional requirements of the livestock industries, through expanded therapeutic claims and associated appropriate usage patterns. it will also ensure that the risk of violative residues from all registered uses will not be an issue. this outcome will also continue to protect the use of t-s for mulesing of lambs. i came across a book recently by psychologist daniel kahneman, titled thinking fast and slow. for veterinary practitioners, this book makes for interesting reading. thinking fast and slow has become a bestseller and in it the author describes two different modes of thinking and decision-making. system operates automatically, with little or no effort, and no sense of voluntary control. system involves effortful mental activities, including complex computations. a punter may make a selection in a race because he thinks he is a good judge of horse flesh and this is a system or a heuristic selection. alternatively, a punter may spend a week studying form before he makes his selection and this is a system judgement. kahneman argues that although the heuristic process is useful, there are biases and traps that intelligent people and even statisticians fall into. system performs better, if established protocols and formulae can be set up. much of the book is about the biases of intuition. kahneman's stated aim is to improve our ability to identify and understand errors of judgment and choice, in others, and eventually in ourselves, by providing a richer and more precise language to discuss them. consider an anorexic cat presented to a practitioner. practitioner a: palpates pain in the anterior abdomen and quizzes the owner, who advises that the cat is fed a high-fat diet. a lipase test may or may not be performed. acute pancreatitis is diagnosed, which is a heuristic decision, especially if pathology tests are not performed. practitioner b: finds the same clinical signs but orders bloods, radiology and sonography. based on those results, a system decision is made. kahneman describes the traps and biases made by practitioner a as follows. . insensitivity to prior probabilities of outcomes. available textbooks indicate that pancreatitis in cats is rare. . insensitivity to sample size. even if pancreatitis was correctly diagnosed in two cats last year, that sample is too small to state that it is a common condition. . misconceptions of chance. there hasn't been a case of a cat with pancreatitis so far this year, so it is about time one showed up. this is using the gambler's fallacy -three tosses of a coin landing heads does not mean that the next one is any more likely to be tails. . availability. the client comes in with a preconceived diagnosis, usually made by an internet search. the client is often wrong, because of not having available experience or data. "i think my dog has ringworm, " for example. practitioner b is a big fan of evidence-based medicine, which seems to be gaining popularity in the veterinary as well as the medical profession. system is continually reinforced by system , so a more experienced practitioner will need less evidence-based medicine than a new graduate. in the emergency room, there is often no time for system , so an experienced practitioner with welldeveloped system knowledge will be more effective. our clients may not be able to afford evidence-based medicine, in which case, they will favour an intuitive practitioner. some practices may find it more profitable to use evidence-based medicine, particularly those with in-house pathology. fear of litigation may encourage some practitioners to use evidence-based medicine. i recommend this book to practitioners. it's pretty heavy going, but repays persistence. comment on this article at www.ava.com.au/ in tasmanian dogs t he paper by david jenkins and others and an associated news article published in the august edition of the journal remind us of the need for ongoing management of tapeworms in dogs, especially hydatids. i believe, however, that the present situation in tasmania has been misrepresented, especially in the news article, which concluded that "hydatid tapeworm (echinococcus granulosus) is still present in australian rural dogs, most commonly in tasmania, despite 'provisional eradication' having been declared in tasmania in ". tasmania ran an effective campaign to control hydatids from the s until provisional freedom was declared in . since then all detections of hydatids in livestock at slaughter have been investigated. although many of these detections can be explained by the animals having been infected on the mainland, there are occasional animals that have only ever resided in tasmania, so must have been infected locally. this indicates a low level of transmission of hydatids in tasmania, but the level of detection in abattoir suggests that transmission is a rare event. continued on page n avma seeks to promote intraprofessional dialogue about animal welfare issues ebola virus antibody prevalence in dogs and human risk world health organization (who) frequently asked questions on middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov questions & answers on middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) update on mers-cov transmission from animals to humans, and interim recommendations for at-risk groups model code of practice for the welfare of animals: the sheep. primary industries ministerial council publication no. australian medicines handbook. australian medicines handbook pty ltd local anaesthetics that metabolize to , -xylidine or o-toluidine: final review of toxicological literature opinion of the scientific committee of the norwegian scientific committee for food safety. norwegian scientific committee for food safety australian government department of health and ageing office of chemical safety. health risk assessment for tri-solfen topical anaesthetic and antiseptic solution for pain relief in sheep hayes principles and methods of toxicology toxicology: the basic science of poisons. th edn mcgraw-hill the european agency for the evaluation of veterinary medicinal products, veterinary medicines evaluation unit. lidocaine summary report tri-solfen: anaesthetic and antiseptic solution for pain relief in sheep research permit (rp ) hayes principles and methods of toxicology national drugs and poisons schedule committee. scheduling proposals, final decisions and reasons australian animal welfare standards and guidelines echinococcus granulosus and other intestinal helminths: current status of prevalence and management in rural dogs of eastern australia publishing asia pty ltd, cremorne street, richmond vic. , australia. tel + ( ) . fax + ( ) . corporate citizenship wiley's corporate citizenship initiative seeks to address the environmental, social, economic, and ethical challenges faced in our business and which are important to our diverse stakeholder groups. we have made a long-term commitment to standardize and improve our efforts around the world to reduce our carbon footprint. follow our progress at www. wiley.com/go/citizenship journal customer services for ordering information, claims and any enquiry concerning your journal subscription please go to www.wileycustomerhelp.com/ask or contact your nearest office. prices include delivery of print journals to the recipient's address. delivery terms are delivered at place (dap); the recipient is responsible for paying any import duty or taxes. title to all issues transfers fob our shipping point, freight prepaid. we will endeavour to fulfil claims for missing or damaged copies within six months of publication, within our reasonable discretion and subject to availability. ltd. all journals are normally despatched direct from the country in which they are printed by surface air-lifted delivery. copyright © australian veterinary association. all rights reserved. no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior permission in writing from the copyright holder. this consent does not extend to other kinds of copying such as copying for general distribution, for advertising or promotional purposes, for creating new collective works or for resale. authorisation to photocopy items for internal and personal use is granted by the copyright holder for libraries and other users registered with their local reproduction rights organisation (rro), eg. copyright clearance center (ccc), rosewood drive, danvers, ma , usa (www.copyright.com), provided the appropriate fee is paid directly to the rro. this consent does not extend to other kinds of copying such as copying for general distribution, for advertising or promotional purposes, for creating new collective works or for resale. special requests should be addressed to permissionsuk@wiley.com disclaimer the publisher, the australian veterinary association and editors cannot be held responsible for errors or any consequences arising from the use of information contained in this journal; the views and opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect those of the publisher, the australian veterinary association and editors, neither does the publication of advertisements constitute any endorsement by the publisher, the australian veterinary association and editors of the products advertised. submission of photographs for publication will be held to imply that permission for publication has been obtained from the photographer and from the subject(s) of the image.avj.pi.feb trademarks ava and the ava logo are registered trademarks of the australian veterinary association limited. there is no evidence of local transmission of hydatids to people in tasmania. the tasmanian department of health and human services advises there has not been any detection of hydatids in people that can be related to infection acquired in tasmania after and evidence suggests that transmission to people ceased in tasmania in the early s. the tasmanian dogs reported by jenkins et al. were sampled as part of investigations into cattle infections detected at slaughter and as such comprise a sample that is heavily biased towards high-risk dogs. the prevalence detected in these dogs cannot be considered an indication of the broader situation in tasmanian dogs and also cannot be reliably compared with the results from a volunteer sample of dogs tested in other states. it is illegal in tasmania to feed livestock offal to dogs unless it has been cooked to the point of being commercially sterile. unfortunately, the section in the paper dealing with dog feeding practices did not differentiate tasmanian results from other states, so does not provide any indication of the level of compliance with this requirement.we are fortunate in tasmania that, unlike on the mainland, hydatids have never been detected in wildlife. this means that by continuing to educate at-risk groups not to feed livestock offal to dogs we have an effective tool for the control of the disease.tasmania will continue to follow up all detections of hydatids in livestock at slaughter to investigate and try to eliminate sources of infection. we will also continue to provide targeted information to dog and livestock owners about the steps they should take to prevent the disease. comment on this article at www.ava.com.au/ vic div hits a century! t he ava victorian division and more than of its members recently celebrated years with a dinner at parliament house. the premier of victoria, dr denis napthine also attended and is pictured below with victorian division president dr trish stewart.anne jackson editor in chief key: cord- -c jxj b authors: memish, ziad a.; al-tawfiq, jaffar a. title: middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection control: the missing piece? date: - - journal: am j infect control doi: . /j.ajic. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: c jxj b nan since the initial occurrence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in , , the disease had caused cases, with a case fatality rate of . %. as with any emerging infectious diseases of pandemic potential there is a concern of the global spread of the disease. it is therefore the first priority of the global public health community to develop and implement the required infection control practices to prevent the dissemination of these emerging organisms within health care facilities (hcfs) and worldwide based on the best available evidence and previous experience with similar or related groups of pathogens. the world health organization (who) through its expert technical committees was prompt in developing its first infection control guidelines based on available knowledge on the new emerging virus, but it mostly drew on experience from a similar virus, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars). these guidelines were updated based on accumulating experience from reports of mers-cov cases and clusters in the community and hcfs in affected countries and regions. this became particularly important with the third and largest wave of hcf-associated mers-cov cases reported from the kingdom of saudi arabia and united arab emirates in april-may . the initial cases were reported in hospital a in jeddah with subsequent appearance of cases in other hospitals. during the initial jeddah outbreak, there were involved hospitals: a-e. hospital a had cases: a community case and health care workers (hcws) assumed to have been infected from the first case. hospital b had community-acquired infections. hospital c reported community-acquired case. hospital d had fatal case in an hcw. the source of infection was believed to be the community; however, hospital-acquired infection could not be ruled out. hospital e was where the main nosocomial cluster occurred. hospital e is a large and busy referral teaching hospital where staff share accommodation. the emergency room is busy with an occupancy rate of % for the emergency beds. there were initially community cases reported. extensive screening of their contacts among hcws and family members identified laboratory-confirmed cases among hcws ( were asymptomatic), family member, and patient contacts. careful review of the recent increase in the number of cases revealed that about % were among hcws. of the initial recent mers-cov infected patients in jeddah, kingdom of saudi arabia, most ( %) were infected in the health care setting. of those, were hcws. , these cases occurred between february , , and april , , and were treated in hospitals in jeddah. most hospitals had or patients, and hospital e had cases. of these cases, % were primary cases. of the cases, % (including hcws) were from health careeacquired infection. an extensive screening of contacts showed that of household contacts ( . %) were polymerase chain reaction positive for mers-cov compared with . % of family contacts screened during - . because the largest percentage of secondary human-to-human transmission occurs in hcfs, the critical question remains of whether the recent large multi-hcf clustering in was caused by failure of the evidence-based recommended infection control measures outlined by the who or failure of its strict application in the affected facilities. the who continues to stress different approaches to infection control: contact precautions, droplet precautions, and airborne isolation. the use of contact precautions is thought to be needed because of the presence of diarrhea and vomiting in approximately % of cases. , , although, there was no documented transmission of mers-cov through this route, the virus was isolated from stool in a few patients. in addition, studies investigating environmental stability of mers-cov have revealed that mers-cov was stable at different temperature and humidity conditions and could still be recovered after hours, which supports the potential of mers-cov to be transmitted via contact or fomite transmission because of prolonged environmental presence. drawing on data from similar viruses, the potential transmission of viral respiratory infections by contacts was highlighted previously. because mers-cov is similar to sars in many aspects, patients with sars had high virus concentrations and prolonged virus excretion in stools. [ ] [ ] [ ] assessment of infection control practices applied in the affected hcfs during the peak of the outbreak conducted by local and international agencies concluded that the jeddah outbreak was related to poor compliance with the recommended basic infection control measures. the finding is supported by similar observations from sars. during the sars outbreak, the infection in health care settings was further exaggerated by overcrowding, short distance between patient beds, inadequate ventilation, use of aerosol-generating techniques, and during cardiopulmonary resuscitation. , the who report on infection control measures for severe acute respiratory infections also elucidated the major risks associated with high-risk aerosol-generating procedures. the recommendations to use droplet precautions for all patients admitted with confirmed or suspected mers-cov, except in aerosol-generating procedures, come from the understanding of the al-hasa outbreak. during that outbreak, a total of patients were recorded across health care settings. the outbreak was controlled with implementation of the basic infection control measures without airborne isolation. , the recommendation also relies on the fact that viral respiratory tract infections (eg, sars) spread by large ( mm in diameter) respiratory droplets. there is a clear seasonal disease activity because the zarqa, jordan, outbreak was in in april , the al-hasa outbreak was in april-may , and the jeddah and united arab emirates outbreak was in april-may (fig ) . therefore, exposure of hcws is more likely during these months because of increased community cases. , airborne infection isolation (aii) precautions should be applied during any aerosol-generating procedures as recommended by the who. , during the sars outbreak, aerosol-generating procedures associated with increased risk of transmission of sars were intubation, tracheotomy, and manual ventilation. indeed, in the only study addressing the risk of mers-cov transmission among hcws, the reported staff were involved in at least of the following highrisk procedures: intubation, airway suctioning, and sputum induction. the centers for disease control and prevention in the united states and european centre for disease prevention and control continue to recommend the application of aii precautions when caring for patients with mers-cov. these recommendations and the recommendations from other experts rely on the fear of the disease and high case fatality rate. in a recently published debate, the presented evidence supported the use of droplet precautions, not aerosol-generating procedures. a recent study showed that mers-cov rna was isolated from the barn of camels linked to a human mers-cov case suggesting possible aerosolization of mers-cov. the study had several limitations, including the following: it was only positive sample; there was a lack of internationally acceptable sampling strategies of the air, and the sequences are all % identical to all other sequences from the patient, camel, and laboratory, which suggests contamination; there was a lack of proof of the causation of aerosol dissemination of the virus; and finally, the viral load in the air sample was higher than the viral load in the camel's nose. in addition, there are no established methods for sampling airborne exposures. for the transmission of sars, and this is likely true with mers-cov, multiple factors play a role in the propagation of infection in a health care setting. these factors include the following: lax basic infection control procedures, aerosol-generating procedures, improper use of personal protective equipment, and mouth exposure to patients' body fluids and excretions. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] teasing out the most important factors contributing to hcw infection of sars, mers-cov, or emerging respiratory viruses is of paramount importance. in addition, the utilization of maximum respiratory protection is easily applied when there are a few cases, but this strategy puts a burden on any health care system when the number of cases increases substantially. when resources are available, using aii precautions in conjunction with contact precautions would provide the best protection for hcws. isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia insaudi arabia hospital outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus global alert and response (gar): middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) e update world health organization. global alert and response (gar): coronavirus infections european centre for disease prevention and control. epidemiological update middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) summary and literature updateeas of screening for middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in hospital patients and their healthcare worker and family contacts: a prospective descriptive study assessment of potential risk factors of infection of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) among health care personnel in a health care setting global alert and response (gar): infection prevention and control of epidemic-and pandemic-prone acute respiratory infections in health care epidemiological, demographic, and clinical characteristics of cases of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus disease from saudi arabia: a descriptive study middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: a case-control study of hospitalized patients clinical features and virological analysis of a case of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection stability of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) under different environmental conditions infection prevention and control measures for acute respiratory infections in healthcare settings: an update identification of a novel coronavirus in patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome severe acute respiratory syndrome the severe acute respiratory syndrome world health organization. who concludes mers-cov mission in saudi arabia sars: experience at prince of wales hospital, hong kong detection of airborne severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) coronavirus and environmental contamination in sars outbreak units hospital-associated middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections infection control and mers-cov in health-care workers travel implications of emerging coronaviruses: sars and mers-cov coronaviruses: severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus and middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in travelers global alert and response (gar): middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) e update aerosol generating procedures and risk of transmission of acute respiratory infections to healthcare workers: a systematic review middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections in health care workers european centre for disease prevention and control. epidemiological update: middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) debate on mers-cov respiratory precautions: surgical mask or n respirators detection of the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus genome in an air sample originating from a camel barn owned by an infected patient commentary: protecting health workers from airborne mers-covdlearning from sars which preventive measures might protect health care workers from sars? clinical management and infection control of sars: lessons learned cluster of cases of severe acute respiratory syndrome among toronto healthcare workers after implementation of infection control precautions: a case series transmission of severe acute respiratory syndrome during intubation and mechanical ventilation illness in intensive care staff after brief exposure to severe acute respiratory syndrome sars transmission among hospital workers in hong kong risk factors for sars transmission from patients requiring intubation: a multicenter investigation in toronto key: cord- - emc o n authors: madani, tariq a title: case definition and management of patients with mers coronavirus in saudi arabia date: - - journal: lancet infect dis doi: . /s - ( ) - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: emc o n nan the threat to global health security from emerging and re-merging respiratory tract infections will be ever present because of the genetic adaptability of microbes, and their ability to resist clinical interventions and public health measures aimed at their elimination. although much has been learned from previous outbreaks, present surveillance systems have their inherent weaknesses, and recent experiences with mers-cov show that pandemic preparedness still faces major political and scientifi c challenges. an important priority for control of infectious disease is to ensure that scientifi c and technological advances in molecular diagnostics and bioinformatics are well integrated into public health. more eff ective and wider partnerships based on equity and best ethical practice, across governments, health care, academia, industry, and with the public, are essential to eff ectively galvanise economic, political and scientifi c measures required to develop core capacities, including legislation, national focal points, and pandemic planning to reduce risk of global spread and reduce the burden of respiratory tract infectious diseases. an urgent need exists to establish trusting and eff ective meaningful collaborations between countries to tackle new emerging microbial threats. this will facilitate early and rapid detection of potential pandemic infectious diseases through public health actions within the framework of the international health regulations. outbreak and prevent human-to-human and animalto-human transmission; an appropriate management algorithm, including best-practice guidelines for accurate diagnosis, infection control, intensive care, emergency medicine, and treatment; prioritise research related to the mers-cov outbreak such as case-control and cohort studies, seroprevalence studies, and clinical trials; and to eff ectively monitor outbreak control activities. a continously operating command and control centre was established in the minister's office. in addition to the advisory council, nine further platforms were established: interministerial to coordinate efforts between the ministry of health (moh) and other concerned ministries; capacitybuilding to recruit and mobilise qualified staff to work in hospitals treating patients with mers-cov, increase the number of beds in intensive care units, and provide state-of-the-art machines such as extracorporeal membrane oxygenation to treat patients with respiratory failure refractory to conventional ventilation; public relations to communicate relevant information to the public, health-care workers, and local and international media; clinical operation to coordinate management of patients and transfers between hospitals; public health to collect data related to patients and their contacts; data analysis to enter and analyse data; epidemiological to provide consultations on data analysis and interpretation; laboratory to ensure fast and reliable diagnostic testing; and, infection control to oversee infection control practice and staff training activities. a mers referral hospital run by well trained staff was designated in riyadh, jeddah, and dammam to receive and manage all patients infected with mers-cov. the moh enforced strict infection prevention as new clinical information became available, a revision of the mers-cov case defi nition seemed appropriate. the new case defi nition (appendix) was developed based on reported health-care-associated mers-cov pneumonia (added as category in the new case defi nition) and non-respiratory characteristics of patients with confi rmed infection who fi rst presented with acute febrile dengue-like illness with body aches, leucopenia, and thrombocytopenia (added as category ). the new case defi nition added a fourth category for contacts of people with mers-cov who present with not only lower respiratory tract but also isolated upper respiratory tract features. this defi nition classifi ed the status of patients into three categories of suspect, probable, or confi rmed infection. the new mers-cov case defi nition was revised and approved by the advisory council after seeking external cdc expert opinion. an algorithm for mers-cov case management was developed (fi gure). according to this algorithm, patients with confi rmed mers-cov who have no evidence of pneumonia or who recover from pneu monia but remain positive for mers-cov, can be isolated at home after careful assessment of the home situation and suitability for isolation by the treating physician, highly trained social workers, or other health-care professionals by telephone or home visits. the cdc has released recommendations on how to assess the home situation and the advice to be given to patients on home isolation and his or her caregivers and household members, and also released guidance for the public, clinicians, and public-health authorities in the usa on control of the mers-cov infection. ministry of health, riyadh, saudi arabia; and department of medicine, faculty of medicine, king abdulaziz university, jeddah, saudi arabia tmadani@kau.edu.sa tim uyeki, and ray arthur for their critical review of the case defi nition and the mers-cov case management algorithm, and fadwa mushtaq for her secretarial assistance world health organization. who experts probe middle-eastern respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov world health organization. who revised interim case defi nition for reporting to who-middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov): as of us centers for disease control and prevention. interim infection prevention and control recommendations for hospitalized patients with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus first confi rmed cases of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infection in the united states, updated information on the epidemiology of mers-cov infection, and guidance for the public, clinicians, and public health authorities health-care-associated bacterial infections are an important cause of morbidity and mortality in critically ill patients, especially patients needing mechanical ventilation. decolonisation with topical antibiotics, such as selective digestive tract decontamination (sdd) or selective oropharyngeal decontamination (sod), eradicates potentially pathogenic bacteria, preventing ventilator-associated pneumonia and bacteraemia. in two dutch studies, , sdd and sod reduced mortality, intensive-care unit (icu) length of stay, icu-acquired bacteraemia, and carriage with antibiotic-resistant bacteria. accordingly, both measures were deemed cost eff ective. only studies that assessed the unit-wide implementation of sdd or sod provide evidence of a key: cord- -arw saeh authors: janies, daniel a.; ford, colby; damodaran, lambodhar; witter, zachary title: spread of middle east respiratory coronavirus: genetic versus epidemiological data date: - - journal: online j public health inform doi: . /ojphi.v i . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: arw saeh nan mers-cov was discovered in in the middle east and human cases around the world have been carefully reported by the who. mers-cov virus is a novel betacoronavirus closely related to a virus (neocov) hosted by a bat, neoromicia capensis. mers-cov infects humans and camels. in , mers-cov spread from the middle east to south korea which sustained an outbreak. thus, it is clear that the virus can spread among humans in areas in which camels are not husbanded. we calculated a phylogenetic tree from genomic sequences of mers-cov hosted by humans and camels using neocov as the outgroup. in order to evaluate the relative order and significance of geographic places in spread of the virus, we generated a transmission graph (figure ) based on methods described in . the graph indicates places as nodes and transmission events as edges. transmission direction and frequency are depicted with directed and weighted edges. betweenness centrality, represented by node size, measures the number of shortest paths from all nodes to others that pass through the corresponding node. places with high betweenness represent key hubs for the spread of the disease. in contrast, smaller nodes at the periphery of the network are less important for the spread of the disease. web scraping and mapping due to the journalistic style of the who data, it had to be structured such that mapping software can ingest the data. we used import.io to build the api. we provided the software a sample page, selected the data that is pertinent, then provided a list of all urls for the software. we used tableau to map the information both geographically and temporally. most important among the places in the mers-cov epidemic is saudi arabia as measured by the betweenness metric applied to a changes in place mapped to a phylogenetic tree. in figure , the circle representing saudi arabia is slightly larger compared to other location indicating its high importance in the epidemic. saudi arabia is the source of virus for jordan, england, qatar, south korea, uae, indiana, and egypt. the united arab emirates has a bidirectional connection with saudi arabia indicating the virus has spread between the two countries. the united arab emirates also has high betweenness. the united arab emirates is between saudi arabia and oman and between saudi arabia and france. south korea, and qatar have mild betweeness. south korea is between saudi arabia and china. qatar is between saudi arabia and florida. other locations (jordan, england, indiana, and egypt) have low betweenness as they have no outbound connections. certain articles include the infected individuals' countries of origin. ln constrast, many reports are in a lean format that includes a single paragraph that only summarizes the total number of cases for that country. if we build the api in a manner that recognizes features in the detailed reports, we can generate a map that draws lines from origin to reporting country and create visualizations. however, since only some of the articles contain this extra information, mapping in this manner will miss many of the cases that are reported in the lean format. our goal is to develop methods for understanding syndromic and pathogen genetic data on the spread of diseases. drawing parallels between the transmissions events in the who data and the genetic data has shown to be challenging. analyses of the genetic information can be used to imply a transmission pathway but it is hard to find epidemiological data in the public domain to corroborate the transmission pathway. there are rare cases in the who data that include travel history (e.g. "the patient is from riyadh and flew to the uk"). we conclude that epidemiological data combined with genetic data and metadata have strong potential to understand the geographic progression of an infectious disease. however, reporting standards need to be improved where travel history does not impinge on privacy. a transmission graph for mers-cov based on viral genomes and place of isolation metadata. the direction of transmission is represented by the arrow. the frequency of transmission is indicated by the number. the size of the nodes indicates betweenness. isds annual conference proceedings . this is an open access article distributed under the terms of the creative commons attribution-noncommercial . unported license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/ . /), permitting all non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. phylogenetics; transmission graph; mers-cov; syndromic; genetic phylogenetic visualization of the spread of h influenza a viruses janies e-mail: djanies@uncc research reported in this publication was supported by a unc research opportunities initiative grant to unc charlotte, nc state university, and unc-chapel hill. the data used in this report are publically available in genbank and the who. we gratefully acknowledge all the researchers and institutions who submitted prepublication data to the public domain. key: cord- -k m xz e authors: chertow, daniel s.; kindrachuk, jason title: influenza, measles, sars, mers, and smallpox date: - - journal: highly infectious diseases in critical care doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: k m xz e influenza, measles, sars, mers, and smallpox illnesses are caused by highly infectious viral pathogens that induce critical illness. these biologically diverse viruses enter and replicate within host cells triggering viral- and host-mediated damage that results in pneumonia and multiorgan failure in severe cases. early case identification and strict infection control limit healthcare transmission. vaccination allowed smallpox eradication and limits global measles and seasonal influenza mortality. while sars-coronavirus (cov) is no longer circulating, mers-cov and zoonotic influenza viruses, with pandemic potential, remain persistent threats. supportive critical care is the mainstay of treatment for severe disease due to these viral infections. measles virus is a pleomorphic, enveloped, negative-sense, single-stranded rna virus of family paramyxoviridae of approximately nm to nm in diameter [ ] . measles virus causes mild to severe illness during seasonal outbreaks in endemic areas and intermittent outbreaks in nonendemic area [ ] . measles virus codes for six structural and two nonstructural proteins (fig. . b) [ ] . hemagglutinin (h) and fusion (f) glycoproteins project from the viral surface and facilitate viral binding to cellular receptors and fusion with the host cell membrane, respectively. matrix (m) protein underlies the envelope providing structure. the inner nucleocapsid is composed of rna coated by nucleoprotein (n), bound by the polymerase complex which includes the large (l) polymerase protein, and phosphoprotein (p), a polymerase cofactor. the remaining nonstructural proteins include c and v. coronaviruses are spherical, enveloped, positive-sense, single-stranded rna viruses of family coronaviridae of approximately nm in diameter [ ] . coronaviruses are the causative agents of an estimated % of upper and lower respiratory tract infections in humans resulting in rhinitis, pharyngitis, sinusitis, bronchiolitis, and pneumonia [ ] . while coronaviruses are often associated with mild disease (e.g., hcov- e, hcov-oc , hcov-nl , hcov-hku ), severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov), a lineage b betacoronavirus, and middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov), a lineage c betacoronavirus, are associated with severe and potentially fatal respiratory infection [ , ] . sars-and mers-cov transcribe and subgenomic rnas, respectively, which encode for the spike (s), envelope (e), membrane (m), and nucleocapsid (n) structural proteins (fig. . c) [ ] . s, e, and m are all integrated into the hostderived lipid envelope, and s facilitates host cell attachment to angiotensinconverting enzyme (ace)- receptors for sars-cov and dipeptidyl peptidase (dpp)- receptors for mers-cov [ , ] . the n protein encapsidates the viral genome to form the helical nucleocapsid. the viral replicase-transcriptase complex is made up of nonstructural proteins (nsp - ) including a unique proofreading exoribonuclease that reduces the accumulation of genome mutations [ ] . poxviruses are oval-to-brick-shaped double-stranded dna viruses of family poxviridae that range in size from to nm [ ] . viruses within genus orthopoxvirus that cause human disease include cowpox virus (cpxv), monkeypox virus (mpxv), vaccinia virus (vacv), and variola virus (varv), the etiologic agent of smallpox [ ] . poxviruses contain a biconcave viral core where the dna genome, dnadependent rna polymerase, and enzymes necessary for particle uncoating reside ( fig. . d ) [ ] . this nucleosome is surrounded by a core membrane that is flanked by two proteinaceous lateral bodies. a single lipid membrane surrounds the cellassociated form of the mature virion (mv). a second host-derived lipid envelope covers the extracellular virion (ev) [ , ] . poxvirus genomes are comprised of a large, linear double-stranded viral dna genome that encodes ~ genes. highly conserved structural genes are predominantly found in the middle of the genome, whereas variable virulence factor genes that function in immune evasion, virulence, and viral pathogenesis are found at the termini of the genome [ ] . wild aquatic birds are natural reservoirs for nearly all influenza a virus subtypes, which spread to domestic avian species and mammals, including humans [ ] . h n and h n subtypes are exceptions in that they have only been isolated from bats [ , ] . certain h and h subtypes are highly pathogenic to domestic poultry when transmitted from wild birds, known as highly pathogenic avian influenza (hpai) viruses [ ] . hpai viruses cause spillover infections in humans that may be severe or fatal. examples include outbreaks of h n and h n hpai viruses in asia with high case fatality among humans, although limited human-tohuman transmission [ , ] has been reported. hpai virus adaptations might lead to sustained human-to-human transmission, and so poultry outbreaks are managed by flock depopulation [ ] . influenza a subtypes isolated in swine include h to h , h , and n and n . subtypes that spillover into humans cause mild to severe illness and are known as swine "variant" viruses [ ] . currently circulating seasonal influenza a subtypes h n and h n and influenza b viruses, yamagata or victoria lineage, cause annual epidemics during fall through spring in temperate regions and infections throughout the year in the tropics [ ] . antigenic drift of h and n surface glycoproteins drives annual epidemics. from to , seasonal influenza caused approximately million illnesses, million hospitalizations, and , deaths in the united states alone [ ] . when two or more influenza a viruses infect a common host, such as a bird or pig, individual gene segments may recombine to form a novel virus, known as antigenic shift. influenza pandemics occur when novel viruses emerge into an immunologically naïve population and become adapted for sustained human-to-human spread. the "spanish" influenza pandemic was the most severe on record, resulting in an estimated million deaths [ ] . less severe pandemics occurred in , , and . in an effort to improve preparedness and response to seasonal, pandemic, and zoonotic influenza, the world health organization (who) conducts global surveillance of influenza a and b isolates (fig. . a) [ ] . measles is pathogenic for humans and nonhuman primates, although sustained transmission occurs only among humans raising potential for global elimination [ ] . historically, measles infected an estimated % of children by age years, resulting in approximately million global deaths each year [ ] . with the introduction of the measles vaccine in and advances in global vaccination programs, measles cases and mortality have drastically declined (fig. . b ). by , % of children worldwide had received at least one dose of the measles vaccine by age year, and during - , global measles mortality decreased by %, preventing an estimated million deaths [ ] . of the known measles genotypes, only five were detected in circulation during - . despite these gains, measles remains endemic in many regions of the world including africa, western pacific, south east asia, and europe, and measles has resurged in previously low-incidence areas (e.g., regions within europe and the americas) with epidemics attributable to importation of cases and suboptimal immunization coverage [ ] [ ] [ ] . an estimated % population immunity is required to prevent measles transmission within communities, a prerequisite for global elimination [ ] . chinese horseshoe bats are the putative reservoir for sars-cov, and dromedary camels are thought to be the reservoir for mers-cov [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . animal-to-human transmission likely occurs following direct contact with intermediate hosts [ , ] . during the - sars epidemic, cases and deaths were reported from countries with no cases reported since ( fig. . c) [ ] . human-to-human transmission of sars-cov occurred primarily in healthcare settings with healthcare workers comprising % and > % of reported cases in china and canada, respectively [ ] . mers was first reported in saudi arabia in with > cases and > deaths reported from countries through [ ] . while most cases have been reported from the arabian peninsula, an imported case to south korea in resulted in a large outbreak in multiple healthcare facilities [ ] . mers transmission occurs primarily in healthcare facilities and to a lesser degree within households [ , ] . while the only known reservoir for varv is humans, it has been postulated that the virus emerged from an ancestral rodent-borne poxvirus more than , years ago [ , ] . numerous smallpox epidemics have occurred throughout recorded history including more than million fatalities during the twentieth century alone [ ] [ ] [ ] . smallpox was eventually eradicated following the implementation of the smallpox eradication program by the who from to ( fig. . d) which was facilitated by the absence of a zoonotic reservoir for varv [ ] . influenza viruses are transmitted by large respiratory droplets by coughing, sneezing, or talking or through contact with infected surfaces [ ] . influenza viruses bind to sugar moieties on the surface of airway epithelial cells where early viral replication, propagation, and shedding occur during an average - days of incubation period [ ] [ ] [ ] . peak viral replication typically occurs within days of symptom onset and resolves within - days, lasting longer in children and immunocompromised hosts [ ] [ ] [ ] . on average one person infects -one to two additional people; however, this reproductive number (r ) varies by viral strain and social and environmental factors [ ] . viral infection impairs the airway mucosal barrier and disrupts the alveolar-capillary membrane contributing to leakage of fluid and inflammatory cells into the alveolar space which impairs gas exchange resulting in hypoxemia [ , ] . bacterial coinfection often complicates severe cases contributing to respiratory failure and death, with staphylococcus aureus and streptococcus species as predominant copathogens [ ] . seasonal influenza virus infection is largely limited to the respiratory tract; however, h and h hpai viruses have a polybasic cleave site within the hemagglutinin allowing for replication outside of the respiratory tract [ , ] . infection with one strain of influenza does not confer complete immunity to other strains or subtypes [ ] . measles is among the most highly contagious respiratory infections, spread by exposure to large respiratory droplets through coughing, sneezing, or talking; by indirect contact with infected surfaces; or by small infectious droplets that can remain suspended in air for up to hours [ , ] . respiratory tract dendritic cells, lymphocytes, and alveolar macrophages are early targets of infection where during an average -to -day incubation period measles replicates and spreads to local lymphatics and respiratory epithelium and then disseminates in blood via infected lymphocytes to epithelial and endothelial cells in most organs [ ] [ ] [ ] . the infectious period begins with fever onset and extends for several days after rash appears [ ] . the estimated r of measles is - dependent upon host susceptibility and social and environmental factors [ ] . measles infects and disrupts tissues throughout the body; however, severe disease is primarily due to lower respiratory tract and neurological complications [ ] . natural measles infection confers lifelong immunity, and passive transfer of maternal antibodies protects newborns during the early postnatal period [ ] . individuals who recover from measles infection are at increased risk of secondary infection [ , ] . sars-cov is transmitted by large respiratory droplets and by contact with infected surfaces. epidemiologic data also support small droplet airborne transmission of sars-cov although the estimated r of . - . argues against this being a predominate route of spread [ , ] . sars-cov binds to angiotensin-converting enzyme (ace)- receptors on respiratory epithelial cells, pneumocytes, and alveolar macrophages resulting in diffuse alveolar damage and respiratory failure [ , ] . sars is a systemic infection with viremia detected in most cases affecting multiple cell types and organs [ , ] . acute kidney injury is multifactorial with evidence of acute tubule necrosis, vasculitis, and glomerular fibrosis, and central nervous system manifestations are at least in part attributable to direct infection of neurons resulting in edema and degeneration [ ] . mers-cov is transmitted by large respiratory droplets and by contact with infected surfaces with an estimated r of < to > outside of versus within healthcare settings, respectively [ ] . mers-cov binds dipeptidyl peptidase (dpp ) on respiratory epithelial cells and pneumocytes where it undergoes productive replication during a - days incubation period [ ] . viral shedding from the lower respiratory tract may persist for weeks [ , ] . viremia, while not documented in all cases, is associated with severe disease and productive infection of dcs, and macrophages is thought to facilitate immune dysregulation [ , ] . dpp is broadly expressed on cells outside of the lung; however, few autopsy data are available to define viral distribution [ , ] . varv is transmitted primarily by large respiratory droplets and to a lesser degree through contact with contaminated objects such as scabs, bedding, or clothing or by airborne small respiratory droplets [ , ] . varv is thought to replicate in airway epithelium and spread to regional lymph nodes [ , ] . varv replicates within lymph nodes and disseminates via the bloodstream seeding distant sights including skin, spleen, bone marrow, liver, kidney, and other organs [ ] . fever manifests following an average days incubation, and rash follows fever by - days, concurrent with high-level viral shedding from oropharyngeal secretions [ , ] . the estimated r of smallpox is between . and [ ] . high-level viremia is detected more often with hemorrhagic compared with ordinary type smallpox, although exact mechanisms of organ failure observed in fatal case are not well defined [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . influenza infection manifests as acute onset of fever, chills, malaise, headache, and myalgias following an average - days asymptomatic incubation period [ ] . most infections are self-limited resolving within - weeks. upper or lower airway complications include otitis media, sinusitis, bronchitis, and pneumonia with or without bacterial coinfection [ , , ] . risk factors for severe infection include age > years or < years; pregnancy; preexisting respiratory, cardiac, neurologic, or metabolic conditions; immunosuppression; and obesity. progressive lethargy and shortness of breath, typically within days of symptom onset, suggest development of lower respiratory tract complications which may rapidly progress to respiratory failure and death in severe cases [ ] . pneumonia due to influenza infection alone versus influenza and bacterial coinfection cannot be reliably distinguished by clinical or radiological grounds, and so a high index of suspicion is needed. influenza complications outside of the respiratory tract include exacerbation of underlying heart disease including ischemic heart disease and heart failure, myocarditis, encephalopathy, and encephalitis [ ] . measles infection manifests by acute onset fever, coryza, conjunctivitis, and cough [ ] . small white papules, koplik spots, appear on the buccal mucosa within days of fever onset, followed by development of diffuse maculopapular rash or days later. diarrhea commonly begins shortly following rash onset and may result in dehydration. symptoms typically resolve within days of fever onset in self-limited illness. groups at increased risk for measles complications include malnourished infants and those with vitamin a deficiency, adults > years old, and immunocompromised individuals [ ] . respiratory complications include otitis media, laryngotracheobronchitis (croup), and pneumonia. pneumonia, often complicated by bacterial coinfection, is the most common severe complication of measles contributing to respiratory failure and death [ , ] . predominant bacterial copathogens include streptococcus pneumonia, staphylococcus aureus, and haemophilus influenzae. three rare but severe neurologic complications occur [ ] . acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (adem) is a demyelinating autoimmune process that occurs within weeks of acute illness in approximately in cases. adem is characterized by fevers, seizures, and neurologic deficits. measles inclusion body encephalitis is a progressive lethal brain infection occurring within months of acute illness primarily among individuals with impaired cellular immunity. subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (sspe) occurs - years following initial infection resulting in seizures and cognitive and motor decline resulting in death. sspe affects an estimated in , infants under year of age and is attributed to host responses to defective viral particle production in the brain. following an average -day incubation period, sars-cov infection presents with fevers, chills, dry cough, headache, malaise, and dyspnea commonly followed by watery diarrhea [ ] [ ] [ ] . age > years and pregnancy are associated with severe disease manifested by progressive respiratory failure within weeks of illness onset [ , ] . common laboratory features of sars included lymphopenia, thrombocytopenia, abnormal coagulation parameters, and elevated lactate dehydrogenase, alanine aminotransferase, and creatine kinase levels [ ] [ ] [ ] . acute kidney injury and proteinuria were observed in % and % of patients, respectively [ ] . initial symptoms of mers-cov infection include fever, chills, cough, shortness of breath, myalgia, and malaise following a mean incubation period of days [ ] . gastrointestinal symptoms, including vomiting and diarrhea, occur in onethird of patients [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the median times from symptom onset to hospitalization, icu admission, and death are , , and days, respectively [ ] . mers patients present with a rapidly progressing pneumonia requiring mechanical ventilation and additional organ support with the first week of illness [ ] . severe disease has been linked to comorbidities including diabetes mellitus ( %), chronic renal disease ( %), hypertension ( %), chronic cardiac disease ( %), chronic pulmonary disease ( %), and obesity ( %) [ ] . the median age of those with confirmed mers is years with a male-to-female ratio of . : [ ] . laboratory abnormalities include lymphopenia, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, elevated serum creatinine levels consistent with acute kidney injury, and elevated liver enzymes [ , , , , ] . high lactate levels and consumptive coagulopathy have also been reported [ , ] . chest radiographic abnormalities are due to viral pneumonitis with or without secondary bacterial pneumonia, and acute kidney injury occurs in up to % of patients [ , , , [ ] [ ] [ ] . as the smallpox disease course was related to the clinical presentation of disease, rao proposed a clinical classification system [ ] that was later adopted by the who in [ ] . ordinary type smallpox was the most common clinical type of smallpox. the incubation period was - days and was followed by fever onset ( . - . °c), headaches, backaches, vomiting, and diarrhea [ ] . lesions first appeared on mucous membranes (including the tongue, palate, and pharynx) ~ day prior to macular rash development, where lesions began on the face followed by proximal regions of the extremities, the trunk, and the distal extremities. lesion development followed a centrifugal dispersion pattern, typically most dense on the face, with papules appearing within days of macular rash development. papules became vesicular ~ - days later followed by a pustular stage ( - days postrash) that peaked ~ days postrash. pustule resolution quickly followed and was accompanied by lesion flattening, fluid reabsorption, hardening, and scab formation ( - days postrash). rao proposed for ordinary type smallpox to be further subdivided based on the macular rash pattern [ ] . these included discrete ordinarytype smallpox, characterized by discrete skin lesions; confluent ordinary-type smallpox, where pustular skin lesions were confluent on the face and extremities; and semiconfluent ordinary-type smallpox, where skin lesions were confluent on the face but disparate over the rest of the body. modified-type smallpox, where lesions were less numerous than in ordinary-type smallpox, was primarily associated with vaccinated individuals and had an accelerated nonfatal disease course [ ] . flattype and hemorrhagic-type smallpox were the most lethal forms of the disease but were also very rare (~ % and % of patients, respectively) [ ] . flat-type smallpox had high cfrs in both unvaccinated and vaccinated patients ( % and %, respectively). hemorrhagic-type smallpox was nearly % fatal in both vaccinated and unvaccinated individuals, and death normally came prior to macular rash development. the clinical symptoms of flat-type smallpox were more severe during the prodromal period and did not subside. skin lesions were flat and often black or dark purple. respiratory complications were common and patients were febrile throughout disease. death typically occurred - days post-fever onset. hemorrhagic-type smallpox could be divided into early and late hemorrhagic-type smallpox. the early form was characterized by hemorrhage (primarily subconjunctival) early in the disease course. generalized erythema, petechiae, and ecchymosis within days of fever and flat matter lesions formed across the entire body surface. lesions turned purple by day with death by day as a result of cardiac and pulmonary complications. in the late form, hemorrhages occurred following rash development and death followed between and days post-fever onset. in healthcare settings, patients under evaluation for influenza should be isolated, and standard, droplet, and contact precautions should be implemented [ ] . traditional antigen-based rapid diagnostic assays (rdas) for influenza lack sensitivity and cannot be relied upon to rule out infection [ ] . newer antigen-based rdas that employ a digital scan of the test strip, and molecular assays that employ isothermal amplification technology have improved sensitivity and specificity that more closely approximates highly sensitive and specific reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (rt-pcr)-based assays [ ] . acceptable sample types for influenza testing include nasopharyngeal swab or wash and bronchoalveolar lavage specimens. individuals suspected of zoonotic influenza infection should have case evaluation and specimen testing coordinated through local or state public health authorities. measles should be considered in patients without preexisting immunity and a compatible febrile rash illness. travel to a region with ongoing measles transmission or exposure to other individuals with a febrile rash illness should raise suspicion. patients under evaluation for measles require isolation and implementation of standard, airborne, and contact precautions. local or state health authorities should be contacted within hours to assist with confirmatory testing, case finding, and infection control. measles is typically confirmed by measles-specific igm serology or detection of measles rna in a nasopharyngeal, throat, or urine specimen by rt-pcr [ ] . a fourfold or greater rise in measles igg titers between acute and convalescent samples tested or more weeks apart can assist with diagnostic uncertainty. virus can also be cultured from respiratory, blood, and urine specimens in appropriate public health laboratories. while sars is no longer circulating, mers should be suspected in individuals with a compatible febrile illness and an epidemiological risk factor [ ] . risk factors include travel to the arabian peninsula or contact with a confirmed or suspected case within days of symptom onset. patients under evaluation for mers require isolation and implementation of standard, airborne, and contact precautions. confirmatory testing and infection control should be coordinated through local or state health authorities. mers may be confirmed in designated public health laboratories by rt-pcr testing of lower respiratory tract specimens [ ] . multiple other specimen types including upper respiratory tract samples, serum, and stool should also be collected for testing. serologic testing can be used to evaluate for suspected infection among individuals no longer shedding virus [ , ] . smallpox has not been observed in over years; however, concerns remain for use as a bioweapon. major and minor criteria have been established to assist clinicians in recognition of smallpox [ ] . individuals under evaluation should be isolated, and standard, airborne, and contact precautions should be implemented. local or state health authorities should be contacted to assist with confirmatory testing and public health interventions. pcr identification of variola dna or isolation of the virus from a clinical specimen is required to confirm a diagnosis in specialized highcontainment laboratories. annual seasonal influenza vaccination is recommended in the united states for all individuals aged months or older and has been associated with decreased risk of pneumonia and death, particularly among high-risk groups [ ] [ ] [ ] . seasonal influenza vaccination does not provide protection against novel strains. consequently, efforts are underway to develop a vaccine that would protect against most or all influenza strains [ ] . three classes of drugs are licensed for the treatment of influenza in the united states [ ] . adamantanes, including amantadine and rimantadine, are not currently recommended given resistance of circulating seasonal strains. baloxavir morboxil, a cap-dependent endonuclease inhibitor, was recently approved for the treatment of uncomplicated influenza [ ] . neuraminidase inhibitors (nai) include oral oseltamivir, inhaled zanamivir, and intravenous peramivir. prophylactic use of nais is recommended in unvaccinated individuals with risk factors for severe disease and during institutional outbreaks to limit spread. therapeutic use is recommended for individuals with suspected or confirmed influenza that have developed or are at high risk for influenza complications [ ] . influenza complications, including respiratory and multiorgan failure, are managed with supportive care. bacterial coinfection should be considered and empirically treated early pending results of microbiologic testing among severe cases. measles can be effectively prevented through vaccination, typically given in combination with vaccines for rubella (mr), mumps (mmr), or varicella (mmr-v). who recommends the first dose of measles vaccine be administered at or months of age in high and low prevalence settings, respectively [ ] . a second dose should be administered after a minimum of -week interval. nonimmune individuals that have been exposed to measles should receive post-exposure prophylaxis with mmr or immunoglobulin within hours or days, respectively, although not concurrently [ ] . clinical management of patients with measles consists of fluid, electrolyte, and nutritional support and early recognition and treatment of bacterial coinfection [ ] . two doses of vitamin a in children under years have been associated with reduced risk of pneumonia and death [ ] . who recommends administering , iu of vitamin a daily for days in children aged year and older, with reduced dosing in younger infants [ ] . there are currently no licensed therapeutics or vaccines for sars or mers. consequently, supportive care is the mainstay of treatment [ ] . renal replacement therapy is frequently required in severe illness [ , , ] . empiric antibiotics are often administered given potential for secondary bacterial infection. ribavirin and pegylated interferon alpha b have been administered to mers patients, although effectiveness data is lacking [ ] . aerosol-generating procedures including endotracheal intubation are associated with increased risk of healthcare worker infection necessitating strict adherence to infection control measures, including use of eye protection in addition to standard, airborne, and contact precautions [ ] . while routine smallpox vaccination ceased at the end of the smallpox eradication program, it is still employed for those at increased risk for exposure. first-generation vaccines comprise a significant proportion of both the us national and global vaccine stockpiles [ ] . however, first-generation vaccines carry high risk of adverse events due to use of replication-competent vacv and potential manufacturing contaminants. second-generation smallpox vaccines have reduced concerns for contaminants and are expected to have similar protective efficacy as first-generation vaccines. acam ® has garnered us food and drug administration licensure for vaccination of those at high risk for orthopoxvirus exposure and is part of the us strategic national stockpile [ ] . acam ® and the lister-derived vaccines rivm and elstree-bn also contribute to the global stockpile. imvamune (mva), a third-generation vaccine, is licensed in europe and canada and is part of the us national stockpile. passive immunization with vig has been employed to treat complications of vaccinations [ , ] . there has also been increasing interest in the development and licensure of small molecule antivirals for treatment of orthopoxvirus infections. cmx (brincidofovir), a dna synthesis inhibitor, has demonstrated protection against lethal varv in nonhuman primates [ ] and has been granted ophan drug designation while also being included in the us strategic national stockpile. st- (tecovirimat), which inhibits viral egress, has potent (ic < . μm) and selective (cc > mm) inhibitory activities against multiple orthopoxvirues [ ] , is the only 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infection ribavirin and interferon alfa- a for severe middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection: a retrospective cohort study aerosol generating procedures and risk of transmission of acute respiratory infections to healthcare workers: a systematic review smallpox vaccine and its stockpile in clinical guidance for smallpox vaccine use in a postevent vaccination program the efficacy of vaccinial immune globulin. a -year study experience of anti-vaccinia immunoglobulin in the united kingdom efficacy of tecovirimat (st- ) in nonhuman primates infected with variola virus (smallpox) an orally bioavailable antipoxvirus compound (st- ) inhibits extracellular virus formation and protects mice from lethal orthopoxvirus challenge key: cord- -sow k m authors: an, jisun; kwak, haewoon title: multidimensional analysis of the news consumption of different demographic groups on a nationwide scale date: - - journal: social informatics doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: sow k m examining , news articles that are the most popular for different demographic groups in daum news (the second most popular news portal in south korea) during the whole year of , we provided multi-level analyses of gender and age differences in news consumption. we measured such differences in four different levels: ( ) by actual news items, ( ) by section, ( ) by topic, and ( ) by subtopic. we characterized the news items at the four levels by using the computational techniques, which are topic modeling and the vector representation of words and news items. we found that differences in news reading behavior across different demographic groups are the most noticeable in subtopic level but neither section nor topic levels. demographics play an important role in news consumption. what women in their fifties read is very different from that of men in their twenties. understanding such differences in news consumption can potentially help journalists to pitch news articles better, help editors to decide which ones to put on the front page, and help computer scientists design new algorithms for recommending articles. that is the reason why news consumption of demographic groups has been actively studied in both the domains of journalism study and computer science [ , , , , , ] . the previous literature regarding news consumption in the study of journalism has mainly focused on the gender differences in the consumption of news genres [ , , ] primarily due to the lack of other detailed data. on the other hand, in computer science, previous studies have mainly focused on developing models for predicting clicks and for news recommendations at an individual level with large-scale data [ , , ] . in this study, we attempt to bridge these two worlds and uncover the differences in news consumption across demographic groups by large-scale news consumption data. specifically, we aim to quantify such differences in four dimensions: actual news items, sections, topics, and subtopics. while the existence of the "differences" is expected, our multidimensional analysis shows how such differences can be differently captured in each dimension. for this study, we collected and analyzed the daily top news items for each gender (male and female) and age group ( s, s, s, s, and s) in daum news, the second most popular news portal service in south korea, for the entire year of . the number of the unique news items collected is , . daum news can have the accurate, not self-reported, information on the user's age and gender based on one's social security number. this practice is not common in the western web services. in south korea, to join a website, it is mandatory for identity verification to provide the social security number that contains your birth year and gender. also, daum news has a strong user base that reads news with a logged-in status mainly because daum news offers a wide range of services, which include e-mail, internet community, or messenger, for example, based on the logged-in status. sex-typed media preference has long been investigated for various types of media. regarding movie and tv genres, studies have found that women are more likely to watch tragedies, soaps, dramas, medical serials, and romances; men, on the other hand, tend to prefer horror, sports, and action and adventure content [ , , , , ] . psychological research suggests that such sex-typed media selections might well be rooted in societal gender stereotypes -men are expected to achieve more, and women are expected to interact more [ ] . scholars of the study of journalism have examined how demographics, such as sex or age, relate to news-seeking behavior and news preferences [ ] . when attending to news, the sexes typically pursue remarkably different interests -in terms of topics, men tend to follow news on politics, sports, and business and finance, whereas women turn to news about community and health issues [ , ] . also, women read more about social/interpersonal issues than men, and men read more about achievement/performance than women [ ] . scholars suggested that the origin of gender difference in news consumption is not considered from biological differences but from the psychological traits led by the sex-typed socialization [ ] . while news preferences have been extensively studied for the news section, little is known about the topic or subtopic preferences of different demographic groups' news consumption. the key reason for this oversight is mainly due to a lack of data. most of the previous work is based on surveys or experiments in the laboratory setting [ , , ] . by contrast, our work relies on the longitudinal data collection where a huge number of korean internet news readers are unobtrusively monitored. since news sites have been publishing online, we now have access to large-scale data of individual news consumption with detailed personal profiles. computer scientists have addressed news-related questions but with different interests and approaches from scholars in journalism or communication studies. news-related research by computer scientists has predominantly focused on modeling news sharing behavior [ ] [ ] [ ] , news diffusion [ , , , , , , , , ] , and modeling the relative prominence of items or topics [ , , , , , ] . computer scientists also have exploited news consumption patterns of individuals mainly for building a better news recommendation system to give readers a personalized experience when reading the news. systems that make recommendations according to demographic classes were initially introduced [ ] . more recently, the demographic information has often been used as a feature of those models [ , ] . however, the demographic differences in news consumption have not been fully uncovered, particularly in different dimensions of news such as topic or subtopic. online news consumption in south korea has increased drastically. about % of south korean people access news online at least once a week . given the % internet and % smartphone penetrations, such a drastic increase makes sense. web portal sites such as naver and daum are especially popular digital news platforms. due to the extreme popularity of these portals, news providers in south korea have been eager to publish their content via portals for years. in , naver and daum formed the committee for the evaluation of news partnership, complete with a set of ethical standards to help decide which providers should be eligible to supply news to portals. as a result, we can reasonably say that news providers and the news readers of daum news are representative of the general south korean news media and population, respectively. daum is the second largest web portal in south korea, followed by naver. daum plays a significant role in providing a place for accessing online news to south korea; % of south koreans ( . m users) access daum news on a weekly basis. daum news provides different ways to explore news articles, for example, by its recency, by current issues, by regions, or by popularity based on the number of views or the number of comments. a unique feature of daum news is that it provides the top most popular news articles on a particular day for each gender and age group, which are [male or female] and [ s, s, s, s, and s and above]. we note that naver does not provide a ranked list of news articles by different demographic groups, and thus, we focus on daum news data even though it is the second largest news portal in south korea. we crawled the top most popular articles for different age and gender groups of each day for a one-year period ( / / − / / ). we carefully designed our crawlers not to degrade the performance of daum's web servers. in our data set, we have , listed news items with , unique news titles. for each news item, we have its unique item id, demographic group, rank in the group, title, summary, news source, and published date. we note that news articles about entertainment and sports are not included in the lists due to daum news's policies. we need to determine the section, topic, and subtopic of the news items we collected. next, we will briefly describe the methodology that we adopt for the analysis. defining the operational coding scheme for news has been a central issue for communication studies. in this study, we introduce four dimensions of news (sections, topics, subtopics, and individual news items) by which we investigate news consumption patterns. the diagram of the four dimensions of news is illustrated in fig. . the first dimension is the news section (e.g., society, politics, etc.), which is a category of news often adopted in newsrooms and which has been popularly used for sex-typed news preference studies. next, a news topic refers to a specific happening (e.g., a mers outbreak in south korea or child abuse case in a daycare center). within a topic, we further explore subtopics by distinguishing different aspects of a topic. finally, there is a dimension where all individual news items are aligned. we then can characterize the entire news collection (e.g., a news collection of south korea in ) according to the four dimensions. the most common way of categorizing news is perhaps to use a news section as defined by the news media. especially for online news, which news section a news article belongs to can be inferred from the meta information embedded in the news urls. for example, the url http://media.daum.net/society/labor/ newsview?newsid= l is categorized as "society." we parsed all of the collected urls and extracted the section information. figure shows the proportion of news items for each demographic group for each news section. in our dataset, daum news has seven different news sections, which are culture, digital, economic, foreign, life, politics, and society. we note that the entertainment and sports sections are not included in the dataset. we observe that female groups are more alike than male groups in terms of news section preference. for female groups, society and culture were the two most popular news sections. for age male and age male groups, society, foreign, and politics were more popular than the others. then, for the age male and age male groups, their interests were digital (i.e., technology news), economics, and politics. we also find one noticeable behavior of the age male group: % of their top most popular news items over a year are about politics. these news section preferences align well with previous work on sex-typed news consumption observed internationally [ , ] . the news section category provided by daum news abstractly captures the high-level topic of a news item. in this study, we go beyond a mere news section preference and examine whether the gender-or age-specific topic or subtopic preferences exist. to do that, we need to understand the semantic content of the news articles. for example, news about "violence at daycare" and "a killer of his family" are both categorized under society, but they are two different topics. we automatically discover a topic-specific categorical structure from a set of titles and classify each news article based on it. topic modeling techniques such as probabilistic latent semantic indexing (plsi) [ ] , latent dirichlet allocation (lda) [ ] , and hierarchical dirichlet processes (hdp) [ ] can be employed to induce topics from the set of news titles. we manually compare the three methods in terms of the interpretability of the induced topics and the quality of the clustered news titles for each of the included topics. for two slices of subsets, may and october , we examined the top topics resulting from the three methods with their top words. for our dataset, plsi's top topics were mapped more clearly with news events in the corresponding month than lda's and hdp's topics were. one possible reason is that lda and hdp were penalized more for modeling topics with short titles than plsi was. thus, we use plsi to detect candidate topics. there are also specialized topic models for short texts, such as a biterm topic model (btm) [ ] , and we leave it as a future work to improve our topic categorization method. one problem with these topic modeling techniques is that they are not timesensitive. the following two news titles, "anyang killer -a man killed his family" and "wife killer -a man killed his wife but did not show any grief," are likely to be categorized as the same topic even though one event happened in january , and the other happened in october . to handle this problem, we first split our dataset by month, and then we build a plsi model for each of the monthly datasets. each plsi model induces topics, giving us , candidate topics in total. each topic is represented by word distributions. we then aggregate similar candidate topics by examining the representative keywords for topics (words with the highest probabilities). in our case, we aggregate topics if they share more than three top words. after this, we classify each news title as one of these candidate topics based on the score given by the plsi model. finally, we split every candidate topic further into multiple topics by considering the publication times of news items. only news items published for days in a row are tagged as the same topic, resulting in , topics. news titles without any matching candidate topic are considered stand-alone topics. altogether, we have , topics. across all topics, the most popular news event is the middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) outbreak in south korea. we find , matching news items regarding mers. the most frequent words are mers, a vice prime minister, confirmed patients, infected, hospital, daejeon, tourists, etc. validation of topic categorization. for the purpose of validation, we crossmatched the set of news items extracted by the topic-model-based clustering method with the set of news items extracted by a keyword-based method. we focus on one particular news topic, mers outbreak in south korea. the outbreak lasted for a month and a half starting on may th. a total of cases occurred during the outbreak, with a death toll of . due to the outbreak, , schools were temporarily closed, and , people were quarantined. mers was the most sensational news event in south korea in . we extract news items whose title contained the word "mers", which results in news items. by including more keywords, we may be able to extract more news items. however, we use a single word to be sure that all the retrieved news items are relevant to the news event. we find that % of news items about the mers outbreak ( out of news items) overlap with those by the topic modeling based method. then, to examine the relevance of those articles without the word "mers," we randomly select articles that do not explicitly include the word "mers" and examine what they are about. we find that all are relevant to the mers. this indicates that our method can extract news items even when the title of news does not include a key topic word. however, a set of topic words (not one word) will also be able to retrieve all relevant news items. once we have a set of news articles on a certain topic, we further need to group them by subtopic. to this end, we train our data to represent each news item on a vector space and then cluster news items. semantic vector space models of language represent each word with a real-valued vector. firstly introduced by hinton [ ] , the methods have been extended using neural network [ , ] and applied for the practical uses. in recent years, milkolvo's skip-gram and distributed bag-of-word (dbow) models [ ] are popularly used for learning vector representation of words and documents due to its computational efficiency. in the skip-gram model, the objective is to predict a word's context given the word itself, whereas the objective in the dbow model is to predict a word given its context. more recently, the concept of embeddings has been extended beyond words to a number of text segments, including phrases [ ] , sentences and paragraphs [ ] , and documents. adopting the document representation method, we learn distributed representations of news items in our daum news collection. each of news items is represented as low-dimensional vectors and are jointly learned with distributed vector representations of words using a dbow model explained in [ ] . in this vector space, two news items of semantically similar meaning are located nearby. in our news embeddings (henceforth news vec), every news item is mapped to a unique vector in a matrix that represents news items, and every word is mapped to a unique vector in a matrix that represents words. we denote by n v the s × f matrix of s which is the sum of n news items (n , n , . . . , n n ) and f dimensions (f , f , . . . , f f ). a great advantage of learning distributed representation vectors for news in this way is that the algorithm is not sensitive to news item length and does not require specific tuning for word weights. the row of the matrix n v, n i , is a vector of f dimensions representing the i-th news item. the dimension of vector f is set to , and the model is trained with epochs. once we have news vec, we apply the hierarchical clustering method using ward's method [ ] to this resulting matrix to cluster news items of the same subtopic. the hierarchical clustering method builds a dendrogram among entities. then, one can cluster entities based on the dendrogram. its main advantage is that the dendrogram is computed only once regardless of the number of clusters of interest. once the dendrogram is built, we can simply choose the number of clusters (k) of our interest. validation for subtopic categorization. to evaluate the news vec based subtopic clustering method, we prepared a corpus in which each news item is labeled by two authors. we used news items about mers extracted by the keyword-matching method. then, we manually classify news items by subtopics. we conduct a qualitative content analysis to develop a taxonomy of subtopics for mers news. following an open-coding method [ ] , we identify the subtopics of mers news in a two-phase process. we first read titles and descriptions of news items to develop an initial coding scheme and then used an affinity diagramming technique [ ] to iteratively develop a classification scheme for subtopics until a new subtopic did not emerge. table lists the resulting subtopics. the individual authors manually classified all news items into one of the subtopic categories. using the delphi method [ ] , after each researcher independently coded the titles, we then iteratively compared and recoded the news items as necessary until we came to an agreement. the ten subtopics regarding the mers with the number of corresponding news items are listed in table . st "reporting new cases" was the most popular subtopic with news articles in our data set, followed by st "responsibility of government" with news items and st "economical consequences" with news items. we then use this labeled data for the evaluation of our subtopic categorization method. we first learn news vec using entire daum news data. then, we cluster those news items into ten groups (k = ) using vectors from the resulting news vec. we evaluate the resulting subsets of news items with manually tagged clusters. for each detected subset, we find the best matched manual cluster based on the proportion of matching news items. across ten subsets, our news vec subtopic classification achieved an . % matching rate on average where the maximum matching rate is . % and the minimum is . %. in our method, selecting the k is challenging. here, we propose one possible solution to assist in the k selection procedure. the idea is that the average similarity scores for all pairs of news items within the same subtopic (s within ) should be smaller than across the subtopics (s across ). when news items are in vector representation, one can use any distance measures, such as euclidean distance or cosine similarity, to measure the similarity score between two news items. those two values, once found empirically, can play a role as thresholds for selecting the k for different topics. in our evaluation data set, s within is . and s across is . when using cosine similarity. for further evaluation, we use these two values to find the subtopics of another topic, "daycare child abuse." for news items regarding the topic, we find k equals five. the manual inspection reveals the following five subtopics emerged: ( ) what the teacher did to a child; ( ) how cruel the teacher is; ( ) investigation and prosecution; ( ) a new regulation on cctv installation at daycare centers; and ( ) other cases of child abuse. we now quantify differences in news consumption across demographic groups in four dimensions: ( ) by actual news item, ( ) by section, ( ) by topic, and ( ) by subtopic. as a first attempt to compare the news consumption of different groups, we look at actual news items. we measure the similarity among groups based on commonly consumed news items (by their unique news ids) among the top articles consumed by each group over a one-year period. we use jaccard similarity to compute group similarity. for the two sets, a and b, the jaccard similarity is given by : j(a, b) = |a∩b| |a∪b| . in our case, let a and b be sets of news items corresponding to the two groups to be compared. strictly, |a ∩ b| would translate to the count of the news items matched across the sets of a and b. figure (a) shows the jaccard similarity among groups as a heatmap. for example, the pair of age female and age female has a jaccard score of . . this means that, among the union set of all their consumed news items, % are common. the higher the similarity score is, the more news items are viewed in common between the two groups. we find that within same-sex groups, the similarity generally increases as the age difference decreases, with female groups have a stronger tendency of it than male groups (the average similarity score among all pairs of female groups is . while that of male groups is . ). however, we observe two exceptions, age female and age male. they are more similar to the age or age than the age same-sex groups. in fig. , we can see that the age groups have more politics and foreign news items in the top lists, indicating their similarity to older groups. we then find strikingly low similarity scores between different sex groups. age male and age male have almost no news items in common with the female groups, and the same happens for the age female and age female groups. with these results, we can conclude that the set of popular news items that females consume is very different from what males read. we have shown that there is a striking difference between the popular news items for the male groups and those of the female groups. now, we will examine the news consumption of those groups in terms of sectional interests. this analysis will tell us whether the existing framework of news consumption based on sex or age is also found in korea. for each group g, we created a vector s g = (w ,g , w ,g , . . . , w s,g ) in which each dimension corresponded to a predefined section from daum news where s = in our case (see sections in fig. ) . the weight w s,g was computed by the proportion of the news items in the section s for the group g. we then computed the cosine similarity between two vectors to compare the sectional interests of two groups. the results are shown in fig. (b) as a heatmap. for female groups, we find high similarity scores between all pairs (> . ), showing that the proportion of news items in each section is similar in each group. a similar pattern is also observed for male groups but to a lesser extent, and with one exception, age male, which shows a very different sectional interest. the reason is that they exclusively read political news - % of the top news items for a one-year period are about politics (see fig. ). male groups are further split into two groups, as age male and age male are more similar to female groups, but age male and age male have sectional interests distinct from those of female groups. this partly supports the traditional sex-typed news consumption theory -our data set also shows different sectional preferences in different gender groups. however, we find such differences are driven more by age male and age male and less by age male and age male. in summary, the sectional interests seem to be alike across all groups except age male. considering that news consumption largely depends on current, local issues, this could make sense. however, given the striking differences in common news items, the fact that groups largely share sectional interests is still surprising. we now move onto the similarities in the topics that different groups consume. given that sectional interests are similar among groups, but not the actual news items, it is intuitive to think that even if two groups are visiting the same news section, such as society, they might consume different topics -older people might read more about "baby killer" while young people read more about "violence at school." to investigate such topic-specific differences in news consumption, we map each news item to a specific topic. the topics are identified by the method we described in sect. . . then, we quantify the importance or the level of attention to a specific topic for a group by computing the lifespan. we define the lifespan of a topic as the longest period of time when that topic appeared on the top list for each group. we then measure the similarities between groups based on the importance of the different topics. we select topics that are consumed by at least two groups, resulting in , topics and compute each topic's lifespan for each group. this gives us a ranked list of topics for each group, and we use spearman's rank correlation coefficient (ρ) to compare the two ranked lists. figure (c) shows the results as a heatmap. all pairs of rankings are statistically significantly different (p < . ). in this heatmap, we compare pairs of values. for example, a value of . between age female and age male is hard to interpret by itself. comparing one similarity score to other entries, one observes that this value is higher to that for the 'age male' -'age male' pair or 'age male' -'age male' pair. simply put, one could claim that gender differences lead to more strongly pronounced news consumption than years of age difference. by comparing pairs of values, we observe that age differences play important roles in news consumption -a similar pattern was also found when looking at common news items in sect. . . given that a pair of different sex groups have few common news items consumed, the high similarity between two ranked list of topics (ρ > . ) is striking. this means that all users of daum news are interested in similar topics, but what they read is different; less than % of news items on average were in common for those pairs of different sex groups while the average ρ is . for these pairs. we also find that two groups, age male and age female, are generally more different from other groups, confirming the existence of an age gap between -year-olds and others. we also note that while the age male group has very different sectional interests, it has similar topic preferences to those of other groups. we firstly observed that demographic groups show such different news consumption patterns at news item level. then, the high similarity scores at section and topic levels tell us that the overall news consumption is largely driven by current issues. however, groups still have distinct news consumption patterns. this suggests that news consumption even for one particular topic may be very different across groups. for this analysis, we use our evaluation data set and focus on the subtopic consumption regarding the mers outbreak. the mers outbreak was a deviant event, and all ten demographic groups have at least one news item about mers. however, the volume of news items about mers is different across groups. news items about mers are more popular in female groups than in male groups-on average, the female group has . popular news items about mers while that of the male group is . . we then quantify the differences in mers news consumption in terms of the content between two groups. to do this, for each group, we rank the subtopics of mers outbreak in table by the number of news items. then, we test the similarity between two groups by computing the spearman's ranking correlation coefficient. this will tell us which two groups have the most similar consumption of subtopics about mers. figure (d) shows the results as a heatmap. all pairs of rankings are statistically significantly different (p < . ). from the heatmap, we observe that ( ) the popular news is more similar within the same sex groups than within the different sex groups; ( ) female groups are more similar to each group than male groups are; and ( ) age differences matter, except in the age male and age female groups. interestingly, all three of these observations are also found in our previous analysis that compares actual news items in sect. . . all these results lead us to conclude that all groups are generally interested in similar news sections or topics; however, for the same topic, they are attracted to different subtopics, leading to the big differences in popular news among groups. to gain insights into how popular news items about mers differ between different demographic groups, we extract the most discriminative words in news titles for each group. we focus on the group-specific words of news titles, specifically on those with a high phi score, the chi-square test statistics [ ] , for discriminating between one group and others (e.g., age female vs. non-age female (all other groups)). table shows the top words ranked by phi. two authors of this work translated korean words to english words. some interesting differences were observed. overall, female groups are likely to check the status of the mers outbreak, such as how many people are infected (the number of patients, death, this week), the symptoms of mers (high fever, cytokine storm), and the protection against mers (mask, gloves). the age female group showed an interest in news about pregnant women who had been diagnosed with mers and other women's cases. the age female group, in particular, was more interested in the status of closed schools and other education-related topics. on the other hand, the male groups were more interested in the political issues surrounding the mers outbreak, the accusations towards the government's response to the mers outbreak (e.g., ruling and opposition parties, the lack of a proper response, misreporting, false propaganda), and the responsibility of politicians. news vec offers an opportunity to visualize each news item in the vector space by applying t-sne, a widely-used dimensionality reduction based on manifold learning [ ] . figure shows where each news item (colored circle) consumed by each gender (fig. (a) ) or age ( fig. (b) ) group is located in the vector space. in the figure, closed circles are that news items have similar representations in the vector space and thus fall in similar subtopics. for the clarity of the visualization, we focus on the news items consumed by a single demographic gender or age group. figure (a) shows a better clustered structure than fig. (b) , meaning that gender difference is well aligned with the difference of vector representation of news items than age difference. in fig. (b) , we can also see some clustered structures, such as groups of green circles (news on patients' deaths read by s), blue circles (news on choongbuk-daejeon regions read by s), red circles (news on the closing of schools read by s), and purple circles (news on the prime minister read by s) from the top to the bottom, while colored circles are mostly dispersed over the space mostly. this is another evidence that gender difference is more noticeable than age difference at the subtopic level. to the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to conduct a multidimensional analysis of the news consumption of different demographic groups on a nationwide scale. differences in news consumption between different demographic groups exist among south koreans. we look into news consumption at different levels and find that section and topic preferences are similar across groups, but subtopic preferences are not. this means that only the behavioral differences in the subtopic level can explain the strikingly low numbers of common news items across different demographic groups, whereas the differences in the news section or topic levels cannot. in summary, while different demographic groups are interested in similar topics, they read news articles belonging to different subtopics, indicating that subtopics make the news consumption of the different groups different. for the following studies, our work suggests that the differences between demographic groups should be examined at the appropriate level. one potential limitation is that we analyze a single news portal service, even though it is an extremely popular service in south korea. to the best of our knowledge, daum is the only data source where ( ) the user-registered demographic information is credible, and ( ) the user base spans all generations and parties. we are willing to extend our approach to new data sources that satisfy above two conditions so that we can find demographic differences in news consumption. we note that all the users are exposed to the same layout and the same items if they visit the website at the same time. thus, the ways to show news, such as news clustering or adaptive layout, cannot selectively influence on a certain user segment. while the differences in news consumption between demographic groups can be explained partly by different interests on subtopics, there could be other latent factors such as sentiments or frames of news. for instance, grabe and kamhawi found that men recognize and respond more to negatively framed messages, while women are more aroused by and engaged with positively framed messages [ ] . by adding another dimension to our news dimensions, we can understand human behavior on consuming news in depth. in this work, we examined the most critical aspects of news, which are section, topic, and subtopic, and saved the other dimensions for the future work. our results also bring the practical implications for news organizations. our 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differences in the mechanics of information diffusion across topics: idioms, political hashtags, and complex contagion on twitter continuous space language models sharing clusters among related groups: hierarchical dirichlet processes qualitative research: analysis types and software tools a biterm topic model for short texts modeling information diffusion in implicit networks key: cord- -qlu dilh authors: johnson, reed f.; via, laura e.; kumar, mia r.; cornish, joseph p.; yellayi, srikanth; huzella, louis; postnikova, elena; oberlander, nicholas; bartos, christopher; ork, britini l.; mazur, steven; allan, cindy; holbrook, michael r.; solomon, jeffrey; johnson, joshua c.; pickel, james; hensley, lisa e.; jahrling, peter b. title: intratracheal exposure of common marmosets to mers-cov jordan-n / or mers-cov emc/ isolates does not result in lethal disease date: - - journal: virology doi: . /j.virol. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: qlu dilh middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) continues to be a threat to human health in the middle east. development of countermeasures is ongoing; however, an animal model that faithfully recapitulates human disease has yet to be defined. a recent study indicated that inoculation of common marmosets resulted in inconsistent lethality. based on these data we sought to compare two isolates of mers-cov. we followed disease progression in common marmosets after intratracheal exposure with: mers-cov-emc/ , mers-cov-jordan-n / , media, or inactivated virus. our data suggest that common marmosets developed a mild to moderate non-lethal respiratory disease, which was quantifiable by computed tomography (ct), with limited other clinical signs. based on ct data, clinical data, and virological data, mers-cov inoculation of common marmosets results in mild to moderate clinical signs of disease that are likely due to manipulations of the marmoset rather than as a result of robust viral replication. infection with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) has been associated with middle east respiratory syndrome commonly known as mers, a respiratory syndrome with acute severe hypoxic respiratory failure often accompanied by renal failure (arabi et al., ; assiri et al., ; zaki et al., ) . as of march, there have been approximately laboratory confirmed cases reported with a % case fatality rate (http://www.who.int/csr/disease/coronavirus_infections/). considering the geographical location of mers and the hajj pilgrimage which draws an estimated . million visitors, roughly . million of whom travel internationally (http://www.cdsi.gov.sa/english/ index.php?option=com_docman&itemid= ) mers-cov represents a global health risk. common signs and symptoms of mers include fever, cough, shortness of breath, and myalgia. gastrointestinal signs are also frequently observed which include vomiting, diarrhea, and abdominal pain (assiri et al., ) . often, mers patients also have underlying comorbidities such as diabetes, hypertension, and chronic cardiac or renal disease (assiri et al., ) . to guide development of mers countermeasures, an appropriate animal model must be identified and characterized. ideally, a laboratory animal model would demonstrate clinical signs consistent with all aspects of human disease. as with most infectious diseases, mice have been evaluated as a potential mers model for pathogenesis and countermeasure screening. balb/c and stat- knockout mice did not develop signs of disease, such as weight loss, nor could infectious virus be recovered from lung homogenates (coleman et al., ) . zhao et al. developed a murine model for mers by transduction of the respiratory tract with the putative mers-cov receptor, human dipeptidyl peptidase (dpp or cd ), using an adenovirus construct (zhao et al., ) . infected mice developed limited clinical signs including a small degree of weight loss. histopathological analysis found peribronchial and perivascular lymphoid infiltrates which later progressed to an interstitial pneumonia. nearly log plaque forming units (pfu)/g of infectious virus could be detected in the lungs of infected dpp transduced mice (zhao et al., ) . the dpp transduced mouse model has been used to evaluate countermeasures and pathogenesis (channappanavar et al., a (channappanavar et al., , b . nonhuman primate (nhp) models are considered to be essential to understanding pathogenesis and evaluating countermeasures. results from several challenge studies of mers-cov in rhesus monkeys (macaca mulatta) have varied between laboratories. the first published nhp model used rhesus monkeys inoculated via multiple routes and evaluated for virological, immunological, and histopathological changes up to days postinoculation . nhps demonstrated signs of pneumonia and virus could be detected in tissues and mucous membranes by quantitative reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (qrt-pcr), but attempts to determine the load of infectious virus was not reported. a follow up study demonstrated that administration of interferon-alpha b and ribavirin reduced viral burden and lessened disease . results from a natural history study of mers-cov-infected rhesus monkeys indicated that intratracheal inoculation induced a non-lethal disease with limited pathology observed in recovering animals at days post-inoculation and infectious virus could be recovered from lung but not other tissues assayed (yao et al., ) . standard radiological examination revealed lung infiltrates at days and post-inoculation, suggesting virus-induced lung disease. more recently, falzarano et al. described multiple route inoculation of the common marmoset (callithrix jacchus) in which transcriptional changes indicating induction of immune, inflammatory, and repair pathways were cataloged and partial lethality was observed (falzarano et al., ) . here we characterize intratracheal (it) inoculation of mers-cov into common marmosets as a model for mers and to determine differences between two common isolates of mers-cov, mers-cov-jordan-n / virus and mers-cov-emc/ virus. we inoculated groups of marmosets and followed disease progression by periodic physical exams that included computed tomography (ct). previously, positron emission tomography with computed tomography (pet)/ct has been used to evaluate tuberculosis therapies in common marmosets (via et al., ) , disease progression in monkeypox-virus-inoculated cynomolgus monkeys (dyall et al., ) , and influenza-a-virus-inoculated ferrets (jonsson et al., ) . ct has two distinct advantages when compared to standard x-ray radiography ) ct provides three dimensional data, and ) ct data can be quantified, which allows unbiased comparisons (elke et al., ; li et al., ; romanova et al., ) . an ex-vivo experiment with marmoset lung and kidney primary cultures found that these tissues could support mers-cov replication; this suggested that common marmosets might be developed as a suitable animal model for mers (fig. ) . therefore, we sought to determine if intratracheal inoculation of marmosets would result in disease presentation similar to human disease. the experimental design is shown in fig. . two pre-inoculation baseline ct's were performed to establish normal lung volumes and any pre-existing anomalies. mers-cov-jordan-n / virus (mers-jor, genbank kc ) and mers-cov-emc/ virus (mers-emc, genbank jx ) were obtained and propagated as described in materials and methods. to ensure that no gross cross-contamination of the mers-cov stocks used for the marmoset experiments occurred during preparation, the spike protein of each stock was sequenced and compared to reference sequences (cotten et al., ; frey et al., ) . the spike region was chosen for comparison due to high diversity associated with viral glycoproteins. strain-specific differences found in mers-jor and mers-emc reference sequences were maintained in our stocks (table ) , indicating that no gross cross-contamination occurred. three single nucleotide polymorphisms (snps) were seen in our stocks, two in mers-emc and one in mers-jor. blastx alignments indicate that two of these snps lead to changes in the s protein sequence. the mers-jor stock had a t to c change at position which induced an i t change in s . two changes were observed in mers-emc c to t at position that did not alter amino acid sequence and a c to a change at which resulted in a n t change in s . changes in the s region seen here are likely a result of serial passage in cell culture (frey et al., ) . body temperature, peripheral oxygen saturation, respiratory rate, and overall condition were evaluated at each physical exam. no increases in body temperatures above normal ranges were observed; subjects maintained peripheral oxygenation throughout the study, and respiratory rates increased above normal range sporadically throughout the study (fig. a) . tremors were noted on daily observations including and between days and postinoculation, but were not consistently observed (data not shown). subjects underwent blood withdrawal on days , or , and at necropsy to determine if hematological parameters indicated changes consistent with disease. day or was chosen based on our data from mers-jor inoculated rhesus monkeys which demonstrated a peak in lung disease at day post-inoculation by ct (manuscript in preparation). subjects did not develop clinically significant changes in total white blood cell count, lymphocyte number, monocyte number, or neutrophil number on day or post-inoculation and remained within the normal range, as indicated by shaded gray area (fig. b ). together, these data indicate that subjects did not develop systemic clinical disease. to determine if virus was disseminating or shedding, whole blood, oropharyngeal, rectal swabs, and fecal samples from mock and inactivated virus subjects, subjects per group, were collected on days À , À , , , , , or , and . mers jordan subjects ex-vivo analysis of primary cells. cells were isolated from lung, kidney, and bronchoalveolar lavage (bal), and one-step growth kinetics were performed as described in materials and methods. lung, kidney and bal demonstrate that mers-cov is able to replicate to at least log pfu/ml. were swabbed on days À , À , (n ¼ ), (n ¼ ), (n ¼ ), (n ¼ ), (n¼ ), (n ¼ ), (n¼ ), (n ¼ ) (n ¼ ) and and mers-emc exposed subjects were swabbed on days À (n¼ ), - (n ¼ ), (n ¼ ), (n ¼ ), (n¼ ), (n ¼ ), (n ¼ ), and (n ¼ ) as outlined in fig. . these samples were assayed by qrt-pcr as described in materials and methods. all samples were negative for mers-cov, suggesting that virus did not disseminate nor was shed. furthermore, plaque assays were performed on necropsy tissues and no infectious virus could be detected. virus isolation was attempted using lung homogenates for two sequential passages on vero cells; no infectious virus could be detected. fluorescent reduction neutralizing assays were performed to determine if marmosets developed an antibody response to mers-cov (fig. ). subjects inoculated with mers-jor developed a low antibody titer to mers-cov with an average titer of : across the group at study end, day - post-inoculation. animals inoculated with mers-emc developed an antibody titer of : for all subjects. media only, and inactivated virus did not develop detectable neutralizing antibody responses to mers-cov. qualitative assessment of the imaging data indicates that mers-cov inoculated marmosets developed lung disease that mainly affected the medial and caudal regions of the lung. lung abnormalities could be observed in media-only and the inactivated virus inoculation groups, with the inactivated virus stimulating increased lung abnormalities when compared to the media only mock inoculated subjects (fig. a ). lung infiltrates presenting as air bronchograms did not completely clear by end of study (fig. b ). more importantly, quantitative assessment of abnormal lung volume data supported the qualitative assessment. the quantitative assessment suggests that mock inoculated subjects developed a short lived response that was observed one day post-inoculation but returned to near baseline by the day ct and remained near that volume throughout the course of the study. subjects inoculated with inactivated virus demonstrated increased abnormal lung volumes when compared to the media only group, but not as elevated as the groups that received live virus. mers-cov inoculated groups demonstrated increasingly abnormal lung volumes beginning day post-inoculation in an individual dependent manner that did not completely resolve by study end (fig. c and d). comparison of the mean peak values of diseased lung volume and percent relative change of abnormal lung volume for each group indicated no statistically significant difference (unpaired t-test) between the virus isolates ( fig. e and f). when the peak diseased lung volume of the infectious mers-emc receiving group is compared to the mock infected the pvalue ¼ . and when compared to the γ-irradiated virus receiving group it is p ¼ . . comparison of the mers-jor group to the control groups indicates a similar pattern p ¼ . and p ¼ . , respectively. comparison of the % fold change in diseased lung volume between the mers-emc and mock group gave p ¼ . and the γ-irradiated virus receiving group was . . comparison of the % fold change in diseased lung volume between the mers-jor and mock group gave p ¼ . and p ¼ . . the data indicate that, in common marmosets, the genetic sequence differences between the isolates do not impact disease progression as indicated by changes in diseased lung volume and that the mers virion itself can induce an inflammatory response. however, a significant difference was observed between the mers-emc group and the mock exposed group when compared by fold change of diseased lung volume, which likely reflects the small group sizes. differences in temporal progression were observed between the individual subjects that did not segregate by virus isolate. one subject in the mers-emc inoculated group appeared to develop a secondary infection observed by ct that increased to study end, day post-exposure. however, no infectious virus could be recovered, suggesting an opportunistic infection either due to repeated manipulations or effects of mers-cov. at necropsy, lung lesions included multifocal to coalescing interstitial pneumonia with consolidation of the dorsocaudal lung lobe in the mers-cov inoculated animals (fig. ). gross pathology of mers-cov infected subjects revealed no to moderate changes. these changes include interstitial multifocal to coalescing moderate pneumonia as shown in fig. a . histopathological examination of select lymphoid tissues revealed mild lymphoid hyperplasia, with medullary histiocytosis of the mandibular and tracheobronchial lymph nodes in several of the mers-cov inoculated subjects, while the control animals showed minimal changes. examination of representative lung tissue samples showed interstitial lymphohistiocytic pneumonia with type ii pneumocyte and bronchial associated lymphoid tissue (balt) hyperplasia and a few syncytia were observed in the mers-cov inoculated animals ( fig. b and d) . in addition, the lung lesions observed in the mers-cov inoculated subjects are consistent with a chronic respiratory disease. in general, the gross and histopathological findings in the lung tissue did somewhat correspond with the ct findings. examination of representative lung tissue from a single subject that received mers-jor and demonstrated the greatest increase in diseased lung volume as seen by ct did not differ grossly or histologically from the other subjects. no signal was detected for the presence of mers-cov antigen by immunohistochemistry (ihc) performed on the lung tissue sections of the infected subjects. ideally, an animal model for mers will recapitulate the key features of the human disease in the severe form. therefore, an ideal mers model might result in lethal disease with severe bronchopneumonia and extrapulmonary complications such as renal failure. with the use of ct, we observed that it inoculation of common marmosets with mers-jor or mers-emc isolates resulted in a non-lethal disease characterized by limited clinical signs and moderate consolidative lung pathology that did not completely resolve by study end. no difference in clinical signs was observed between the two isolates or control subjects, nor could we detect mers-cov genome using a genome specific qrt-pcr assay with a sensitivity of genome copies of mers-cov. detection of neutralizing antibody in the infectious virus receiving groups and not the γ-irradiated virus receiving group does suggest that an infectious process did take place which allowed for antigen processing for development of neutralizing antibodies. artifacts introduced by manipulation of the subjects should be accounted for by use of control subjects. control marmosets were inoculated with media or inactivated virus which also resulted in limited lung pathology. in the present study, examining the percent change in diseased lung volume determined a significant difference was observed between the mers-emc group and the mock group, but not between the mers-emc and γ-irradiated group, which suggests that some viral-induced disease process did occur. however, statistical significance was not found when the total diseased lung volumes were compared between any of the groups. across all groups, pathology findings were predominantly confined to the lungs showing chronic and resolving changes. the absence of viral antigen signal in the lung tissue sections by ihc might be a result of probing for the viral antigen only at a late stage of disease, when there was likely considerable clearance of the virus. falzarano et al. observed inconsistent lethality highlighted by lung pathology that shared some characteristics of mers following mers-emc exposure of common marmosets. three notable differences between the present study and falzarano et al. are ) our use of control subjects receiving media or inactivated virus, ) single it route vs. multiple inoculation routes (oral, intranasal, ocular, and it), and ) the volume of lung inoculum ( . ml vs. . ml). similar to their rhesus experiment, their marmoset experiment was designed as a serial euthanasia study. six subjects were euthanized at early timepoints post-exposure, before the disease course could resolve. however, two subjects met moribund endpoint criteria on day , and survived to day post-inoculation. it is unknown what the true outcome of the subjects that were serially euthanized would have been and if the subjects that met endpoint criteria did so due to virus induced disease or subject manipulations, thus skewing the interpretation of disease severity. adding to the difficulty in data interpretation, qrt-pcr data is not supported by immunohistochemistry, em, or virus isolation. furthermore, the pattern of infectious virus isolation shown by falzarano et al. demonstrates that initially only the lungs contain infectious virus in / tissues (trachea and lung lobes) examined, by day postinoculation virus can be isolated from fewer lung lobes ( / tissues), but virus can be isolated from the trachea. by day postinoculation virus is detected in / of lung lobes and all tracheas examined. no quantification is provided, therefore it is difficult to determine if propagated infectious virus was recovered or merely the inoculum. based on our data and falzarano et al.'s data, it is possible that intratracheal inoculation results in mechanical damage to the respiratory epithelium, followed by inflammation and repair, which leads to restoration of mucociliary motion that clears the liquid (and virus) from the lung. in the absence of a lethal model, other quantitative measures become more valuable for demonstrating pathogenesis. in the present study, we demonstrated that ct is effective for evaluating disease progression and regression following mers cov exposure in common marmosets. ct data can be quantified, which provides an opportunity to effectively evaluate countermeasures in sub-optimal models and strengthen data gained in well-established models. in the case of mers, an optimal animal model must still be developed. staged euthanasia studies similar to the adenovirus transduced mouse mers model could be performed in nhps, but such studies are undesirable due to the ethical concerns of nonhuman primate use. vero cells (atcc catalog number ccl ) were maintained in dulbecco's modified eagle's medium (dmem) (hyclone, logan, ut) and supplemented with % fetal bovine serum (fbs) (sigma st. louis mo) at c with % co . mers-cov isolates (jordan-n / and emc/ ) were propagated at a multiplicity of infection of . on vero cells in % fbs and % co for - days postinoculation until cytopathic effect encompassed - % of the vero cell monolayer. virus was concentrated by ultracentrifugation and pelleted through a % sucrose cushion at ,  g for h at c. the pellet was re-suspended in dmem % fbs, frozen and titered by limiting dilution plaque assay (see below). inactivated virus for the control groups was generated by treating virus with , gy of gamma irradiation from a cobalt irradiator (jl shepherd -r ), followed by confirmation of inactivation. mers-cov-jordan-n / was a kind gift of armed forces health surveillance center, division of global emerging infections surveillance and response system and mers-cov-emc/ was kindly provided by vincent munster, laboratory of virology, national institute of allergy and infectious diseases (niaid). marmoset lung tissue was ground in a sterile petri dish using a plunger from a sterile syringe, digested with u/ml of collagenase (life technologies, ny usa), and % fetal calf serum (fcs, hyclone) c for min. the reaction was quenched, and the homogenate was passed through a -mm filter, washed, and centrifuged (  g, min, c). after the final wash, cells were re-suspended in ml of ack lysing buffer (life technologies) for min and washed twice with ml pbs/ mm edta/ . % bsa. washed and pelleted cells were re-suspended in rpmi (lonza, switzerland) supplemented with % fcs (hyclone, ut, usa) and % penicillin/streptomycin (ps) and plated. media was changed after h. kidneys were processed similar to the lung but strained through mm and mm filters prior to the ack lysis step. bronchoalveolar lavage samples were centrifuged at  g for min at c, re-suspended in rpmi % fcs, and % ps (life technologies) before plating. multi-step growth curves were performed on isolated primary cells infected with mers-jor at a multiplicity of infection of . . supernatants were harvested at , , , and h and stored at À c until plaque assays were performed (described below). mers-cov isolates were sequenced using the primers in table . spike genomic sequences were generated by aligning sanger to generate a comparison between study stocks and references, spike sequences obtained from sequencing and associated reference sequences were aligned using clustal omega with default settings (goujon et al., ; mcwilliam et al., ; sievers et al., ) . the resulting clustal alignment was filtered for alignment positions with at least one variant base using a custom python script. potential coding changes were assessed by blastx alignments (altschul et al., ) . ten common marmosets, ranging in weight from g to g and age from to years were divided into groups. mock inoculated subjects (n ¼ ) received dmem supplemented with % fbs by it inoculation. two subjects received inactivated virus by it inoculation; one subject received inactivated mers-jor virus isolate, and one subject received inactivated mers-emc virus isolate. three marmosets received  pfu of mers-jor and others received  pfu of mers-emc by it inoculation. prior to handling, marmosets were anesthetized with isoflurane to effect. it inoculation was performed by placement of a gauge  in. catheter into the trachea followed by installation of the virus inoculum in a . ml volume followed by a . ml air flush of the syringe and catheter. all animal procedures were approved by the national institute of allergy and infectious diseases (niaid) animal care and use committee, and adhered to national institutes of health (nih) policies. the experiments were carried out at the niaid integrated research facility, an aaalac and aalas accredited facility. prior to and after inoculation, ct scans, physical exams, including temperature and weight measurements were performed, oropharyngeal and rectal swabs, and stool samples were collected (fig. ) . nhps were monitored at least twice daily. a preestablished scale was used to evaluate subject health and disease progression. these criteria included: ( ) overall clinical appearance, ( ) labored breathing, ( ) activity and behavior, ( ), responsiveness, and ( ) core body temperatures. no subjects met moribund clinical endpoint criteria by study end. eight of marmosets were humanely euthanized for histopathological and virological analysis. blood withdrawal was performed pre-inoculation, either day or post-inoculation, and at necropsy. we acquired high resolution chest ct scans, without contrast, using a hybrid philips gemini slice pet/ct scanner specifically designed to function in a biological safety level environment. due to the rapid respiratory rate of marmosets, a breath hold could not be performed. the ct parameters were as follows: helical scan, kvp, ma s, mm field of view, . mm/rotation table speed, high-resolution collimation of  . mm , . mm slice thickness, and . mm increment covering the whole lung. the images were acquired using a standard algorithm and reconstructed using a y-detail algorithm. images were analyzed as previously described (via et al., ) . unpaired t-test of peak abnormal lung volume was performed with graphpad prism . (graphpad software, ca, usa). complete blood cell differential count was determined from blood samples collected in edta-coated blood tubes and analyzed using a sysmex xt v ™ hematology analyzer (sysmex america). viral load in samples was determined by quantitative pcr using the following primer probe set: forward primer: ʹtggcc gtggtggttatcact ʹ, reverse primer: ʹctcaaaatcgtccatcca ctca ʹ, and probe ʹ -fam/caccccattccactatgagcgagacaac/ -tamsp/ ʹ. cycling conditions were c for min and c for min for the rt-step followed by c for s and c for s for cycles. the taqman one-step rt-pcr master mix was used (life technologies, ny, usa). samples were extracted with trizol and screened for the presence of mers-cov using specific primers on an applied biosystems ht fast real time pcr system (life technologies). the limit of detection was gene copies. virus stock and tissue samples were excised at necropsy, flash frozen, and stored at À c. for tissues, a w/v homogenate between % and % was generated. serial -fold dilutions were made for virus stocks, growth curve samples, and tissues and incubated on confluent veroe cells using . % tragacanth in emem % fbs, and % ps overlay and incubated for days. following incubation, tragacanth overlays were removed, the monolayers were stained with crystal violet ( . % crystal violet, % ethanol % formalin v/v), and plaques were enumerated. serum samples taken at necropsy or experiment end were heat inactivated at c for h then serial diluted and mixed with pfu (final moi¼ . ) of either mers-jor or mers-emc and incubated for h. after incubation virus and serum mixture was added to veroe cells (atcc, manassas va) for h at c, % co on well operetta (perkin-elmer) compatible plates. negative control (no virus and no serum) samples and positive control (virus þ rabbit polyclonal antibody to the mers spike protein (sino biological)) samples were also included. cells were washed and incubated for h followed by fixation with % nbf. mers-cov infection was visualized by fluorescence using a mers-cov anti-spike antibody (sino biological) on an operetta high content imager (perkin-elmer). the dilution at which % inhibition of relative fluorescence intensity was observed was reported as the frna . forty-one tissues from all major organ systems were collected and fixed in % neutral buffered formalin (nbf) for days. following fixation in % nbf tissues were processed following standard procedures. hematoxylin and eosin (he) stain was applied using the leica automated staining system (leica, microsystems). stained slides were then examined via standard light microscopy. to detect mers-cov antigen, ihc was performed using a rabbit polyclonal antiserum against mers-cov (sino biological p.r. china) ( : ). tissues from an uninfected control animal were used to validate all ihc procedures. he and ihc sections were examined by light microscopy by the veterinary pathologists (sy and lh). in this experiment, we sought to determine if there were virus specific differences in disease progression following intratracheal inoculation of common marmosets with middle eastern respiratory syndrome coronavirus, commonly known as mers-cov, with two common laboratory viral isolates (mers-emc and mers-jordan). in contrast to previous results, we observed a non-lethal disease and few, if any, signs of virus-specific pathology. in addition, we were unable to isolate infectious virus from tissues. computed tomography was used to evaluate disease progression and provide quantitative data for comparisons between mockexposed, inactivated virus-exposed, and virus-exposed subjects. the data indicate that marmosets do not faithfully replicate human mers pathogenesis and that alternate models must be developed to efficacy test medical countermeasures. basic local alignment search tool clinical course and outcomes of critically ill patients with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection epidemiological, demographic, and clinical characteristics of cases of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus disease from saudi arabia: a descriptive study virusspecific memory cd t cells provide substantial protection from lethal severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection t cell-mediated immune response to respiratory coronaviruses wild-type and innate immune-deficient mice are not susceptible to the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus full-genome deep sequencing and phylogenetic analysis of novel human betacoronavirus middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) causes transient lower respiratory tract infection in rhesus macaques evaluation of monkeypox disease progression by molecular imaging quantification of ventilation distribution in regional lung injury by electrical impedance tomography and xenon computed tomography infection with mers-cov causes lethal pneumonia in the common marmoset treatment with interferon-alpha b and ribavirin improves outcome in mers-cov-infected rhesus macaques full-genome sequence of human betacoronavirus c jordan-n / after serial passage in mammalian cells a new bioinformatics analysis tools framework at embl-ebi molecular imaging reveals a progressive pulmonary inflammation in lower airways in ferrets infected with h n pandemic influenza virus growth pattern analysis of murine lung neoplasms by advanced semiautomated quantification of micro-ct images analysis tool web services from the embl-ebi magnetic resonance imaging versus computed tomography for identification and quantification of intraventricular hemorrhage fast, scalable generation of high-quality protein multiple sequence alignments using clustal omega differential virulence and disease progression following mycobacterium tuberculosis complex infection of the common marmoset (callithrix jacchus) an animal model of mers produced by infection of rhesus macaques with mers coronavirus isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia rapid generation of a mouse model for middle east respiratory syndrome this work was supported by the national institute of allergy and infectious disease, division of intramural research. we are grateful to marisa st. claire, russell byrum, dan ragland, and the entire evps and irf team for their contributions to these studies. we key: cord- -qqsmn u authors: caron, rosemary m. title: public health lessons: practicing and teaching public health date: - - journal: preparing the public health workforce doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: qqsmn u the following four cases represent events that actually occurred at the local, statewide, national, and international levels. a general, succinct overview is provided of each case with references listed should the reader want to access additional resource materials. the concise format of these cases is intended to generate questions. following the general overview of each case, i examine the lessons learned from the practitioner and educator perspective and i list the skills necessary to address the issues in the case. the reader will note that there are skills that are essential for the public health practitioner to master, whether one is in an internship, entry-level position, or the director of a public health organization and so these skills are consistently listed. i encourage the reader to regularly keep abreast of the news locally and abroad and to set aside time before a staff meeting or supervisory group meeting, or use the first few minutes of a class to discuss these issues. ask your workforce or students, “are we ready to handle such an event if it were to occur here?”; “what resources would we need to have accessible?”; “have we partnered with the correct agencies in the community?”; “do we have an established, trusted presence in the community?”; “who else do we need on our team?”; “do we need training in a specialty area, e.g., emergency preparedness?”; “what skills have we mastered and what skills do we need to obtain?” the discussion-based questions are endless but one runs the risk of not being prepared, either individually, or in their agency, should they not discuss how public health events are occurring around us daily. i encourage you to adapt these selected cases to use in your organization and/or classroom. discussing these issues and reviewing the lessons learned will only help us to be better prepared public health practitioners and educators of public health students. prior to the federal ban on lead paint and the housing in the center of this city is of very poor quality (mhd a) . manchester is the most racially and ethnically diverse community in the state. the city's designation as a refugee resettlement community contributes to this richness in diversity. manchester experiences disparity in socioeconomic status and health, similar to other larger urban communities: manchester, new hampshire represents an urban microcosm of the childhood lead poisoning problem. one-third of all childhood lead poisoning cases occur predominantly in the center of this urban community (mhd a; nhdhhs ) . in , . % of children in manchester who had been screened for lead poisoning had eblls, as compared to . % of the new hampshire total (nhdhhs ) . in , approximately % of the leadpoisoned children in the local health department's caseload were refugees or children of refugees. (mhd b) sargent et al. ( ) previously examined clp in urban, suburban, and rural communities in massachusetts and reported that "…those children living in communities with high rates of poverty, single-parent families, and pre- s housing and low rates of home ownership were - times more likely to have lead poisoning" (p. ). the center city of manchester reflects similar demographics and is a community at risk for clp. pediatric fatality: although fatalities due to clp are rare, the first pediatric fatality to occur in over a decade in the usa occurred in this community of manchester, nh. the fatality occurred in a -year-old sudanese refugee child who had resettled in to this community with her mother and siblings from a refugee camp in egypt. the family resided in an apartment in a tenement building that was constructed in the s. approximately weeks following resettlement, this child acquired an ebll of micrograms of lead per deciliter of blood. the cdc's action level in was micrograms per deciliter of blood. hence, this child's ebll was times above cdc's action level at that time. an environmental and epidemiological investigation determined that due to the child's exposure to lead paint dust and chips in the apartment she lived in with her family and her underlying conditions of pica (a craving for nonfood substances) and malnutrition resulted in her acquiring an ebll in a short period of time. the child died as a result of complications triggered by the ebll (caron et al. ) . furthermore, despite the existence of federal regulations developed by the environmental protection agency (epa) that require property owners and managers to provide families with information about lead poisoning and any lead hazards in the home before its sale or lease, the investigation into this case revealed that this information was not communicated in a manner that was understood by the mother of this child (caron et al. ) . lessons learned: this tragic event underscored the need for attention to be paid to those public health problems that persist in the environment, i.e., those issues that the community may live with because there is no feasible solution to completely eliminate the risk. due to the older housing stock in the community that contains lead paint, the cdc named the community and its surrounding towns as a universal screening site. this means that every child at and years of age must be screened for exposure to lead ). this is a form of secondary prevention. the gold standard is primary prevention where exposure to lead would not occur in the first place, thus the risk is removed from the environment. to achieve primary prevention of clp, lead paint would need to be abated from every apartment unit in the city. however, this is a costly process that the municipality or property owners/managers are unable to afford. yet, there are many families with lead-poisoned children who would argue that the benefits of primary prevention outweigh the costs. this case also highlights the complexity of persistent public health problems, such as clp. for instance, this particular family, not unlike other african refugee families, was illiterate in english as well as their own language. in addition, the refugee resettlement process is designed in a declining model of support where the refugees are placed in available housing, which is often of poor quality, and offered health benefits for a limited period of time, and employment is the benchmark of resettlement success not acculturation, good health, or community engagement (caron and tshabangu-soko ) . this community was fortunate in that it already had a functional community coalition that was addressing the problem via policy development, distribution of resources, surveillance, and testing of at-risk children. yet, it is important to consider the multifactorial issues affecting this persistent public health problem in this particular community. selected issues are included below ): • non-english speaking, at-risk population. • public health system that views the problem as complex due to the continuing influx of refugees and the number of agencies involved in refugee resettlement. • multiple stakeholders who view the problem differently and who offer varied, uncoordinated solutions. • intersect of socioeconomic factors, housing policies, cultural practices, english proficiency, and native language literacy. • clp exemplifies the failure of policy development and implementation in the community. • competing demands for food, shelter, clothing, employment for at-risk populations. • exposure results in health effects that are not visible until an ebll is acquired. • providing education in a culturally competent manner. • distrust of community organizations by the at-risk african refugee population. • often, persistent public health problems "…possess no definitive resolutions…" so "…remediation must focus on how to best manage them" (caron and serrell , p. ) . if this tragic event occurred in your community, what questions would you ask? i offer the following questions for you to consider from a practitioner and educator perspective: . how could we prevent children from being poisoned by lead in our community considering that practical solutions are difficult to implement due to the high cost of lead-abatement measures? . are there primary and secondary prevention tools we could implement and evaluate in our community? how will we provide lead prevention education for families for whom english is not their first language? there are over different languages spoken in the manchester, nh, school system (mhd a). it is not feasible to provide translation services for every dialect. how would you educate about a serious public health issue, such as clp, for which there are no visible signs or symptoms until there is an ebll? . does the community have a plan to address this public health issue? has the community, who lives with the issue (i.e., refugees, "working poor"), been invited to participate with public health practitioners? is there a community coalition formed to work on monitoring the issue and connecting families with testing services? how would you establish such a community group if one does not exist? . how would you partner with an academic institution with public health expertise to assist with providing knowledge, expertise, and resources? . how would you partner with the local health-care system (i.e., community health centers, hospitals, physician practices) to assure that they are following cdc testing guidelines and to assist with consistent outreach and prevention education efforts? . are there refugee resettlement services developed by resettled refugees who can assist with contacting an often hard-to-reach population to offer peer education? how would you engage this social service agency? . what data should you be collecting? how will you access these data? who is the "keeper" of the data? how will you conduct surveillance of the public health issue? . what stakeholders in the public health system should be invited to address the problem? if a stakeholder refuses to come to the "table" to work on the issue because they believe the issue is either not under their purview or is too complex to address, how would you engage this key partner? . policies pertaining to lead paint in housing and occupancy vary from state to state. how would you amend the current (if any) lead housing policies in your community or state? would public health enforcement laws be necessary (i.e., citations for property owners who do not comply with the developed policy)? whom would you work with to develop and enact such policies? . this case demonstrates a very tragic, albeit rare, event. with so many competing demands on the public health system, and the fact that clp is a persistent public health problem that the community has lived with for generations, and the costly abatement measures-should clp be in the "top ten" of issues for communities, similar to manchester, nh, to be concerned about? why or why not? . if we addressed clp in the community, what other public health issues could potentially be lessened or mitigated? . how does the refugee resettlement process exacerbate clp? should the refugee resettlement process be redesigned? if so, how? . should communities with refugee children poisoned by lead request a moratorium for refugee resettlement until the community can provide quality housing that does not pose a health risk? what are the implications of a moratorium for the resettled refugees and the community? . how would you engage the refugee resettlement agencies, the social service agencies developed by refugees, and the refugees themselves in a coordinated effort to reduce clp? . how would you know what the newly resettled refugee concerns are and how they compare to their counterparts who have been living in the community for a period of time? the answers to many of these questions may include more resources, more expertise, and more community support. i agree with this assessment. however, often, the public health principles that guide us are challenging to implement "on the ground." clp is a very real issue for this community. the number of refugees affected by this public health problem is influenced by the type of refugee who is resettled in the community. for instance, refugee children of parents who speak english and have a secondary and/or postsecondary education tend to not experience an ebll. this community is not able to request from which country the "newcomers" will arrive. box . highlights selected public health tools that should be utilized by a competent public health workforce addressing clp among a refugee population in their community. these skills are not meant to be exhaustive but are important for public health practitioners and educators of the public health workforce to consider when working on this type of public health problem. • engage the community in the public health issue being addressed. community-based participatory research (cbpr) is one approach to involve the community in addressing the public health issue that they live with on a daily basis. cbpr "…in public health focuses on social, structural, and physical environmental inequities through active involvement of community members, organizational representatives, and researchers in all aspects of the research process. partners contribute their expertise to enhance understanding of a given phenomenon and to integrate the knowledge gained with action to benefit the community involved". (israel et al. , p. ) serrell et al. ( ) previously identified four core values that were important to progress when building community capacity to address clp: "…adaptability, consistency, shared authority, and trust as core values for such partnerships" (p. ). the type of public health professional required to address this specific public health issue includes, but is not limited to, the following: • public health director • environmental health specialist • nurse case manager • build academic-community partnerships based on cbpr principles (see above). these partnerships do not require the presence of a local academic institution but could operate via distance technology so the correct expertise for the specific public health issue is accessed. it is important to note that it can take time to build operational partnerships. • collect data from screening facilities (e.g., local health department, primary care physicians, community health centers). these data may be centralized in a state clp and prevention program. • analyze the data for descriptive purposes to know the demographics of the affected population and the at-risk population. • implement primary prevention via culturally and linguistically appropriate educational methods. • implement secondary prevention via blood screening. assure screening is being conducted by communicating with screening facilities and engaging in medical record audits. • develop policy that will be protective of the resident and places the burden of care on the property owner/manager to abate lead from the dwelling. • consider the community's ecology (i.e., its social, cultural, economic, and political composition) and social context of risk. caron et al. ( ) proposed the following: …that communities are important determinants in health-related problems for refugee populations. each community has its own environment and public health system that interacts with each other to influence health risks and risk perceptions of its populations. (p. ) • partner with others in the public health system (e.g., housing development, refugee resettlement agencies, property managers, etc.) and learn their barriers to the problem, as well as their perception of the public health issue so a feasible and equitable solution or management strategy may be developed. • evaluate progress by reviewing the data to determine whether or not there is a decrease in the number of children poisoned by lead. based on the data, which will tell the story, targeted or tailored approaches for the affected population may be warranted. for example, peer education efforts may be implemented, temporary removal of a family from a home with lead paint until the lead can be removed or covered to meet housing code approval, visual aids for education, nurse case management, environmental inspection of the dwelling, etc. background: "hepatitis c is an infection caused by a virus that attacks the liver and may cause liver damage, liver failure, and even cancer" (nhdhhs , p. ). specifically, hepatitis c arises as a result of a blood-borne infection. for the majority of those infected, the acute phase of the infection is asymptomatic. in addition, for some infected individuals, their immune system will clear the infection. however, there is a risk that many people infected with the hepatitis c virus (hcv) will develop an active, chronic infection and without therapy some will develop liver cirrhosis, liver disease, liver failure, and/or liver cancer (nhdhhs ). the cdc estimates that there are approximately . million people who have been infected with hcv and . million people with active infection in the usa (cdc ): risk factors for acquiring hepatitis c include injection drug use, tattoos with contaminated supplies, use of infected blood products or occupational needlestick injury, transmission during pregnancy, and sexual transmission (which is usually very uncommon). the risk of acquiring hcv from a needlestick injury with blood from an hcv-infected patient is approximately - %, but it depends on the level of virus in the blood and the nature of the injury. (cdc ) hcv can be treated with an antiviral drug regimen that is administered for a period of several months and is quite costly (nhdhhs ). for those who are eligible for therapy and have not been treated in the past, the likelihood of cure is very good in acute infection ( - %). with newer available agents, the response rate is very good in chronic infection as well ( - %). (nhdhhs , p. ) specific to the transmission of hcv in health-care settings, risk factors include the following: . reuse of syringes for more than one patient or to access medication containers used for more than one patient; . sharing of contaminated equipment, like point of care or podiatry equipment; and/or . drug diversion by an infected healthcare worker (hcw). transmission can occur when the infected hcw self-administers an injectable narcotic, intended for patient administration, fills the syringe with saline, and places the used syringe back into the circulation for patient administration. (nhdhhs , p. ) reportable diseases are those that "…hospitals, laboratories, healthcare providers, childcare centers, schools, and local boards of health are required to report diagnosis of certain infectious diseases to dphs" (division of public health services; nhdhhs , p. ): in new hampshire, hcv infection is not in and of itself a reportable disease. however, any suspected outbreak, i.e., the occurrence of illness or disease in a community at a rate clearly in excess of what is normally expected, is reportable to dphs under the mandatory reporting law, part he-p communicable diseases. (nh general court ; nhdhhs , pp. - ) reported infections are investigated by public health nurses and epidemiologists at the new hampshire dphs. the purpose of the investigation is to prevent additional illness in the population, which may be accomplished through a variety of methods, depending on the specific disease. some examples of how public health works to prevent additional illness include identifying close contacts to the infected person and recommending prophylaxis medication to prevent them from becoming ill (antibiotics, antivirals, vaccine, etc.), providing disease prevention recommendations (washing hands, covering cough, etc.), recognizing outbreaks, and identifying and controlling their source (healthcare-associated outbreaks, foodborne outbreaks, etc.). (nhdhhs , pp. - ) investigation overview an outbreak of hcv was identified at exeter hospital in exeter, new hampshire, in . of the initial four patients diagnosed with hcv, one of the individuals was a traveling medical technician in the cardiac catheterization laboratory of the hospital. further investigation by the new hampshire department of health and human services (nhdhhs) revealed that the cause of the outbreak was drug diversion ("…the stealing of narcotic pain medication intended for patients for self use"; nhdhhs , p. ) by the infected medical technician. the testing of potential patients was conducted based on the hospital units to which the medical technician had access, i.e., patients seen in the cardiac catheterization laboratory and those who were patients in the operating room and the intensive care unit. for these areas, patients who had procedures in the cardiac catheterization laboratory during a time period that overlapped the medical technician's time of employment were tested for hcv: of the , who were tested, patients were identified with active hcv infection with the nh hcv outbreak strain. additional patients had evidence of past hcv infection (and their virus could not be tested) and of them were categorized as probable cases (n = ) and suspect cases (n = ) based on epidemiological information. (nhdhhs , p. ) to contact those who were patients in the operating room or intensive care unit during this same time period, nhdhhs partnered with local health departments and clinics to conduct rapid hcv testing on site "…for the first time in an outbreak setting" (nhdhhs , p. ). … , patients were tested and…no additional cases of active hcv infection matching the outbreak strain were identified. additional investigation of other units in . the medical technician worked for a staffing agency that assigned him to different hospitals in seven other states (arizona, georgia, kansas, maryland, michigan, new york, and pennsylvania) over a decade (seelye ). in addition, he had been fired four times over this time span for allegations of drug use and theft (associated press ). thus, the potential for exposure of patients in other states existed and resulted in a multistate outbreak investigation that was conducted by the cdc. "as of may , other cases of the nh hcv outbreak strain were identified and confirmed in two other states (kansas and maryland)" (nhdhhs , p. ). the traveling medical technician pled guilty to "…obtaining controlled substances by fraud… [and] tampering with a consumer product" (fbi ): …he devised a scheme to divert and steal the controlled substance fentanyl for personal use and abuse. fentanyl is a powerful anesthetic intended for patients undergoing medical procedures, among other uses. [he] admitted that he would surreptitiously take syringes of fentanyl prepared for patients, inject himself with the drug, and refill the syringes with saline, causing the syringes to become tainted with his infected blood. he then replaced the tainted syringes for use on unsuspecting patients. consequently, instead of receiving the prescribed dose of fentanyl together with its intended anesthetic effect, patients actually received saline that was tainted with the same strain of hepatitis c carried by [the medical technician]. (fbi ) at the conclusion of the investigation, the nhdhhs ( ) recommended the following action areas: • "increase regulation and improve information sharing regarding allied healthcare workers." • "strengthen healthcare systems to promote prevention and early detection of drug diversion." • "assure optimal response to healthcare associated outbreaks to protect patient safety." (p. ) lastly, as of september , the nhdhhs had partnered with the national association of drug diversion investigators (naddi) in maryland and honoreform, hepatitis outbreaks national organization for reform, a patient advocacy group based in nebraska to influence national policy regarding the regulation of medical technicians (associated press ). any criminal act involving a prescription drug. (national association of drug diversion investigators) inciardi et al. ( ) define prescription drug diversion as the following: …the unlawful channeling of regulated pharmaceuticals from legal sources to the illicit marketplace, and can occur along all points in the drug delivery process, from the original manufacturing site to the wholesale distributor, the physician's office, the retail pharmacy, or the patient. (p. ) in , the cdc declared that the overdose on prescription drugs had reached an epidemic status (cdc a). to further illustrate this point: "in , approximately , unintentional drug overdose deaths occurred in the united states, one death every minutes" (cdc a, p. ). opioid analgesics are responsible for the increase in overdose-related deaths (cdc a). regarding the demographics of the abuse of and deaths from opioid analgesic use, it is …highest among men, persons aged - years, non-hispanic whites, and poor and rural populations. persons who have mental illness are overrepresented among both those who are prescribed opioids and those who overdose on them. (cdc a, p. ) of those who are prescribed opioid analgesics, the populations of greatest concern are those who seek care from multiple physicians and potentially take advantage of the physician's sensitivity to the patient's pain management (cdc a). it is this population that is estimated to not only comprise approximately % of overdose cases on opioid analgesics but also are diverting drugs for self-use or providing them to others (cdc a). thus, the cdc recommends that prevention efforts should focus on addressing the following target populations: patients who consume opioid analgesics in high doses and those who seek care from multiple physicians and receive high doses of opioid analgesics. this latter group is likely to be involved in drug diversion (cdc a). inciardi et al. ( ) report that the primary populations involved in drug diversion include "…drug dealers, friends and relatives, smugglers, pain patients, and the elderly, but these vary by the population being targeted" (p. ). due to the complexity of the issue, several comprehensive prevention strategies have been proposed by the cdc and the american medical association: • restrict the number of reimbursement claims for opioid analgesic prescriptions written by a physician and filled by a pharmacy. this restriction is important for low-income populations on public health insurance, such as medicaid, since this population presents as high risk for drug abuse (cdc a). • monitor that the type and prescribed usage of the opioid medication aligns with the diagnoses (cdc a). • develop and enforce legislation that prohibits "doctor shopping" for those physicians who will prescribe opioid analgesics in high doses; elimination of "pill mills" where controlled pain medicine is distributed with little to no medical oversight; and the requirement of a physical examination prior to receiving a prescription for an opioid (cdc a). • provide medical education via evidence-based practice for general and specialist physicians regarding opioid use and risks, thus holding them accountable for their prescribing practice (cdc a). • fund, at the national level, the national all schedules prescription electronic reporting act (nasper). nasper provides …physicians with up-to-date, patient-specific information at the point of care in order to support appropriate prescribing and to identify those patients who were abusing or diverting prescription drugs. (ama , p. ) nasper was intended to fund prescription drug monitoring programs at the state level (ama ). • develop locations that will take back unused or expired medications (ama ). • expand access to addiction treatment and recovery centers (ama ). • support naddi: …a non-profit organization that facilitates cooperation between law enforcement, healthcare professionals, state regulatory agencies and pharmaceutical manufacturers in the prevention and investigation of prescription drug diversion. (naddi ) lessons learned: if this unfortunate event occurred in your hospital, what questions would you ask? i offer the following questions for you to consider from a practitioner and educator perspective: • how could a medical technician with a suspect record be passed from hospital to hospital? why did the staffing agency not disclose the issues with this employee? did the hospital conduct a thorough background check? • what are our hiring processes? how can we see "red flags" before the individual of concern is hired? who should be involved in the hiring process? • is there a system in place for employees to report suspicious behavior to senior management and human resources? should there be incentives to report employees observed in negligent behavior? • do we have a policy to prevent drug diversion in the workplace? if so, how can we improve the policy? • should we implement mandatory, unannounced drug testing for all hospital employees who engage in patient contact? should termination of employment be implemented if an employee refuses to cooperate with this policy? • is there a reporting system in place so that other hospitals across the country could be notified about the infected individual's reason for termination? • should the penalty for engaging in drug diversion be suspension or removal of one's license or certification to practice their skill in a health-care setting? • what other partners in the public health system should be involved in this issue? how can we partner more effectively with law enforcement and drug rehabilitation centers, for example? • should a public registry for those health-care workers found guilty of drug diversion be created at the national level? should access to such a registry be limited to health-care hiring agencies? should the public also have access to this registry? • how can we do a better job in protecting our patients? • how is drug diversion a public health problem, as well as a health-care problem? box . highlights selected public health tools that should be utilized by a competent public health workforce addressing a hcv outbreak in their community due to drug diversion. these skills are not meant to be exhaustive but are important for public health practitioners and educators of the public health workforce to consider when working on this type of public health problem. • conduct an outbreak investigation. − confirm that there are more cases than expected. − consider whether there is ongoing transmission. − define an outbreak-related case. − confirm existing number of outbreak-related cases. − investigate existing number of outbreak-related cases by reviewing all available data (e.g., medical records, laboratory results, interviews). − determine the infectious period for the outbreak. − determine potential sites of contact in a facility and potential family and others who could be exposed. − determine the exposed cohort of people at each site who may have been present during the case's infectious period. − define the screening action plan (including eligibility, implementation, and follow-up). − create a media plan. − develop and implement recommendations to prevent future outbreaks for particular populations or settings. − evaluate the outbreak response including whether implementations were effective in stopping transmission. − identify lessons learned to prevent future outbreaks (cdc b). • communicate with the affected patients, their families, and the public as soon as the act of negligence is realized. • improve communication between the public health system and the healthcare system professionals. • develop a policy that would serve as safety measures to protect patient populations from health-care workers engaged in drug diversion. examples of such policies could include the establishment of a public registry of health-care workers found to be guilty of drug diversion; mandatory, unannounced drug testing of health-care workers whose employment involves patient contact; coordination of care so the number of physicians prescribing pain medications is limited; continued reporting of mandatory conditions. • collaborate with public health system partners, such as local health departments and law enforcement to assist with drug diversion education initiatives, drug and disease testing, and drug diversion investigations. • support national initiatives, such as nasper and honoreform. • engage in ongoing surveillance of drug diversion in the health-care setting. • educate health-care employees on proper reporting of such adverse events. the type of public health professional required to address this specific public health issue includes, but is not limited to, the following: antibiotic resistance is rising for many different pathogens that are threats to health. if we don't act now, our medicine cabinet will be empty and we won't have the antibiotics we need to save lives. (dr. thomas frieden, director, cdc) overview of public health threat antibiotic use arises from the inappropriate use of antibiotics in humans and animals. for example, with humans, physicians often prescribe an antibiotic when one is not needed and/or the patient does not complete the entire course of antibiotic treatment. thus, "…up to % of all antibiotics prescribed for people are not needed or are not optimally effective as prescribed" (cdc a, p. ). antibiotic resistance can occur both within and outside of health-care facilities, yet deaths related to antibiotic resistance are most common in the healthcare setting (cdc a). furthermore, antibiotics are also commonly used in food animals to prevent, control, and treat disease, and to promote the growth of food-producing animals. the use of antibiotics for promoting growth is not necessary, and the practice should be phased out. (cdc a, p. ) antibiotic resistance is not only a public health problem in the usa but it also presents as a major public health problem on a global scale. the statistics that demonstrate the magnitude of this public health issue on a national scale are staggering: • "each year in the united states, at least million people acquire serious infections with bacteria that are resistant to one or more of the antibiotics designed to treat those infections." • "at least , people die each year as a direct result of these antibiotic-resistant infections." • "many more die from other conditions that were complicated by an antibioticresistant infection." (cdc a, p. ) the cdc states that these figures most likely underestimate the magnitude of the problem since …the distinction between an antibiotic-resistant infection leading directly to death, an antibiotic-resistant infection contributing to a death, and an antibiotic-resistant infection related to, but not directly contributing to a death are usually determined subjectively, especially in the preponderance of cases where patients are hospitalized and have complicated clinical presentations. (cdc a, p. ) thus, these statistics could be significantly higher. moreover, the health-care burden this preventable public health issue creates is multifaceted and can include the following cost-related issues for the health-care system: …prolonged and/or costlier treatments, extend hospital stays, necessitate additional doctor visits and healthcare use, and result in greater disability and death compared with infections that are easily treatable with antibiotics. (cdc a, p. ) these health-care costs are estimated to be in excess of us$ billion and societal costs due to a loss of productivity are estimated to be us$ billion a year (roberts et al. ) . a further complication of antibiotic resistance is seen in those populations who have underlying disease, such as diabetes, asthma, and rheumatoid arthritis. these groups, in addition to those patients who may undergo chemotherapy, organ and bone marrow transplant surgery, joint replacement surgery, or end-stage renal disease are significantly dependent on antibiotic use to fight off infections (cdc a). these subgroups represent a susceptible population to infection especially if antibiotics that are heavily relied upon do not work optimally for these patients. the cdc readily acknowledges the following significant areas of improvement in the body of knowledge regarding antibiotic resistance: • "limited national, state, and federal capacity to detect and respond to urgent and emerging antibiotic resistance threats….we do not have a complete picture of the domestic incidence, prevalence, mortality, and cost of resistance." • "currently, there is no systematic international surveillance of antibiotic resistance threats. today, the international identification of antibiotic resistance threats occurs through domestic importation of novel antibiotic resistance threats or through identification of overseas outbreaks." • "data on antibiotic use in human healthcare and in agriculture are not systematically collected. routine systems of reporting and benchmarking antibiotic use wherever it occurs need to be piloted and scaled nationwide." • "programs to improve antibiotic prescribing are not widely used in the united states. these inpatient and outpatient programs hold great promise for reducing antibiotic resistance threats, improving patient outcomes, and saving healthcare dollars." • "advancing technologies can identify threats much faster than current practice. advanced molecular detection (amd) technologies, which can identify ar [antibiotic resistance] threats much faster than current practice, are not being used as widely as necessary in the united states." (cdc a, p. ) chen et al. ( ) propose that rather than identify population groups at risk for ca-mrsa, diagnostic and preventive approaches should focus on addressing risk factors for ca-mrsa, including "…poor personal hygiene, transmission through contaminated environmental services, and care of non-intact skin" (p. ). ca-mrsa infections typically occur in otherwise healthy people with no recent stay in a health-care facility. in contrast, hospital-acquired mrsa (ha-mrsa) is contracted by patients in a health-care facility and has been attributed to invasive surgical procedures and poor infection control practices (niaid ) . health-care providers are concerned about those ha-mrsa infections that are potentially brought into the community once the patient is discharged (johnson ) . the cdc's report titled antibiotic resistance threats in the united states, , is an excellent resource on this topic and provides a comprehensive overview of specific, ranked antimicrobial resistance threats, including prevention measures. an abbreviated outline of prevention measures for ca-mrsa and ha-mrsa are presented here. the reader is encouraged to review the cdc's report on this topic for more extensive information. at the state and community level, it is important to: • "know resistance trends in your region." • "coordinate local and regional infection tracking and control efforts." • "require facilities to alert each other when transferring patients with any infection." (cdc a) the north carolina department of public health proposes the following core activities for public health professionals to engage in when managing ca-mrsa as a public health threat: • "recognize outbreaks" − for example, "an isolated case on a wrestling team; several cases within the same prison unit in a month; more than one case in a child care classroom in a month" (ncdph ). • "react to community concerns" − "consider the risk factors for transmission; the cs" − "contact (skin-to-skin)" − "contaminated items and surfaces (wrestling mats, weight room equipment)" − "comprised skin integrity (cuts and abrasions)" − "crowding (locker rooms)" − "cleanliness (absence)" (ncdph ) • "respond with public health control measures" − "active surveillance to determine scope of problem in specific setting" − "assure specific control measures for wound care and containment of drainage" − "stop any sharing of personal items and promote enhanced personal hygiene" − "consider exclusion from contact activities, especially with actively draining or packed wounds" − "achieve and maintain a clean environment" (ncdph ) selected examples of actions health-care administrators and providers can take include the following: • "require and strictly enforce cdc guidance for infection detection, prevention, tracking, and reporting." • "make sure your lab can accurately identify infections and alert clinical and infection prevention staff when these bacteria are present." • "prescribe antibiotics wisely." • "remove temporary medical devices such as catheters and ventilators as soon as no longer needed." (cdc a) patients and their family members should: • "ask everyone, including doctors, nurses, other medical staff, and visitors, to wash their hands before touching the patient." • "take antibiotics exactly and only as prescribed." (cdc a) carbapenem-resistant enterobacteriaceae (cre) is a hospital-associated infection that is difficult to treat because the bacteria, normally found in the gut, have become resistant to all antibiotics, including carbapenem, which is often considered a last resort type of antibiotic (cdc c). according to the cdc ( c), …cre infections most commonly occur among patients who are receiving treatment for other conditions. patients whose care requires devices like ventilators (breathing machines), urinary (bladder) catheters, or intravenous (vein) catheters, and patients who are taking long courses of certain antibiotics are most at risk for cre infections. additional risk factors for cre infections include a patient's functional status and a stay in the hospital's intensive care unit (schwaber et al. ) . research conducted by perez et al. ( ) suggests that acute care health facilities could be significant reservoirs for the transmission of cre infections. furthermore, cre infections "…can contribute to death in up to % of patients who become infected" (cdc c). approximately cre infections occur in health-care facilities in the usa. "each year, approximately deaths result from infections caused by the two most common types of cre, carbapenem-resistant klebsiella spp. and carbapenem-resistant e. coli" (cdc a). the incidence of cre infections is on the rise, increasing sevenfold over the past decade (mckinney ). the cdc reports that "about % of u.s. short-stay hospitals had at least one patient with a serious cre infection during the first half of . about % of long-term acute care hospitals had one" (cdc a). the cdc has a comprehensive "detect and protect" program for cre infections. the reader is referred to the following website which provides information about this program (http://www.cdc.gov/hai/pdfs/cre/cdc_ detect protect.pdf). an abbreviated outline of prevention measures for cre infections is presented here: state and local health departments are well positioned to lead cre control efforts because of their expertise in surveillance and prevention and their ability to interact among all the health-care facilities in their jurisdiction. (jacob et al. , p. ) thus, at the state and community level it is important to: • "know cre trends in your region"; • "coordinate regional cre tracking and control efforts in areas with cre. areas not yet affected by cre infections can be proactive in cre prevention efforts"; • "require facilities to alert each other when transferring patients with any infection"; • "consider including cre infections on your state's notifiable diseases list". (cdc a) selected examples of actions health-care administrators and providers can take include the following: • "require and strictly enforce cdc guidance for cre detection, prevention, tracking, and reporting"; • "make sure your lab can accurately identify cre and alert clinical and infection prevention staff when these bacteria are present"; • "know if patients with cre are hospitalized at your facility, and stay aware of cre infection risks. ask if your patients have received medical care somewhere else, including another country"; • "follow infection control recommendations with every patient, using contact precautions for patients with cre. whenever possible, dedicate rooms, equipment, and staff to cre patients"; • "prescribe antibiotics wisely"; • "remove temporary medical devices as soon as possible." (cdc a) • "tell your doctor if you have been hospitalized in another facility or country"; • "take antibiotics only as prescribed"; • "insist that everyone wash their hands before touching you." (cdc a). [to address antibiotic resistance] "…will require expanded and coordinated action from clinicians, facility administrators, and public health officials." (jacob ) guh et al. ( ) reported that of state health departments surveyed, all perceived emerging infections, such as cre, as a public health priority for prevention. yet, the extent to which these states can engage in prevention-oriented activities depends upon available resources and existing partnerships among their agencies, hospital administrators, and others in the public health and health-care systems. the cdc has developed core actions to help prevent the development of antibiotic resistance: • "preventing infections, preventing the spread of resistance"; • "tracking"; • "improving antibiotic prescribing/stewardship"; • "developing new drugs and diagnostic tests." (cdc a, p. ) lessons learned the main question is how do we, as public health practitioners and educators, work collaboratively with our partners in the health-care system to prevent antibiotic resistance in the health-care setting and the community? building upon the public health action plan set forth by the cdc, box . highlights selected approaches and tools to prevent infections, broaden our surveillance approach, and improve antibiotic stewardship. these skills are not meant to be exhaustive but are important for public health practitioners and educators of the public health workforce to consider when working on this type of public health problem. • cdc has several surveillance programs to monitor antibiotic resistance trends in the community: • "cdc's national healthcare safety network (nhsn) is used by healthcare facilities to electronically report infections, antibiotic use, and resistance" (cdc , p. ). the more hospitals that report to this database will enable cdc to track the level of antibiotic resistance in all bacteria, as well as track antibiotic usage. "this information will allow facilities to target areas of concern, to make needed improvements and to track the success of their efforts" (cdc a). • "cdc manages the get smart program [http://www.cdc.gov/getsmart], a national campaign to improve antibiotic prescribing and use in both outpatient and inpatient settings" (cdc a, p. ). "one core activity is the development and implementation of the antibiotic stewardship drivers the type of public health professional required to address this specific public health issue includes, but is not limited to, the following: , a tool that provides healthcare facilities with a menu of interventions they can select from to improve antibiotic use" (cdc a, p. ). • "stewardship is a commitment to always use antibiotics only when they are necessary to treat, and in some cases prevent disease; to choose the right antibiotics; and to administer them in the right way in every case. effective stewardship ensures that every patient gets the maximum benefit from the antibiotics, avoids unnecessary harm from allergic reactions and side effects, and helps preserve the life-saving potential of these drugs for the future." (cdc a, p. ) • "…new antibiotics will always be needed to keep up with resistant bacteria as well as new diagnostic tests to track the development of resistance". (cdc a, p. ) and is believed to be spread via direct transmission. the case fatality rate is high in that approximately half of the people with the mers-cov infection have died. "however, the virus has not shown to spread in a sustained way in communities. the situation is still evolving" (cdc the severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) pandemic was short lived but certainly tested the preparedness of our public health and health-care systems for a never-before-seen virus that was transmissible from animals to humans. mers-cov possesses some similarities to sars in that both are believed to be evolved from the bat coronavirus, affect the lower respiratory system, and are transmitted via an airborne route (breban et al. ). however, recent research has also indicated significant differences between these two coronaviruses. for example, assiri et al. ( ) reported that patients diagnosed with mers-cov tended to be older men with underlying chronic medical conditions, including diabetes, heart disease, and renal disease. in addition, these researchers noted that the progression to respiratory failure occurred faster compared to sars (zumla ) . furthermore, these authors observed, in contrast to sars, which was much more infectious especially in healthcare settings and affected the healthier and the younger age group, mers appears to be more deadly with % of patients with co-existing chronic illnesses dying, compared with the % toll of sars. (zumla ) lastly, the authors note that it is possible we are only detecting the most serious of the mers-cov cases, and there are milder cases going undetected in the community (zumla ) . it is these milder cases that also require a case definition: ultimately the key will be to identify the source of mers infection, predisposing factors for susceptibility to infection, and the predictive factors for poor outcome. meanwhile infection control measures within hospitals seem to work. (zumla ) public health emergency? although this is a new virus with a high case fatality rate and is of great concern to the public health and health-care communities, the world health organization (who)'s emergency committee of the international health regulations [unanimously decided in july ] …that with the information now available, and using a risk-assessment approach, the conditions for a public health emergency of international concern (pheic) have not at present been met. (who ) "while not considering the events currently to constitute a pheic, members of the committee did offer technical advice for consideration by who and member states on a broad range of issues, including the following: • improvements in surveillance, lab capacity, contact tracing and serological investigation • infection prevention and control and clinical management • travel-related guidance • risk communications • research studies (epidemiological, clinical and animal) • improved data collection and the need to ensure full and timely reporting of all confirmed and probable cases of mers-cov to who…." (who ) furthermore, there are no current travel bans to countries that have reported mers-cov cases. cdc's …travel notice is a watch (level ) which advises travelers to countries in or near the arabian peninsula to follow standard precautions, such as hand washing and avoiding contact with people who are ill. (cdc ) similarly, who does not currently propose any travel or trade restrictions or special screening activities at points of entry into countries (hopp ) . public health preparedness cdc is actively monitoring the outbreak of mers-cov cases and working with international public health partners. to date, cdc has engaged in public health preparedness for this new virus in the following ways: • "…developed molecular diagnostics that will allow scientists to accurately identify mers cases." • "…providing mers-cov testing kits to state health departments." • "…developed interim guidance for preventing mers-cov from spreading in homes and communities to help protect people if there is ever a case of mers in the u.s." • "…offering recommendations to travelers when needed. cdc is also helping to assess ill travelers returning from affected areas." • "…provide advice and laboratory diagnostic support to countries in the arabian peninsula and surrounding region." (cdc ) research by breban et al. ( ) examined the transmissibility of mers-cov between humans which allowed them to estimate the potential for mers-cov to attain a pandemic status. the authors concluded "…that mers cov does not yet have pandemic potential" (breban et al. , p. ) . the authors recommend the following public health actions: "…enhanced surveillance, active contact tracing, and vigorous searches for the mers-cov animal hosts and transmission routes to human beings" (breban et al. , p. ) . knowledge gaps since this outbreak is still evolving, there are many gaps in our knowledge about the epidemiology of the infection, its clinical course, best diagnostic tools, patient management, and infection control. assiri et al. ( ) did an outstanding job in formulating the questions the public health and health-care communities should be addressing. i have highlighted a few of these questions here for discussion purposes. the reader is referred to the descriptive study of mers-cov in saudi arabia that was conducted by assiri et al. ( ) for further probing questions. • "what is the natural reservoir of mers-cov?" • "what is the source of exposure to mers-cov outside of the healthcare facility (e.g., animals, water, sewage, food)?" the type of public health professional required to address this specific public health issue includes, but is not limited to, the following: asymptomatic, mild, severe infection)?" • "what is the infection rate in the community?" • "what are the protective immune system mechanisms against mers-cov?" • "what is the excretion pattern of the virus?" • "what is the best clinical management of mers-cov?" • "is there a role for antiviral agents?" • "how stable is mers-cov under different environmental conditions (e.g., dry surface, in vomit, sputum or diarrhea)?" • "how can we efficiently disinfect against mers-cov?" • "is there a role for herd immunity against mers-cov? public health skills to address a novel disease outbreak • collaborate with public health partners at the local, state, federal, and international levels in the case of mers-cov, public health and health-care professionals and researchers are reviewing the similarities and differences between sars and mers-cov. reviewing how similar outbreaks were managed can help steer a similar • participate in videoconferences and conference calls sponsored by the cdc and who regarding the latest information and best practices pertaining to the epidemiology, prevention guidelines, clinical management engage in diligent surveillance activities to help develop prevention methods specific to your local community • evaluate these prevention efforts and adapt as necessary. • document the approaches implemented and their effectiveness as this may inform evidence-based practice for future disease outbreaks • be prepared, to the extent possible, with sufficient material and personnel resources to plan, respond, and evaluate prevention efforts inform and educate the public about their risk and prevention efforts via media outlets outbreaks of novel diseases can be unpredictable as the virus evolves. be prepared for changes in transmission, the target population, and disease management references local public health case: pediatric fatality in a refugee resettlement community agency for toxic substances disease registry case studies in environmental medicine: lead toxicity community ecology and capacity: keys to progressing the environmental communication of wicked problems environmental inequality: childhood lead poisoning as an inadvertent consequence of the refugee resettlement process fatal pediatric lead poisoning childhood lead poisoning in a somali refugee resettlement community in new hampshire accessed sept. city of manchester, new hampshire health department (mhd) lead poisoning among refugee children resettled in massachusetts review of community-based research: assessing partnership approaches to improve public health new hampshire childhood lead poisoning prevention program: - blood lead level screening data childhood lead poisoning in massachusetts communities: its association with sociodemographic and housing characteristics an academic-community outreach partnership: building relationships and capacity to address childhood lead poisoning combating rx diversion, overdose and death-comprehensive public health strategies needed after hepatitis c probe, nh, groups push for better drug diversion prevention, detection core elements of an outbreak investigation former employee of exeter hospital pleads guilty to charges related to multi-state hepatitis c outbreak mechanisms of prescription drug diversion among drug-involved club-and street-based populations national association of drug diversion investigators new hampshire code of administrative rules new hampshire division of public health services, department of health and human services national public health case: antibiotic resistance centers of disease control and prevention community-acquired methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus skin and soft tissue infections: management and prevention. current infectious disease reporting assessment of public health perspectives on responding to an emerging pathogen: carbapenem-resistant enterobacteriaceae vital signs: carbapenem-resistant enterobacteriaceae hospital mrsa infections fall by more than %, report shows superbug a 'triple threat' but cdc issues warning early to prevent spread north carolina public health management of ca-mrsa carbapenem-resistant acinetobacter baumannii and klebsiella pneumoniae across a hospital system: impact of post-acute care facilities on dissemination hospital and societal costs of antimicrobialresistant infections in a chicago teaching hospital: implications for antibiotic stewardship predictors of carbapenem-resistant klebsiella pneumoniae acquisition among hospitalized adults and effect of acquisition on mortality international public health case: middle east respiratory syndrome-coronavirus epidemiological, demographic, and clinical characteristics of cases of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus disease from saudi arabia: a descriptive study. the lancet infectious diseases interhuman transmissibility of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: estimation of pandemic risk middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) who statement on the second meeting of the ihr emergency committee concerning mers-cov fullest clinical report of saudi mers points to important differences with sars cases to date key: cord- -d opzb m authors: seo, mihye title: amplifying panic and facilitating prevention: multifaceted effects of traditional and social media use during the mers crisis in south korea date: - - journal: journal mass commun q doi: . / sha: doc_id: cord_uid: d opzb m in the context of the middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) outbreak in south korea, this study examines the multifaceted effects of media use considering the current complex media environment. analysis of a two-wave online panel survey found that traditional media use had a positive influence on mers knowledge while social media use did not. however, knowledge did not facilitate preventive behaviors. in contrast, negative emotional responses due to media use stimulated desirable behaviors. furthermore, social media use directly influenced behavioral responses but traditional media use did not show the same effects. different functions of traditional and social media during an epidemic are discussed. changed that understanding considerably (petersen, hui, & zumla, ) . this unforeseen crisis induced not only morbidity and mortality but also fear and panic in korea. in fact, the panic epidemic caused more widespread damage than the disease itself by slowing the economy and interfering with people's daily routines. in times of crisis, the importance of the media is heightened. government and responsible organizations consider media to be an essential part of crisis management (reynolds & seeger, ) , and the public relies on the media to make sense of confusing or chaotic situations (tai & sun, ; zhang, kong, & chang, ) . given the importance of media in times of crisis, scholarly attention has been largely paid to the following questions: (a) how government and other organizations work (or should work) with media to prepare for and respond to crises and (b) how the media reports (or should report) on crises. relatively less attention, however, has been paid in existing research to examining informational, emotional, and behavioral consequences of individuals' media use in times of crisis. as the importance of social media has risen in general, its importance in the context of crises has also increased. evidence shows that many people turn to social media to seek crisis-related information, such as safety instructions and news updates (veil, buehner, & palenchar, ) , which stands to promote proper behavioral responses to facilitate effective crisis management. however, both researchers and practitioners caution that media-social media in particular-may create misperceptions and amplify public fears by fostering public panic and proliferating unverified information (kasperson, ) . in comparison to traditional media, social media use is particularly susceptible to the aforementioned concerns due to enhanced speed of information transmission and distinctive features of open access platforms (zeng, starbird, & spiro, ) . in the context of the mers outbreak in korea, this study provides an empirical examination of the multifaceted effects of media use in times of crisis in the complex and dynamic media environment of today. using two waves of online panel data collected at two different time points during the mers crisis, i investigate how individuals' traditional and social media use during the crisis produced various consequences, including increased mers knowledge, negative emotions such as fear and anxiety, and direct and indirect facilitation of mers preventive behaviors. i also scrutinize the differences in these effects caused by traditional and social media use. the term crisis is defined as "some breakdown in a system that creates shared stress" (coombs, , p. ) , which includes a very broad range of situations. an infectious disease outbreak is a typical example of crisis in the public health context. prior research has focused on how governments or other responsible organizations can achieve positive relationships with the public in managing a particular crisis. based on the organization-public relationship (opr) approach, scholars have theorized and investigated various (pre)conditions, attributes, and communication strategies of organizations to bring about positive relational outcomes with the public, such as satisfaction, commitment, trust, and mutual understanding (s.-u. yang, ) . with respect to the mers crisis in korea, s.-u. yang ( ) showed that the government's lack of dialogic competency negatively affected government-public relationships. those findings indicate that the korean government's lack of mutuality and openness weakened the credibility of its risk information, which produced negative relational consequences such as distrust and dissatisfaction and the intent to dissolve the relationship. cooperation with the media on the part of government and responsible organizations is a major portion of effective crisis management processes (coombs, ) . from a crisis management perspective, prior research has mainly focused on how to understand and work with the media to accomplish various goals (reynolds & seeger, ) . for instance, researchers have identified the kinds of communication strategies that work best to reduce public-relations damage and generate compliance with desired behaviors in hazardous situations (glik, ) . for instance, seeger, reynolds, and sellnow ( ) emphasized the importance of coordinating specific communication tasks for each crisis phase in the context of hurricane katrina and the h n outbreak. based on the existing literature and case studies, scholars have also attempted to provide guidelines for best practices in crisis communication (veil et al., ) , which could also be used as evaluative criteria in crises (plattala & vos, ) . another line of research focuses on how media channels cover crises by analyzing the content of crisis reporting and discussing its implications. as manifested by terms such as disaster marathon (liebes, ) , the unexpected and impending nature of crises triggers media hype, which produces a prolific amount of reporting. much research has investigated the characteristics of crisis coverage (shih, wijaya, & brossard, ) . shih and colleagues ( ) , for instance, found that the coverage of epidemics showed common patterns across discrete diseases, such as a high eventbase and emphasis on newly identified cases and government actions. with respect to the mers crisis in korea, jin and chung ( ) performed semantic network analysis of korean and foreign media coverage of the crisis. they examined the most frequently used words (e.g., patient, hospital, infection, government, and case) and concluded that korean media focused heavily on the number of cases and the government's responses, consistent with shih and colleagues' findings (see kwon, , for similar findings) . based on content analyses of crisis reporting, past research has also identified persistent problems in crisis reporting, such as excessiveness (rezza, marino, farchi, & taranto, ) , inaccuracy (auter, douai, makady, & west, ) , and sensationalism (moeller, ) . korean media's mers reporting was not exempt from sensational and excessive coverage of the contagious nature of the disease and patient counts (kim, ; kwon, ) . as population mobility and trade in goods and services have increased, newly emerging infectious diseases have become global public health concerns. some emerging infectious diseases have derived from a known infection, such as influenza, and have spread into new populations. the mers outbreak in korea can be understood as one such example. an outbreak of infectious disease causes not only human casualties but also massive economic harm. different from chronic health risks, infectious pandemics trigger spontaneous and intense media attention (posid, bruce, guarnizo, taylor, & garza, ) , which could create cascading effects in various public responses. however, relatively little empirical research has considered the various consequences of media use by individuals during a public health crisis. one of the most desirable public responses to a public health crisis is engaging in preventive behaviors (mitroff, ) . public adoption of precautionary behaviors is critical to preventing large outbreaks of infectious disease, particularly in densely populated countries such as korea. people need to behave in ways that prevent the spread of infectious disease and its consequences, and the media plays an important role in facilitating those behaviors (gammage & klentrou, ; zhang et al., ) . learning from media is one potential pathway to engagement in preventive behaviors (sayavong, chompikul, wongsawass, & rattanapan, ) . besides cognitive responses, another way to galvanize preventive behaviors could be through emotional responses, which could alarm people enough to take proper actions with respect to a given risk. research on risk and health communication has offered various theoretical models and empirical evidence for each approach (boer & seydel, ; griffin, dunwoody, & neuwirth, ). yet, there has been little research testing and comparing the two potential paths to preventive behaviors in the context of a pandemic crisis. first, media use could increase knowledge about a crisis, which could stimulate the public to enact preventive behaviors. the heavy emphasis on knowledge is largely drawn from the traditional knowledge deficit model of communication (rutsaert et al., ) , which claims that a lack of understanding is the major obstacle to reasonable public responses to a risk or crisis. therefore, it accentuates the scientific knowledge transfer from experts to the layperson and media have been regarded as a major conduit of knowledge transfer (hilgartner, ) . thus, when a crisis happens, government and responsible organizations attempt to work with media to disseminate crisis-related information, and the general public turns mainly to the media to acquire the information to deal with the atmosphere of uncertainty. despite that widespread expectation, relatively little empirical attention has been given to whether public crisis knowledge is indeed increased by media use or whether understanding of a crisis indeed facilitates preventive behaviors in times of crisis. media is known to be more suitable for diffusion of knowledge than other channels, such as interpersonal communication (price & oshagan, ) . prior research shows that media use increases health knowledge in the general public, which in turn encourages desirable health behaviors (gammage & klentrou, ; sayavong et al., ) . little empirical evidence, however, has been collected in the context of urgent public health crises such as epidemics. on the contrary, disaster studies have extensively examined individual and group responses to impending threats (e.g., natural disasters or terrorist attacks). according to that body of research, in the face of an impending threat, people become more sensitive to cues about social environments and engage in searches for information as a basis for protective behaviors (lindell & perry, ) . however, despite the known contribution of media channels to these disaster research models, media variables have received insufficient attention in explaining the behavioral responses of individuals to crises. second, media use could stimulate proper behavioral responses via mobilizing information (mi). in the health communication literature, mi is designed to encourage a specific health behavior (friedman & hoffman-goetz, ) . applied to a crisis context, mi offers specific "how to" and "where to" information, such as checklists for preparedness supplies, evacuation information, phone numbers or websites for further information, or specific instructions for precautionary behaviors, meant to encourage people to take specific actions (tanner, friedman, & barr, ) . facing a crisis, the public needs to learn about both the nature of the crisis and how to mitigate its effects and defend themselves (guion, scammon, & borders, ) . a handful of prior studies in the communication discipline have documented the direct and indirect effects of media use on preventive behaviors via knowledge in a crisis situation. ho ( ) , for example, found that attention to newspaper and television news increased public knowledge about the h n pandemic. zhang et al. ( ) also found that media use potentially influenced h n preventive behaviors through fear and perceived knowledge. the results of national surveys in the united kingdom indicate that exposure to media coverage or advertising about swine flu increased the adoption of recommended preventive behaviors (g. rubin, potts, & michie, ) . lin and lagoe ( ) also showed that tv and newspaper use increased h n risk perception and vaccination intent in media users. based on those discussions and findings, it is expected that media use will facilitate public understanding of an emerging infectious disease and encourage appropriate precautionary behaviors. media use in large-scale emergencies, however, still requires empirical scrutiny because of the many unexpected twists that characterize fluid crisis situations. human beings facing a crisis often experience a range of negative emotions. the intense uncertainty inherent to a crisis situation galvanizes fear, worry, and panic (sandman & lanard, ) . in the outbreak of an unfamiliar contagious disease, both the unknown cause and fatal outcome and the interruptions of daily routines and stigma could strengthen negative emotional responses (lee, kim, & kang, ) . prior research indicates that individuals often feel more threatened during crises than is warranted by the actual risk level (coombs & slovic, ) . according to social amplification theory, the risk people feel when facing a crisis could be amplified or weakened by exchanging various forms of information via the news media or informal networks (renn, burns, kasperson et al., ) . once a perceived risk is officially acknowledged, the distortion and exaggeration of information tend follow (song, song, seo, jin, & kim, ) , feeding a range of negative emotional responses. prior research has found that the media tends to overemphasize risk and sensationalize crises. for instance, the media overstresses the horrific symptoms of contagious diseases regardless of facts about the prevalence of those symptoms in a time of outbreak (moeller, ; ungar, ) . the media also tends to focus more on the spread of a disease and the body counts rather than scientific causes (d. rubin & hendy, ) . these types of sensationalism can produce disproportionate public fear and panic responses to infectious diseases. scholars such as muzzatti ( ) have gone a step further and demonstrated that the media can actually manufacture threats to public health. some prior works have examined the effects of media use on emotional reactions toward a crisis. hoffner, fujioka, ibrahim, and ye ( ) , for instance, found that people who learned about the september terrorist attacks through mass media were more likely to report negative emotions than those who heard the news interpersonally. they attributed that difference to the nature of the live pictures and content in mass media crisis reporting. people's negative emotional responses as influenced by media use could lead to inappropriate behaviors, such as avoidance of precautionary behaviors or unnecessary or excessive behavioral reactions (liu, hammitt, wang, & tsou, ) . however, other convincing literature has claimed that emotions can trigger behavioral responses that are benign and adaptive (baumeister, vohs, dewall, & zhang, ) . negative emotional experiences can stimulate people to seek pertinent information (e.g., the risk information seeking and processing (risp) model, griffin et al., ) and encourage them to take preventive actions (e.g., protection motivation theory [pmt], boer & seydel, ) . unlike the cognition-based approach, which emphasizes the role of knowledge, these theoretical models focus on how negative emotions work as motivational drivers to guide people to protect themselves. empirical work has supported those claims by showing that negative emotion can drive positive behavioral responses, including adopting recommended health behaviors (ruiter, abraham, & kok, ) and engaging in information seeking (z. j. yang & kahlor, ) . as discussed, korean media coverage of the mers crisis did not deviate wildly from the patterns reported in the literature (kim, ; kwon, ) . the terms most frequently and centrally mentioned by the major news outlets mainly related to the contagious nature of the disease and patient counting (kwon, ) . sensational reporting and delivering government press releases without critical validation were also characteristic of the mers coverage (kim, ) . in addition, poor government handling of that crisis reduced the credibility of the information it provided (s.-u. yang, ) . against that backdrop, it is worth investigating the potential association between media use related to mers and the negative emotional responses of media users to determine the extent to which they influenced the behavioral responses of those users. along with traditional media channels such as television and newspapers, the importance of social media increases during large-scale events. these trends are particularly salient in the context of crises, which are traditionally marked by high levels of information seeking by the general population. evidence shows that people turn to social media during times of crisis to find information about safety instructions, news updates, and damage reports. increasingly, the public expects even official agents to respond to public requests via social media in times of emergency, concurrent with traditional crisis management (veil et al., ) . these heightened expectations are due in large part to perceptions of the benefits of social media for crisis communication. it is believed that social media can accelerate information dissemination in crisis situations by linking end users directly to critical information sources in real-time (hughes & palen, ) . during the h n virus outbreak, people exchanged information and experiences through social media (chew & eysenbach, ) . social media, such as twitter, has been used to quickly share initial information and updates during various types of crises, as well as to encourage specific actions, such as volunteering and precautionary behaviors (potts, ) . the presence of social media as an information source becomes salient when traditional media provides limited information. for instance, tai and sun ( ) showed that, during the severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) epidemic in , chinese people turned to the internet and message services to find information unavailable from the traditional media, which operate under close censorship by the chinese government. likewise, at the beginning of the mers crisis, the korean government withheld the list of hospitals affected by mers, and the mainstream media adhered to the information embargo requested by the government. limited access to needed information fueled fear, so people turned to social media instead of traditional media outlets (kim, ) . social networking service (sns) users are likely to be exposed to messages that affect their perceptions and their use of preventive behaviors related to health risks and the crisis event. vos and buckner ( ) found that sns messages in the outbreak of the h n virus consisted mainly of sense-making messages to educate users about the nature of the risk and efficacy messages to encourage appropriate responses. in a similar line, yoo, choi, and park ( ) found that receiving information about mers through sns directly encouraged mers preventive behavioral intentions. social media is filled not only with information but also emotional expressions (chew & eysenbach, ) . negative emotions are more likely than positive emotions to be floating around social media during an infectious outbreak, which could increase risk perception (choi, yoo, noh, & park, ) . for instance, song et al. ( ) found that negative emotions (e.g., anxiety or fear) prevailed in online boards and social media during the mers crisis. often, information intertwined with emotional markers travels around social media, and emotionally charged messages are more likely than purely informational posts to be shared and diffused (pfeffer, zorbach, & carley, ; stieglitz & dang-xuan, ) . s. choi, lee, pack, chang, and yoon ( ) mined internet media reports about mers in and examined their effects on public emotion expressed online, which they captured using a sentiment analysis. they mined all mers-related news articles from media companies, including the comments about each one. in a time-series analysis, they found a flow from internet media to public fear. according to song et al. ( ) , negative emotion accounted for % of all posts throughout online networks, especially twitter, during the mers crisis. therefore, i have drawn the following four hypotheses. i expected that both traditional and social media use in times of crisis could directly and indirectly facilitate preventive behaviors (via mers knowledge) and negative emotional responses to the mers situation. emerging social media channels have reshaped the crisis information context, which potentially complicates the relationships among media use and informational, emotional, and behavioral responses in the general public. although social media has been considered a powerful tool for disseminating information, both researchers and practitioners have cautioned against the propensity of social media to proliferate inaccurate data, unverified rumors, and even malicious misinformation (zeng et al., ) . because information disseminated through social media is often unverified, identifying accurate data and valid sources can be challenging and could both undermine relevant knowledge and exacerbate the consequences of emotional and behavioral responses. together with the characteristics of open access platforms, this concern is heightened by the dynamic nature of crisis communication and information overload in times of crisis (zeng et al., ) . social media networks are mostly composed of acquaintances and thus share common characteristics with interpersonal channels. prior works have shown that interpersonal channels tend to show stronger effects on behavioral change than traditional media, mainly through normative pressure (price & oshagan, ) . in addition, social media generally deal with a rapid exchange of information, which could be more appropriate for short and clear mi than for scientific knowledge about a crisis. for instance, won, bae, and yoo ( ) conducted an issue word analysis of sns messages during the mers outbreak and reported the six most frequently mentioned words on sns at that time. two of the six words were mask and hand sanitizer, which are clearly related to preventive behaviors. the other four words were hospital, infection, coughing, and checkup, which are also at least indirectly related to preventive behaviors. however, a big data analysis examining online news sites found that posts about symptoms, government reaction, disease treatment, business impacts, and rumors ranked higher than prevention-related information (song et al., ) . therefore, the effects of social media use on crisis knowledge and preventive behaviors might differ from those of traditional media. in terms of emotional responses, social media and traditional media might also show some differences. social media is known for its ability to spread information in a speedy and viral manner, but that information tends to be integrated with emotions. furthermore, emotionally charged messages are more likely to be shared than neutral messages (pfeffer et al., ; stieglitz & dang-xuan, ) . recent works on the mers crisis have shown that about % of the buzzwords on social media during the mers crisis were negatively charged emotional words such as fear and anxiety (s. choi et al., ; song et al., ) . those works suggest that social media might be more likely than traditional media to magnify negative emotional responses. on the contrary, some prior works have found that people use social media for social support in crisis situations (y. choi & lin, ) . that phenomenon could lessen the negative emotional responses in social media users. therefore, it is worth investigating how the cognitive, emotional, and behavioral responses to social media use differ from those to traditional media use, which raises the following research question: are there any differences between traditional media use and social media use in terms of cognitive, emotional, and behavioral responses during the mers crisis? the proposed research model is based on the preceding discussion (see figure ) . specifically, i expect that both traditional and social media use related to mers was associated with mers knowledge, and that it directly and indirectly encouraged mers preventive behaviors in media users. i also expect that traditional and social media use about the korean mers crisis stimulated negative emotional responses, which in turn influenced both precautionary and panic behaviors in media users. finally, i examine whether social media use showed informational, emotional, and behavioral consequences similar to those of traditional media use. the data for this study were obtained from a two-wave online panel survey. wave survey was conducted in the first few days of june , when hype about the mers situation was escalating, and wave survey was conducted about month later. the respondents were adult members of an online panel recruited and maintained by a survey company in seoul, korea. about million online users compose the company's panel, and participants were randomly drawn from that list to meet the specified constraints (e.g., areas of residence based on census composition). the selected panel members received a soliciting e-mail from the company and had full liberty to decline participation. the first page of the online survey included an explanation of the study purpose and researcher contact information. study participants gave informed consent by clicking the start survey button. they were free to stop taking the survey at any time, and they received small monetary incentives (e.g., cash-equivalent points) from the company. a total of , members of the online panel participated in wave survey. about month later, the same respondents were recontacted by the survey company to participate in wave survey. the number of participants who completed both waves and online surveys was , which is the final subject sample used for the analyses herein. the final sample was . % male, with a mean age of . years (sd = . ). with regard to level of education, . % of the sample had some level of college education or a bachelor's degree, . % had a -year college degree, and . % of the sample had some level of high school education or were graduates of high school. the median monthly household income was between , , and , , won. of the total sample, . % were married, with an average of . children (sd = . ). traditional news use. traditional news use of mers-related content was measured based on media use frequency questions. specifically, on a -point scale ( = never to = very often), respondents were asked to measure how much they relied on tv news or tv news websites and newspapers and newspaper websites in the context of the korean mers crisis (r = . , m = . , sd = . ). social media use. social media use of mers-related content was measured using three -point scales ( = never to = very often) in wave survey. the specific use behaviors were (a) seeking mers-related news or information using social media, (b) receiving mers-related news or information from others via social media, and (c) talking about mers with others via social media (α = . , m = . , sd = . ). negative emotional reactions to the mers situation. negative emotional reactions to the mers situation were measured in both waves and surveys. on a -point scale ( = not at all to = feel strongly), respondents were asked to report how strongly they felt fear and anxiety about the mers situation (wave , r = . , m = . , sd = . ; wave , r = . , m = . , sd = . ). mers knowledge. mers knowledge was measured using six quiz-type questions in both waves and surveys. knowledge items covered mers symptoms, lethality, maximum latent period, and institutions where a formal diagnosis of mers could be made during the outbreak. for each question, correct answers were coded as , and incorrect answers were coded as . subsequently, the answers to those six questions were combined and used as the mers knowledge measure (wave , with scores ranging from to , m = . , sd = . ; wave , with scores ranging from to , m = . , sd = . ). wave survey using five items. on a -point scale ( = never to = very often), respondents were asked how often they engaged in behaviors to prevent mers: wearing a mask when they were out, washing hands frequently, avoiding contact with people with mers symptoms, avoiding hospitals, and avoiding daily activities such as grocery shopping to avoid crowds (α = . , m = . , sd = . ). before running the path model to test hypotheses, a confirmatory factor analysis (cfa) was conducted to test validity of the measurement model. two knowledge measures were excluded from cfa because measures were composed of all dichotomized items. model modification was not utilized: χ ( ) = . , p = . ; normed fit index (nfi) = . ; incremental fit index (ifi) = . ; comparative fit index (cfi) = . ; root mean square error approximation (rmsea) = . with % confidence interval (ci) = [. , . ]. factor loadings ranged from . to . and two factor loadings were rather low of . (one of mers preventive behaviors) and . (newspaper use item). however all ave (average variance extracted) were higher than . and factor loadings were still within acceptable range (fornell & larcker, ) . therefore, all items remained. path analysis was conducted to test the hypotheses with latent variables and two observed knowledge variables. the tested model included two control variables from wave data. specifically, mers knowledge and negative emotions about the mers situation measured in wave controlled each of the wave variables accordingly. the research model showed a reasonably good fit according to commonly used criteria (hu & bentler, ) : χ ( ) = . , p = . ; nfi = . ; ifi = . ; cfi = . ; rmsea = . with % ci = [. , . ]. figure presents the overall results with path coefficients of the hypothesized model. h predicted that the more individuals use traditional news media (h a) and social media (h b), the more mers knowledge they would acquire. as expected, mers knowledge increased with increasing use of mers-related traditional news media (β = . , p < . ), which supported h a. on the contrary, mers-related social media use was not significantly associated with mers knowledge (β = −. , ns), which did not support h b. therefore, h was only partially supported. h predicted that two types of media use would be positively associated with negative emotional responses to the mers situation. results showed that the more traditional media one used, the more anxious and worried about mers one became (β = . , p < . ), which supported h a. however, mers-related sns use and negative emotions was not significantly associated (β = . , ns), which failed to support h b. therefore, h was also partially supported. the next set of hypotheses predicted that positive effects of mers knowledge (h a) and negative emotional responses (h b) on mers preventive behaviors. as predicted, negative emotional response was positively related to engagement in mers preventive behaviors (β = . , p < . ). on the contrary, mers knowledge was not significantly associated with mers preventive behaviors (β = . , ns). therefore, h was also partially supported. the final set of hypotheses expected that both traditional news media use (h a) and social media use (h b) would have direct positive effects on mers preventive behaviors. results showed that only social media use showed note. dotted arrows denote paths that are not statistically significant or only marginally significant. the numbers presented in figure are the standardized path coefficients. all exogenous variables, including mers knowledge (w ) and negative emotions (w ), were correlated with one another. no error term was correlated. w = wave ; w = wave ; mers = middle east respiratory syndrome. *p < . . **p < . . ***p < . . direct positive effects on mers preventive behaviors (β = . , p < . ) not traditional media use (β = . , ns). finally, rq asked whether traditional media use and social media use show any differences in terms of cognitive, emotional, and behavioral responses. results showed that individuals during the mers crisis showed different responses depending on two types of media use. with respect to cognitive responses, as reported above, only traditional media use was positively associated with mers knowledge. likewise, in terms of emotional responses, traditional news media use showed a positive association with negative emotional reactions. with respect to behavioral responses, only social media use showed significant positive direct effects on mers preventive behaviors. wald tests comparing the path coefficients confirmed that the difference between effects of social media and traditional media on behavioral responses (wald test = − . , p < . ) was statistically meaningful. wald test result also validated that the difference in cognitive response between social and traditional media use was also statistically significant (wald test = − . , p < . ). despite a consensus that the media play an important role in times of crisis, the informational, emotional, and behavioral effects of traditional and social media use by individuals have been understudied in previous research. using two sets of data collected at two different time points during the mers crisis in korea, i investigated how traditional and social media use influenced mers knowledge, fear and anxiety about the mers situation, and adoption of preventive behaviors. to reflect the complexity of today's media environment in times of crisis, i focused on potential differences between the effects of traditional and social media use. first, this study found that traditional media use and social media use have different effects. as expected, traditional media use galvanized public understanding of mers. the more people read newspapers and watched tv news about mers, the more knowledge they acquired about mers symptoms, lethality, and maximum latent period. social media use neither increased nor decreased mers knowledge. the role of social media in times of crisis has received growing attention, at least in part because of its potential for viral information transmission. however, i did not find significant cognitive effects from social media use. compared with traditional media, which mainly report information verified by expert sources (lowrey, ) , social media can not only convey knowledge but also disseminate false or unverified information during a crisis. the null effect of social media use on mers knowledge might thus result from the conflicting content of social media. this speculation, of course, should be verified with a robust empirical examination. second, i found that negative emotions played a prominent role in facilitating preventive behaviors in the mers crisis. experiencing fear and anxiety is a natural reaction when people are faced with a crisis. a lack of familiarity with newly emerging infectious diseases such as mers tends to deepen fear and anxiety (sandman & lanard, ) , and media use could amplify those emotional experiences (kasperson, ) . finding of this study also indicate that traditional media use increased negative emotional responses. the more media respondents consumed, the more fear and anxiety they felt about the mers situation. more importantly, i found that the negative emotional responses people experienced when facing a crisis caused them to protect themselves from mers instead of pushing them into illogical or destructive behaviors. the positive role of negative emotions in promoting adaptive behaviors is consistent with what theoretical frameworks such as pmt and risp suggest. however, most prior studies based on pmt have been developed and tested within the context of public health campaigns. compared with carefully designed campaign messages intended to scare people to act properly with respect to a given risk, media messages could more likely be crude and mixed with various intentions (e.g., sensational reports to secure audience attention). indeed, there is a lack of empirical research examining what kinds of crisis-specific responses could be elicited from the media individuals choose to use in times of crisis. in addition, risp research provides a useful theoretical framework to predict that negative emotions could motivate people to seek information about a risk. however, this framework did not pay attention to media use, which can lead to behavioral consequences such as preventive behaviors beyond information seeking. this study addressed these gaps in the literature by directly testing the roles of negative emotions and media as potential sources of those emotions during a pandemic, which has been rarely examined in previous studies. this finding has clear implications for governmental communication strategies and media reporting. this study's results suggest that it may not be effective crisis management to brush off negative emotions among the public as illogical overreactions. instead, admitting fears and anxiety people may feel and designing messages channeling those emotions into desirable health behaviors needs to be considered even in times of crisis. sympathizing with people's feelings can be an effective means to boost the evaluation of communicators' dialogic competency which was found to be positively related to information credibility and trust in the government during the mers endemic (s.-u. yang, ) , which in turn may promote government and media health message effectiveness. this seemingly positive role of negative emotions, however, does not advocate for sensationalizing crisis situations. instead, both government and media may consider applying knowledge about the potentially positive function of negative emotion to public communication during a crisis. for instance, risk and health communication research has developed guidelines on how to write a good fear appeal message in the public health campaign context. government and news media may consult with these guidelines to compose a message to help people to cope with an epidemic risk. third, the findings of this study indicate that the role of knowledge for preventive behaviors in the mers crisis was rather limited. only traditional media use significantly increased the public's knowledge about mers but the increased understanding did not facilitate precautionary behaviors. disseminating knowledge has been a top priority in times of crisis under the assumption that understanding could lead the public to protective behavioral responses. the results of this study imply that filling the deficit of knowledge may not be the most efficient way to promote behavioral responses. the findings here suggest that an emotional pathway may work more efficiently than cognitive drives in promoting the adoption of preventive behaviors during a public health crisis. however, it is also important to point out that the findings related to knowledge should be interpreted with caution in the context of the mers crisis. s.-u. yang ( ) noted that koreans in general tended to perceive the government's mutuality and openness in communication somewhat unfavorably, which often negatively affected government-public relationships. as s.-u. yang ( ) showed, the korean government's lack of mutuality and openness seems to have deteriorated the credibility of its risk information, which may have worsened the public's trust and satisfaction with the government. this unique situation might have lowered not only the credibility of government information but also the credibility of information from news media that relied heavily on the government for information. accordingly, the low credibility of public information on mers can explain the limited role of knowledge in promoting desirable behavioral responses. prior work examining a different epidemic crisis found that one material factor influencing preventive action was respondent opinion about authorities (quah & hin-peng, ) . my finding thus suggests that simple acquisition of disseminated scientific knowledge might not necessarily produce desirable behavioral responses from the public. it also implies that contextual factors, such as government dialogic competency, should be considered to fully grasp the role of knowledge in times of crisis. fourth, the findings of this study show that, unlike traditional media use, social media use produced strong direct behavioral responses during the mers crisis. traditional media use did not show direct effects on preventive behaviors. this distinction between social media use and traditional media use could be explained in the following two ways. first, compared with traditional media, which is known to be powerful in knowledge diffusion, the interpersonal channel has been considered effective on behavioral responses via the normative route (price & oshagan, ) . the role of normative pressure on behavioral adaptation has been well documented in the health communication literature (e.g., planned behavioral intention model, ajzen, ) . given that social media networks are mainly composed of acquaintances, it is possible that social media might have formed specific behavioral norms related to the mers crisis (e.g., avoidance of hospitals and crowded places). the other explanation is related to potential differences in the content of traditional media and social media. social media might have delivered more mi than traditional media. indeed, a prior work analyzing social media content during the mers crisis reported that preventive behavior-related terms (e.g., masks and hand sanitizers) were the most frequently mentioned words (won et al., ) . furthermore, the most needed information at the beginning of the mers crisis was the list of mers-affected hospitals, which the korean government had withheld. given the government's unwillingness to share the list of hospitals, the public resorted to social media to actively seek, exchange, and share the hospital-related information. that piece of information could single-handedly trigger one preventive behavior (i.e., avoiding specific hospitals to protect themselves). indeed, hospital was one of the terms most frequently used on social media during the mers crisis (won et al., ) . however, a big data analysis of traditional media reported that words such as infection, confirmed cases, and death were centrally located in traditional media content (kwon, ) . in short, compared with traditional media, social media might play an essential role in virally diffusing mi (specific behavioral information, including where not to go and what to do). given the importance of dialogic competency for effective crisis communication (s.-u. yang, ) , some technological features of social media may have enhanced communication mutuality and openness which the korean government and media lacked. communication through social media may allow users to share empathy and social support. at the same time, social media-mediated communication can be perceived as more accessible and open than media-mediated communication. strong mutuality and openness perceived through communication with network members on social media could have increased the credibility of mi which could have enhanced behavioral responses at least during the mers crisis in korea. another notable finding regarding social media is that social media did not generate public anxiety and fear, at least during the mers crisis in korea. this is quite an interesting finding because the korean government strongly criticized media, especially social media, for releasing unverified rumors and fears. the lack of association between social media use and negative emotional responses could be a result of canceling out effects. in other words, social media might induce fear and anxiety, but social media might effectively cancel out the negative emotions by providing wanted social supports or mi, which should be under solid empirical scrutiny in the future study. in the interest of future research, it is important to discuss some of the limitations of this study. the data are not based on a representative sample, which means the study findings must be interpreted with caution. for instance, online panels tended to include the younger and the more educated compared with the general population, which could influence the interpretation of the role of social media and traditional media use during the mers crisis in korea. the measurement of key variables also has limitations. for example, traditional media use was assessed only for newspaper and television. omitting radio and general internet use should be recognized as another major limitation of the study. also, using quiz-type questions to tap mers knowledge without close validation and planning might have contributed to the low correlation between the two mers knowledge measures, which also raises a concern about a test-retest error involved in the panel data. these measurement issues could produce errors, which would be carried into the hypothesized path model this study proposed. in addition, wave data did not include mers preventive behavior measures, which made it impossible to control all the endogenous variables in wave data. therefore, it is hard to argue that an ideal panel data analysis was conducted for testing the proposed hypotheses. with these limitations in mind, this study contributed to the scholarship by testing the predictions drawn from existing theories that have rarely been examined in the context of a real epidemic crisis. major scholarly focus in the communication field has been on how government and responsible organizations manage or should manage crises. shifting away from that focus, this study investigated the associations between individual media use and consequent responses which have been relatively understudied. the author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. the author(s) received no 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crisis-related social media messages mihye seo (phd, the ohio state university) is an associate professor in the department of media and communication at sungkyunkwan university, seoul, south korea. her research focuses on media use and its influence on individuals' daily life and on community-building efforts. key: cord- -xdexrlq authors: park, jung wan; lee, keon joo; lee, kang hyoung; lee, sang hyup; cho, jung rae; mo, jin won; choi, soo young; kwon, geun yong; shin, ji-yeon; hong, jee young; kim, jin; yeon, mi-yeon; oh, jong seok; nam, hae-sung title: hospital outbreaks of middle east respiratory syndrome, daejeon, south korea, date: - - journal: emerg infect dis doi: . /eid . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: xdexrlq from may through july , a total of cases of middle east respiratory syndrome were reported from hospitals in daejeon, south korea, including index case and new cases. we examined the epidemiologic features of these cases and found an estimated median incubation period of . days ( . days in hospital a and . days in hospital b). the overall attack rate was . % ( . % in hospital a and . % in hospital b), and the attack rates among inpatients and caregivers in the same ward were . % and . %, respectively. the overall case-fatality rate was . % ( . % in hospital a and . % in hospital b). the use of cohort quarantine may have played a role in preventing community spread, but additional transmission occurred among members of the hospital cohort quarantined together. caregivers may have contributed in part to the transmission. from may through july , a total of cases of middle east respiratory syndrome were reported from hospitals in daejeon, south korea, including index case and new cases. we examined the epidemiologic features of these cases and found an estimated median incubation period of . days ( . days in hospital a and . days in hospital b). the overall attack rate was . % ( . % in hospital a and . % in hospital b), and the attack rates among inpatients and caregivers in the same ward were . % and . %, respectively. the overall case-fatality rate was . % ( . % in hospital a and . % in hospital b). the use of cohort quarantine may have played a role in preventing community spread, but additional transmission occurred among members of the hospital cohort quarantined together. caregivers may have contributed in part to the transmission. a few respiratory viruses constitute emerging threats to global health security ( ); among them are middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) coronavirus (mers-cov), which has caused outbreaks in saudi arabia ( , ) . the major mers outbreaks that occurred during - have been in or near the arabian peninsula. however, information on the epidemiologic features of mers is insufficient, especially for different environmental and cultural settings. the mers outbreak in south korea could provide more information about the epidemiology of mers because it was the largest outbreak outside the middle east ( ). the first case of mers in south korea was reported on may , . the patient had flown among several countries in the middle east (bahrein, the united arab emirates, saudi arabia, and qatar) and became the source of consecutive hospital-to-hospital transmissions after his return to south korea, which led to laboratoryconfirmed cases ( ) and deaths. hospital-to-hospital transmission involved hospitals and originated from hospital (hospital p) ( , ) . this transmission was attributable to "hospital shopping" by some mers patients ( , ) and was particularly evident in daejeon, which is the fifth largest city in south korea. the index case-patient for nosocomial transmission in daejeon had initially traveled from his home city of daejeon to pyeongtaek, south korea, seeking healthcare at hospital p, after which he returned to daejeon. subsequently, hospitals in daejeon experienced mers cases attributable to this patient. this index case-patient in daejeon was consecutively hospitalized at hospital a in daejeon during may - , , and at hospital b during may - , . thereafter, an additional mers cases ( in hospital a, in hospital b) were reported. after the south korea government recognized the outbreak of mers in daejeon, cohort quarantine (isolation of persons who had been in contact with patients with confirmed cases in the hospital ward) was applied. this quarantine seems to have played a useful role in preventing the spread of mers-cov to the local community. we describe the mers case-patients, the epidemiologic features of the disease, and the quarantine policy used to prevent additional transmission. hospital a is a -bed general hospital in daejeon. the outbreak occurred in ward on the fifth floor, where rooms ( with beds, with beds, with beds, and with bed) are located. hospital b is an -bed university hospital in daejeon. the main outbreak occurred in ward on the ninth floor, where rooms ( with beds, with beds, with beds, and with bed) are located. epidemiologic investigators of the korea centers for disease control and prevention started their outbreak investigation with face-to-face interviews of the index casepatient in daejeon and the additional case-patients with confirmed mers-cov infection. we collected data on the demographic characteristics and the clinical, contact, and mers-cov exposure histories and thoroughly reviewed the medical records of the case-patients to identify symptoms, underlying concurrent medical conditions, laboratory findings, and clinical courses of illness. clinical outcome was classified as recovery or death, and the ambulation status of the inpatients at the time of admission was clarified. we collected the names of inpatients, their room numbers, medical staff, and caregivers (family members or professionals hired by the family or hospital) exposed to mers-cov in each hospital. the duration and route of exposure were further determined by reviewing recordings from closed-circuit televisions placed in the hospitals. moreover, we used the floor plan of each hospital to estimate the spatial distributions and transmission routes of the virus within the hospitals. these estimates enabled us to identify a possible location of exposure and a transmission route for each confirmed case. when a patient with a confirmed case had experienced several possible exposures, we determined the most probable exposure by author consensus. persons who had had face-to-face contact with patients with confirmed cases were considered the closest contacts. when the data were ambiguous, the following were reviewed independently by the korea centers for disease control and prevention and the daejeon in-depth team: all potential exposures by symptom onset; disease duration; physical distance from a patient with a confirmed case; and infector factors including ambulation status, symptoms (including a productive cough), and sharing of caregivers. when a patient with a confirmed case had been subjected to several potential exposures, the most probable exposure was determined by consensus of the teams. an expert member of the korean society of epidemiology reviewed all decisions. the process was repeated until a final consensus was obtained. sputum samples from the persons suspected of having mers were collected in sterile cups and sent to qualified local or national laboratories for confirmation. as a confirmatory test, a real-time reverse transcription pcr of nucleic acid extracted from sputum specimens was performed ( ) . cycle threshold values were also measured to quantify viral loads. for each patient with a confirmed case, the korea centers for disease control and prevention assigned a case number according to the order of confirmation during the mers outbreak in south korea. for example, the case number of the index case-patient in daejeon was . the cases were described in case-series form. attack rates were calculated as the number of cases per number of exposed persons (defined as persons who had experienced face-to-face contact with a symptomatic mers case-patient in either hospital or as persons who had been in the same hospital ward as the symptomatic case-patients). such persons were identified from the outbreak investigation reports and the lists of those undergoing cohort or home quarantine. to assess differences in attack rates and case-fatality rates according to independent variables, we performed χ and fisher exact tests by using sas software version . (sas institute, inc., cary, nc, usa). comparisons were considered significant at p< . and marginally significant at p< . (both p values were -tailed). we defined the incubation period as the time from exposure to onset of mers-associated symptoms, including nonspecific signs and symptoms such as fever, chills, cough, sore throat, sputum production, dyspnea, myalgia, headache, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and abdominal discomfort. if the exposure period was > days, a single interval-censored estimate of the incubation period was computed by using the earliest and latest dates of exposure and the date of symptom onset for each case-patient (coarsedatatools package in r statistical software version . . ) ( ). to construct cumulative fraction curves of all cases by incubation period, we calculated the log-normal density function by fitting the interval-censored data on incubation periods. to do this, we used the maximum-likelihood method and calculated the medians and th and th percentiles of the incubation periods. the daejeon index case-patient (case-patient ), a -yearold man, lived in daejeon and was a former smoker ( to pack-years). he had undergone colon surgery in august at hospital p. the index case-patient of the mers outbreak in south korea (case-patient ) was in hospital p during may - , . the daejeon index case-patient was admitted to hospital p at the same time (may - , ) for a follow-up colonoscopy. after discharge on may , the daejeon index case-patient felt feverish and had chills, cough, general weakness, and diarrhea. because of these symptoms, he was hospitalized in hospital a in daejeon during may - ; the room was shared by inpatients and caregiver. because his symptoms did not improve, he was transferred to the emergency department at hospital b. after hospitalization in ward in hospital b, he was suspected of having mers and was isolated in a negative-pressure room on may . ultimately, he became the th confirmed mers patient of total case-patients during the outbreak. before the daejeon case-patient was isolated, those around him did not use protective equipment. therefore, virus was spread from him during his first days of illness, before mers diagnosis and isolation. when we checked the closed-circuit television recordings from hospital a to estimate how many persons could have been in contact with the daejeon index case-patient, we found that he had been in several sections of the hospital ward, in particular those located on the left side of the nurse station. these sections included his admission room, a restroom, the nurse station, the foyer, and the hall in front of the elevators. the daejeon index case-patient had potentially contacted every inpatient in the same hospital ward. therefore, we classified all patients and caregivers in that ward as possible contacts. a total of cases (including the index case) were confirmed in the hospitals, and case-patients died of mers ( in hospital a and in hospital b) (online technical appendix, https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/ / / - -techapp .pdf). other than the index case, cases occurred in hospital a and in hospital b. casepatients , , and were admitted to the same room in hospital a as the daejeon index case-patient. case-patient was a caregiver hired by case-patient , so she was in the same hospital room in hospital a during may - . case-patients , , , , and were admitted to the same room in hospital b as the daejeon index case-patient. case-patient was the wife of case-patient ; case-patient was a caregiver hired by case-patient ; and case-patient was the wife of case-patient . therefore, when caregiving, they were in the same room as the daejeon index case-patient. the median age of the case-patients was (interquartile range - ) years; ( . %) were male; ( . %) were commercial caregivers; and ( . %) were family caregivers. a total of ( . %) case-patients had underlying diseases; ( . %) had pulmonary diseases, such as asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, idiopathic pulmonary disease, lung cancer, and pulmonary tuberculosis. all patients reported fever. other signs and symptoms included chills ( patients, . %), cough ( , . %), sputum ( , . %), myalgia ( , . %), headache ( , . %), dyspnea ( , . %), nausea ( , . %), diarrhea ( , . %), table . quarantine policy to prevent additional transmission of mers, daejeon, south korea* action  the cohort quarantine applied to admitted patients and their caregivers (professional or family) exposed to the mers case-patients.  inpatients admitted to the same hospital room before quarantine were quarantined in the same room because their degree of exposure was probably the same. their caregivers were also quarantined in the same room because of the need for caregiving.  the medical staff (physicians, nurses, and medical technologists) exposed to the mers case-patients were subjected to home quarantine. however, members of the households of medical staff were not subjected to home quarantine until and unless that medical staff member exhibited any symptoms. contact between household members and the medical staff member was severely restricted.  the wards under cohort quarantine were controlled by unexposed medical staff using level d protectors (microguard ; m, bracknell, uk). each protector included an n mask, protective glasses, a whole-body protective gown, gloves, and boots.  the body temperature of persons (including inpatients and caregivers) and medical staff admitted to cohort or home quarantine was checked, and these persons were clinically interviewed twice daily. if they reported any symptoms (including a febrile sensation or chills) or if they were asymptomatic but with a body temperature > . c°, they were immediately placed in a quarantined area at each hospital. the kcdc performed laboratory tests at this stage; the results were available d later. if the doctor in charge strongly suspected mers, that patient could be transferred, with careful precautions, to a national isolation hospital within d.  all wards were disinfected by use of sodium hydrosulfite, % (vol/vol) alcohol, and % (vol/vol) chlorhexidine twice during each shift, thus times/d.  south korea operates a nationwide medical insurance scheme; all costs incurred by mers patients were covered.  persons with confirmed mers were transferred to another quarantine room that had negative-pressure equipment. strategies for caregivers  the infection control team carefully explained the risk for mers and the need for cohort quarantine to all caregivers. some caregivers did not wish to remain in hospital wards with inpatients. they were taken home and placed in in-home quarantine and used the same mers quarantine strategy applicable to medical staff in close contact with the patients.  caregivers attended only noninfected inpatients who required total care. if an inpatient was confirmed to have mers, nursing care was provided by professional nurses wearing protectors.  the infection control team continuously educated caregivers on how mers was transmitted and how to prevent infection. caregivers were told to wear protectors (n masks, vinyl gowns, and gloves) and to not touch each other. however, during the first week of quarantine, checks of closed-circuit television footage showed that the protector and contact rules were sometimes not obeyed in hospital a.  hospital a designated rooms for caregivers in the quarantine ward. the caregivers could use these rooms when they were not actively engaged in patient care. to prevent the spread of mers-cov to the local community, on june , , the government of south korea ordered cohort quarantine, which hospitals a and b followed (table ) . persons with a history of exposure to patients with confirmed mers were isolated in the same hospital ward. after the index case-patient in daejeon spread mers-cov in daejeon, the first case occurred on may , , and the last on june , (total outbreak duration days) ( figure ). the epidemic curve for hospital a suggested a relatively sporadic pattern compared with that for hospital b. the peak in hospital b comprised mostly patients who shared a hospital room with the index case-patient. most mers cases appeared later in professional or family caregivers rather than in inpatients. the estimated median incubation period for confirmed cases was . ( % ci . - . ) days ( figure ). incubation periods were . ( % ci . - . ) days for hospital a and . ( % ci . - . ) days for hospital b. in hospital a, the index case-patient was admitted to room , in sector a (figure ) . thereafter, casepatients were in sector a, and was in sector b. however, the case-patient in sector b had a history of contact with case-patient , who was transferred to sector b from sector a for quarantine. most case-patients were presumed to have been infected by the daejeon index case-patient case-patient is not included because date of illness onset is unknown. black, weekday; blue, saturday; red, sunday or holiday. (case-patient ). however, instances of other transmission were noted: case-patient to case-patient , casepatient to case-patient , and several case-patients to case-patient . for this last instance of transmission, we could not identify the most probable source, because many possible exposures were evident (case-patients , , , , , and ). in hospital b, the index case-patient was admitted to room , located on the upper side of ward (sector c). eight case-patients were in sector c. case-patient was in room on the opposite side of ward (sector d). case-patient was in the emergency room and ward with the index case-patient. case-patient was presumed to have been infected by case-patient during performance of cardiopulmonary resuscitation in the intensive care unit. a total of cases developed among persons exposed in hospital a (attack rate . %) and among persons exposed in hospital b (attack rate . %) ( table ). the attack rates for the sectors hosting the index case-patients (sector a of hospital a, sector c of hospital b; figure ) were higher than those for other sectors (sector b of hospital a, sector d of hospital b; figure ) ( . % vs. . % in hospital a, p< . ; . % vs. . % in hospital b; table ). the probability of infection for a person admitted to the same rooms as the index case-patient was . %. in both hospitals, attack rates were somewhat higher for caregivers ( . %) than for inpatients ( . %), although statistical significance was not attained. the overall case-fatality rate was % (table ). this rate was higher for patients in hospital b ( . %) than for those in hospital a ( . %), although statistical significance was not attained. during the mers outbreak in south korea, confirmed cases (including deaths) occurred in daejeon, all associated with the same index case-patient. two hospitals were affected. the incubation periods and case-fatality rates for the hospitals differed. under the south korea healthcare system, patients can visit secondary hospitals and the emergency rooms of tertiary hospitals without limitation ( ) , which probably facilitated nosocomial transmission of mers-cov. indeed, the outbreak in daejeon accounted for of the major mers-cov outbreaks in south korea. these observations underscored the importance of the outbreak in daejeon, leading the south korea government to focus resources on controlling transmission of the virus. the estimated median incubation period for mers during the outbreak we report was similar to that for outbreaks in the eastern province of saudi arabia in ( ) . incubation period estimates may differ, depending on the method used to select exposure: the most probable exposure versus overlapping exposures. in our study, the incubation periods estimated by using both methods were similar. the incubation period estimated by using the most probable exposure method was . ( % ci . - . ) days, and that estimated by using the overlapping exposures method was . ( % ci . - . ) days. the overall attack rate among all exposed persons in daejeon was similar to that for pyeongtaek ( ) . the case-fatality rate of the outbreak in daejeon was lower than that in the eastern province of saudi arabia in ( ) but similar to that in jeddah, saudi arabia, in ( ). our results indicate various epidemiologic characteristics of mers-cov. all persons acquired infection in a hospital setting, which is consistent with the previous outbreak in saudi arabia, in which nosocomial spread curves indicate estimated cumulative fractions of cases corresponding to the incubation periods, estimated by creating lognormal density functions fitting the observed data. horizontal lines indicate % cis for the th, th, and th percentiles of the estimated incubation periods. a) total; estimated median incubation period was . ( % ci . - . ) days. b) hospital a; estimated median incubation period was . ( % ci . - . ) days. c) hospital b; estimated median incubation period was . ( % ci . - . ) days. hospital outbreaks of mers, south korea, was a major route of mers-cov transmission ( ). the characteristics of the specific hospital seemed to affect attack rates and case-fatality rates. the index case-patient in daejeon was consecutively admitted to hospitals. the fifth floor of hospital a specializes in senile patients, most of whom have chronic illnesses, including parkinson's disease, paraplegia attributable to old infarctions, or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. most beds on the fifth floor are occupied by bedridden patients. the attack rate among caregivers was higher in hospital a than in hospital b. because immobile patients require personal caregiving, their caregivers were required to be in prolonged close contact with patients, which might have resulted in a higher attack rate. hospital b is a university hospital and thus contained more severely ill patients than hospital a. ward , to which the daejeon index case-patient was admitted, is the main ward of the pulmonary medicine department. we presumed that the case-fatality rate was higher for hospital b than hospital a because of underlying pulmonary disease, which has been reported to be a risk factor for development of more severe diseases ( ) . generally, cohort quarantine may be useful as an infection-control tool to limit virus transmission in hospitals in which susceptible inpatients are gathered or to more effectively detect infected patients ( ) . hospitals a and b applied cohort quarantine. in this situation, cohort quarantine had several advantages and disadvantages. the primary purpose was to prevent the spread of mers-cov to the local community. after applying cohort quarantine, no further spread of mers-cov occurred other than within hospitals a and b. this result may have been achieved by quarantining all persons who had been in contact with mers-cov-infected patients and by refusing hospital entry to all susceptible persons. in addition, more cases were diagnosed promptly by active surveillance of the cohort. however, this policy had a limitation. one cohort accommodated inpatients and caregivers in the same hospital room; thus, if person in the cohort was infected by mers-cov, others were exposed, increasing the probability of mers-cov transmission. this practice raises an ethical issue in terms of whether letting persons stay in the same room with potential mers patients is justified by the purpose of preventing transmission of the virus to the community. some caregivers at hospital a may have had difficulty complying with the quarantine policy (the protector and contact rules) because they cared for immobile patients. thus, this practice may have increased transmission within the hospital. we identified several cases with uncommon routes of transmission. case-patient was the head nurse of the intensive care unit to which case-patient was admitted. when case-patient experienced cardiac arrest, that nurse performed cardiopulmonary resuscitation while wearing a level d protector. however, afterward, she may have been exposed to mers-cov when she wiped sweat with her bare arm. case-patient was an employee of hospital a; he worked in information technology. he was employed by hospital a during january-may , , and his bedroom was located on the seventh floor. his routine work routes, shown on closedcircuit television, did not reveal any close contact with case-patients; thus, the transmission route was unclear. we presume that he was infected by fomites in an elevator or exposed to a patient in a place lacking closedcircuit television coverage. the transmission route for case-patient was also unidentified. it is possible that some medical staff and caregiver, contaminated with mers-cov after visiting room , may have visited case-patient in room . of note, when case-patient was exposed to mers-cov, the outbreak in daejeon had not yet been recognized and hospital b had not yet implemented infection control strategies (e.g., handwashing; wearing gloves, masks, and vinyl gowns). this study had several limitations. first, we cannot be certain that all chains of infection between case-patients have been identified. we did not perform serologic analyses to seek cases that were potentially missed; such missed cases may have affected the incubation period estimates and case-fatality rate. second, closed-circuit television may not have captured all relevant movements. in conclusion, in , daejeon experienced a hospital-associated outbreak of mers-cov. two hospitals experienced nosocomial outbreaks, and virus transmission was evident among mostly inpatients and caregivers. to prevent the spread of the virus to the local community, we developed a unique and successful cohort quarantine policy. however, ethical issues associated with this policy require thorough discussion by policy makers. middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) is a novel cov known to cause severe acute respiratory illness in humans; approximately % of confirmed cases have been fatal. human-to-human transmission and multiple outbreaks of respiratory illness have been attributed to mers-cov, and severe respiratory illness caused by this virus continues to be identified. as of february , , the world health organization has reported laboratory-confirmed cases of mers-cov infection, including deaths, indicating an ongoing risk for transmission to humans in the arabian peninsula. visit our website to listen: https://www c.cdc.gov/podcasts/player.asp?f= ksa mers-cov investigation team. hospital outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: epidemiology and disease control measures mers-cov outbreak in jeddah-a link to health care facilities middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus outbreak in the republic of korea. osong public health and research perspectives mers outbreak in korea: hospital-to-hospital transmission epidemiologic features of the first mers outbreak in korea: focus on pyeongtaek st. mary's hospital estimating incubation period distributions with coarse data epidemiological, demographic, and clinical characteristics of cases of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus disease from saudi arabia: a descriptive study understanding, compliance and psychological impact of the sars quarantine experience address for correspondence: hae-sung nam, department of preventive medicine and public health dr. park is a medical specialist in infectious diseases and an epidemiologist at the korea centers for disease control and prevention, in cheongju, south korea. his research interest is mers-cov infection. key: cord- -ptmxkpae authors: kopel, jonathan; perisetti, abhilash; gajendran, mahesh; boregowda, umesha; goyal, hemant title: clinical insights into the gastrointestinal manifestations of covid- date: - - journal: dig dis sci doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ptmxkpae the month of december became a critical part of the time of humanity when the first case of coronavirus disease (covid- ) was reported in the wuhan, hubei province in china. as of april th, , there have been approximately . million cases and , deaths across the world, which were associated with covid- . the covid- is the seventh coronavirus to be identified to infect humans. in the past, severe acute respiratory syndrome and middle east respiratory syndrome were the two coronaviruses that infected humans with a high fatality, particularly among the elderly. fatalities due to covid- are higher in patients older than years of age or those with multimorbid conditions. the covid- is mainly transmitted through respiratory droplets, with the most common symptoms being high fever, cough, myalgia, atypical symptoms included sputum production, headache, hemoptysis and diarrhea. however, the incubation period can range from to days without any symptoms. it is particularly true with gastrointestinal (gi) symptoms in which patients can still shed the virus even after pulmonary symptoms have resolved. given the high percentage of covid- patients that present with gi symptoms (e.g., nausea and diarrhea), screening patients for gi symptoms remain essential. recently, cases of fecal–oral transmission of covid- have been confirmed in the usa and china, indicating that the virus can replicate in both the respiratory and digestive tract. moreover, the epidemiology, clinical characteristics, diagnostic procedures, treatments and prevention of the gastrointestinal manifestations of covid- remain to be elucidated. the covid- is a novel coronavirus with the first reported case in wuhan, hubei province of china, in early december . the infected patients presented with pneumonia from an unknown cause, and by december , the world health organization (who) recognized these cases due to a potential virus. in march , covid- spread to other countries with a declaration as a pandemic by who [ ] . the coronaviruses (covs) belong to a large family of single-stranded, positive-sense rna viruses that infect both humans and animals, causing several respiratory, gastrointestinal (gi), hepatic and neurologic diseases [ ] . the covs can be further divided into four major groups: alpha-coronavirus, beta-coronavirus, gamma-coronavirus and deltacoronavirus [ ] . however, there were only six human covs that have been identified, including the alpha-covs hcovs-nl and hcovs- e and the beta-covs hcovs-oc , hcovs-hku , severe acute respiratory syndrome-cov (sars-cov) and middle east respiratory syndrome-cov (mers-cov) [ ] . the covid- is the seventh human cov to be identified, which has continued to spread globally. the covid- -related disease can lead to pneumonia, acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards) and congestive heart failure [ ] . although covid- -related fatality data continue to change rapidly, current estimates from china put the case fatality rate in men and women at . % and . %, respectively. infected patients < years of age have a fatality risk of < . %, while those > years old have a fatality up to % [ ] . however, current estimates put the cumulative fatality for covid- at . % ( % ci . - . ) for china and . % ( . - . ) outside of china [ ] . globally, the fatality rate for covid- is estimated to be . % ( . - . ) [ ] . a recent study on the epidemiology of covid- found that the daily cumulative index (dci) of covid- cases was greatest in china ( . per day), followed by republic of korea ( . per day), iran ( . per day), italy ( . per day), bahrain ( . per day), kuwait ( per day) and japan ( . per day) [ ] . furthermore, the overall fatality rate of covid- was highest in eastern mediterranean regions ( . %, n = ), followed by asia ( . %, n = ) and europe ( . %, n = %) [ ] . however, these fatality data continue to changes as more cases appear in the usa and abroad. besides, patients with heart and lung diseases, diabetes, decompensated cirrhosis, hiv with low cd counts and other immunosuppressed patients are at higher risk for contracting covid- and developed severe disease. the diagnosis of covid- is performed by the combination of history and physical examination, reverse transcriptasepolymerase chain reaction (rt-pcr) analysis and computerized tomography (ct) scan. however, the ct scans have been found to have the highest specificity for the diagnosis of covid- , although this may increase healthcare costs and reduces time to start treatment to individuals suspected of covid- [ ] . currently, prevention of the transmission of covid- remains at paramount importance. therefore, the centers of disease control (cdc) has recommended frequent hand washing, social distancing, avoiding crowds and avoidance of touching the mouth, nose and eyes to prevent the spread of covid- until a vaccine or novel treatment is approved [ ] . covid- is the disease caused by sars-cov- or covid- virus. current evidence indicates that covid- virus (or sars-cov- ) belongs to the beta-cov group and shares % nucleotide identity at the genomic level with sars-cov [ ] . similar to other covs, covid- is believed to have originated from bats and transferred to other intermediate hosts before being transmitted to humans [ ] . in most cases, covid- is transmitted through respiratory droplets [ ] . once an individual is infected with covid- , the most common symptoms are fever ( %), cough ( %), myalgia or fatigue ( %), and sometimes atypical symptoms such as sputum ( %), headache ( %), hemoptysis ( %) and diarrhea ( %) are present [ ] . however, a patient can harbor a virus for a period of - days without any symptoms [ ] . this is especially true with gi symptoms in which patients can still shed the virus even after pulmonary symptoms have resolved [ ] . given the high percentage of covid- patients that present with gi symptoms (diarrhea, nausea, etc.), screening these patients is essential. therefore, pre-screening for covid- should extend to asymptomatic individuals while keeping the gi manifestations in mind [ ] . the main limitations of our current understanding of covid- and its effects on the gi tract are primarily due to poor understanding of the effects of other covs on the gi tract. for sars-and mers-cov, the mechanism of gastrointestinal entry remains unknown; however, covid- has shown a mechanism by which covs might infect and proliferate in the gi tract for a long time. although the respiratory symptoms of covs are well-known, the gi symptoms and continual viral shedding in the feces are often overlooked. this review provides a comprehensive list of the gi symptoms, pathophysiology and mechanisms related to those symptoms, including the role of fecal shedding of covid- . recently, cases of fecal-oral transmission of covid- have been confirmed in the united states (us) and china, indicating that the virus can replicate in both respiratory and digestive tracts [ ] . furthermore, it is hypothesized that the virus can be re-transmitted by feces through aerosolization of viral-containing droplets; however, this has not been confirmed [ ] . interestingly, some patients with positive covid- stool samples did not experience any gi symptoms, nor did it correlate with the severity of lung infection [ ] . however, testing stool samples for covid- may provide an alternative method for diagnosing covid- [ ] . furthermore, testing stool after a patient has been infected with covid- may be necessary to monitor any gi complications, and the potential for fecal-oral transmission after respiratory symptoms has resolved. specifically, % of covid- patients have viral rna that remains positive even after the negative conversion of viral rna in the respiratory tract [ ] . therefore, it might be possible that covid- can produce long-term changes to the gi tract anatomy and physiology even after the respiratory infection has passed [ ] . it could happen for the gut-microbiome and gut-lung crosstalk with the covid- genome, which has been observed with the influenza virus in the past [ ] . a few patients with covid- showed intestinal microbial dysbiosis with decreased probiotics, such as lactobacillus and bifidobacterium [ ] . among covid- patients, gi symptoms, such as diarrhea ( - . %), and nausea and vomiting ( - . %), occur with modest frequency compared to the fever and pulmonary symptoms in most patients (table ) [ ] [ ] [ ] . a recent study suggests that gi symptoms can be as high as % ( . - %, nausea ( . %), diarrhea ( . %), anorexia ( . %), abdominal pain ( . %), belching ( %) and emesis ( %) [ , ] . this difference in the gi and pulmonary symptoms suggests differences in the covid- viral tropism compared to sars-cov, mers-cov and influenza virus [ ] [ ] [ ] . although the pathogenesis is still being investigated, the first step of viral entry into the enterocytes occurs via the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ace ) protein, similar to sars-cov [ , , ] . ace- is a type- transmembrane metallocarboxypeptidase that helps regulate blood pressure along with the ace through the renin-angiotensin systems (ras) [ ] . the ace- degrades angiotensin ii to generate angiotensin - , thereby negatively regulating ras [ , ] . although ace- is expressed mostly in the vascular endothelial cells, the renal tubular epithelium and in leydig cells in the testes, ace- has also been detected in the lung, kidney and gi tract [ ] [ ] [ ] . the sars and mers-cov are also believed to use the ace- and ddp , respectively, to enter cells for viral replication and release [ , ] . as shown in fig. , the virus can then spread to other digestive organs, such as the liver, by using the same ace enzyme [ ] . reports of covid- presenting with abnormal liver chemistries were found to be as high as - % [ ] . despite the limited information on covid- and its gi symptoms, information from sars-cov and mers-cov provides some insights on the symptoms and disease severity from other covs. the mers-cov has shown to infect human primary intestinal epithelial cells, small intestine it is also found to transmit via the fecal-oral route [ ] . given the prevalence of both mers-cov and covid- in the middle east, the co-infection of both coronaviruses through fecal-oral transmission remains a concern in countries with poor sanitation or healthcare infrastructure [ ] . patients infected with the mers-cov show almost a similar frequency of gi symptoms ( %) as covid- [ , , ] . specifically, the most common gi symptoms of mers-cov were diarrhea ( %) and vomiting ( %) [ ] . another study on mers-cov patients showed the presence of gi symptoms in almost % of patients; the study found diarrhea ( %), vomiting ( %) and abdominal pain ( %) being the most common gi symptoms [ ] . sars-cov also showed a similar frequency of gi illnesses ( . %) to mers-cov [ ] . furthermore, the frequency of diarrhea ( - %), nausea and vomiting ( . %) and abdominal pain ( %) in sars patients are similar to mers-and covid- [ , , ] . interestingly, some sars patients ( %) can present with diarrhea and fever without respiratory symptom; in most cases ( . %), sars patients present with watery diarrhea [ ] . the study also found that the sars-cov rna can still be detected in the stool for more than weeks after initial symptoms [ ] . therefore, covid- , like other covs, may continue to shed the virus through stool many weeks after the resolution of pulmonary symptoms. it is of a significant public health concern as poor water and sanitation practices could continue to spread covid- in the community. although no clinical studies have examined the release of the cytokine in the gi tract of covid- patients. however, th and th cytokines cause hypocontractility and hypercontractility of inflamed intestinal smooth muscle through downregulating l-type ca + channels and upregulating regulators of g protein-coupled receptors [ ] . furthermore, several cytokines such as interleukin- (il- ), il- , il- , tumor necrosis factor-α, il- and tumor necrosis factor-like cytokine a all contribute to maintaining the integrity and function of the gi tract [ ] . in covid- patients with cytokine storm, elevations of il- , il- , granulocyte colony-stimulating factor, interferon-γ inducible protein , monocyte chemoattractant protein , macrophage inflammatory protein -α and tumor necrosis factor-α were elevated [ ] . although these cases are rare, these cytokines may become elevated in mild or persistent covid- cases [ ] . for most covid- patients, cytokines il -β, il- ra, il- , il- , il- , il- , fgf , gcsf, gmcsf, ifnγ, ip , mcp , mip α, mip β, pdgfb, tnfα and vegfa were also elevated [ ] . some of these cytokines have been previously shown to be involved in gi health and disease [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . for example, il- is a potent cytokine that binds to lymphocytes and macrophages to maintain and preserve intersinal epithelium after injury from mechanical stresses, infections or viruses [ ] . similarly, il- tnfα are believed to maintain intestinal epithelium by termination of excess inflammatory responses after infections or cell death and survival mechanisms [ , ] . the elevation of these cytokines suggest an increased protective response to covid - infection and damage to the gi tact. further studies are needed to indemnity the cytokines elevated in covid- patients and how it may influence the health of the gi and respiratory tract through chronic alterations in cytokine expression and secretion. white blood cell (wbc) counts vary in covid- patients ranging from leukopenia, leukocytosis and lymphopenia; however, lymphopenia is the most common wbc derangement [ , , ] . elevated lactate dehydrogenase, ferritin and aminotransferase levels have also been observed [ , , ] . as it is a viral infection, patients usually have normal procalcitonin levels; however, higher procalcitonin levels have been seen in patients admitted to the intensive care unit (icu) care [ , , ] . the covid- patients typically present with bilateral ground-glass opacification with or without consolidations are consistent with viral pneumonia on chest ct scans [ , ] . chest ct scans, together with rt-pcr testing, have a high sensitivity of % for detecting covid- but at the expense of specificity being only % [ ] . in patients with gi symptoms, the best test of covid- diagnosis appears to be the collection and analysis of stool samples [ , , ] . given the susceptibility of the gi tract to sars-cov- infection, it is also recommended to measure aminotransferase levels to evaluate the severity of the infection [ ] . however, more studies of covid- are needed to establish rigorous and reliable markers for evaluating gi injury. there are currently no approved treatment recommendations for gi manifestations of covid- except for symptomatic and supportive care. the covid- is currently being treated with antiviral agents that are under experimentation for effectiveness. these agents include chloroquine, chloroquine/hydroxychloroquine, remdesivir (novel nucleotide analog), lopinavir-ritonavir (protease inhibitor) and tocilizumab (il- inhibitor) [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . each of these agents was shown to be effective against sars-cov in preliminary in vivo and in vitro studies; however, further human clinical trials are needed to assess the effectiveness of these agents [ , ] . therefore, the medical community presumes that the same overlap might exist to counteract covid- too. as of today, preventive measures (washing hands, social distancing, avoiding crowds, etc.) remain the only effective method for reducing the spread and severity of covid- . currently, there is no evidence that the gi symptoms of elderly patients infected with covid- are different from younger populations. furthermore, given the potential risk of spread of the covid- via fecal-oral transmission, all major american gastroenterological societies including american association for the study of liver diseases (aasld), american gastroenterological association (aga), american college of gastroenterology (acg) and american society of gastrointestinal endoscopy (asge) have made recommendations for managing covid- in the patients both in outpatient and endoscopy settings [ , ] . they divided those procedures into "non-urgent/postpone" and "non-urgent/perform" depending on the need for the endoscopy. it has been strongly advised to reschedule nonurgent endoscopic procedures such as cancer evaluations, prosthetic removals and evaluation of significant symptoms [ , ] . furthermore, physicians are encouraged to screen patients using telemedicine for non-emergent procedures to decrease office visits for at-risk or infected patients and provide needed care to patients who are less willing or unable to travel. besides, telemedicine between patients allows effective triage the urgent and non-urgent procedures, thereby reducing a patient's risk of being exposed to covid- . deferral of the elective procedures is likely to decrease the risk of transmission of covid- as luminal contents are frequently encountered during upper and lower endoscopies. second, all personnel involved with endoscopic procedures should wear appropriate personal protective equipment (ppe) (gloves, mask, eye shield/goggles, face shields and gown) [ ] . these protocols and ppe are strongly encouraged by the cdc and who [ ] . with a shortage of medical supplies, it is also recommended that physicians extend the use or reuse of surgical masks and eye protection; however, reusing medical equipment may inadvertently increase covid- transmission or exposure [ ] . further investigation is needed to determine proper protective equipment protocols for covid- infections. patients should be pre-screened again at the time of arrival to endoscopy center to determine whether they are at high risk if they report any history of fever or respiratory symptoms, family members or close contacts with similar symptoms, any contact with a confirmed case of covid- and recent travel to a high-risk area [ ] . high-risk patients with symptoms should be offered covid- testing. particular emphasis should be given to check the body temperature of patients arriving at the endoscopy center and avoid bringing patients older than years to medical facilities unless necessary [ ] . furthermore, endoscopy units should inform patients at least h before any procedure to discuss their risks of covid- , risks of endoscopy in viral transmission and appropriate intervention, including the postponement of the procedure. furthermore, the world endoscopy organization (weo) suggests endoscopy centers should be at a biosafety level (includes laboratories or medical facilities that work with agents associated with human diseases that pose a moderate health hazard) for all endoscopies. the biosafety level should be increased to level (includes laboratories or medical facilities that work with microbes of either indigenous or exotic that cause serious or potentially lethal disease through inhalation) for covid- patients [ ] . as described by the british society of gastroenterology (bsg), the different biosafety levels minimize the transmission of covid- and delay or "flatten" the outbreak curve of the infection, which prevents overwhelming the healthcare resources [ ] . therefore, the bsg recommends that endoscopic procedures only be performed in patients with acute upper gi bleeding, acute esophageal obstruction, endoscopic vacuum therapy for perforations/leaks, acute cholangitis/jaundice secondary to malignant/benign biliary obstruction, acute biliary pancreatitis, and/or cholangitis with stone and jaundice, infected pancreatic collections, urgent inpatient nutrition support and gi obstruction needing urgent decompression/stenting [ ] . it is particularly important since these patients tend to have weaker immune systems and have a higher risk of infection [ ] . the covid- virus remains a global healthcare emergency as the number of cases and fatality continue to rise. as more information is being gathered, understanding of the virus will most likely improve with better diagnosis, prevention and treatment options for patients exposed or experiencing symptoms from the disease. however, the gi manifestations of covid- pose a continuing challenge for the prevention of the virus spread. physicians should monitor for gi symptoms in covid- -infected patients and examine whether the virus continues to remain in their stools after their respiratory symptoms have resolved. this knowledge may provide greater insight into preventing further infections and long-term complications arising from the covid- and might help in policy-making to prevent the community from the virus spread. novel coronavirus infection and gastrointestinal tract the sars-cov- outbreak: what we know the structure and functions of coronavirus genomic ′ and ′ ends isolation of a novel coronavirus from 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(covid- ) considerations in performing endoscopy during the covid- pandemic suggestions of infection prevention and control in digestive endoscopy during current -ncov pneumonia outbreak in wuhan acknowledgments none. key: cord- -w bm p authors: suarez, david l.; pantin-jackwood, mary j.; swayne, david e.; lee, scott a.; deblois, suzanne m.; spackman, erica title: lack of susceptibility of poultry to sars-cov- and mers-cov date: - - journal: biorxiv doi: . / . . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: w bm p chickens, turkeys, ducks, quail and geese were challenged with sars-cov- or mers-cov. no disease was observed, no virus replication was detected, and antibodies were not detected in serum. neither virus replicated in embryonating chicken’s eggs. poultry are unlikely to serve a role in the maintenance of either virus. which it has % identity across the genome ( ). sars-cov- is highly transmissible among humans and particularly virulent for elderly individuals and those with certain underlying health conditions. multiple studies have examined the susceptibility of domestic animals to cov- to establish the risk of zoonotic transmission and two studies have shown chickens and pekin ducks were not susceptible to infection ( , ) . middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov), another coronavirus of high concern associated with zoonotic infection, was first detected in patients with severe acute lower respiratory tract disease in saudi arabia in . mers-cov causes lower respiratory disease similar to the sars-covs ( ). unlike sars-cov- , mers-cov transmits poorly to humans and does not exhibit sustained human-to-human transmission; however, it has a high case fatality rate of around %. although the mers-cov case count is low, human cases continue to be reported, therefore there is a possibility for the virus to adapt to humans. based on sequence similarity, the closest relatives of sars-cov- and mers-cov are believed to be bat beta-coronaviruses ( ), but because of the amount of sequence difference between human and bat isolates an intermediary host likely exists. for mers-cov, dromedary camels appear to be the primary natural reservoir of infection to humans, but other domestic animals seem to be susceptible to infection ( , ) . there is only a single study of mers-cov in chickens that looked for antibodies, but all samples were negative ( ). because poultry are so widespread and have close and extended contact with humans, and other mammals in many production systems, including live animal markets, susceptibility were conducted with sars-cov- and mers-cov in five common poultry species. additionally, embryonating chicken eggs (ece) have been utilized for the isolation and as a laboratory host system, including use in vaccine production, for diverse avian and mammalian viruses. therefore, ece were tested for their ability to support the replication of both viruses. hosts and sources of endemic human genomic characterization of the novel human-pathogenic coronavirus isolated from a patient with atypical pneumonia after visiting wuhan transmission studies of sars-cov- in fruit bats, ferrets, pigs and chickens the lancet susceptibility of ferrets, cats, dogs, and other domesticated animals to sars-coronavirus . science mers-cov: a global challenge human coronavirus infections-severe acute middle east respiratory syndrome (mers), and sars- reference module in biomedical sciences identification of mers-cov in dromedary camels middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in non-camelid domestic mammals. emerg microbes infect respiratory syndrome (mers) coronavirus seroprevalence in domestic livestock in saudi arabia key: cord- -emsvxxs authors: tortorici, m. alejandra; veesler, david title: structural insights into coronavirus entry date: - - journal: adv virus res doi: . /bs.aivir. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: emsvxxs coronaviruses (covs) have caused outbreaks of deadly pneumonia in humans since the beginning of the st century. the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov) emerged in and was responsible for an epidemic that spread to five continents with a fatality rate of % before being contained in (with additional cases reported in ). the middle-east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) emerged in the arabian peninsula in and has caused recurrent outbreaks in humans with a fatality rate of %. sars-cov and mers-cov are zoonotic viruses that crossed the species barrier using bats/palm civets and dromedary camels, respectively. no specific treatments or vaccines have been approved against any of the six human coronaviruses, highlighting the need to investigate the principles governing viral entry and cross-species transmission as well as to prepare for zoonotic outbreaks which are likely to occur due to the large reservoir of covs found in mammals and birds. here, we review our understanding of the infection mechanism used by coronaviruses derived from recent structural and biochemical studies. three dimensional -o-ac-sia -n-acetyl- -o-acetyl-sialosides ace angiotensin-converting enzyme apn amino-peptidase n cov coronavirus cryoem cryo-electron microscopy dpp dipeptidyl peptidase fab antigen-binding fragment of an antibody mers-cov middle-east respiratory syndrome coronavirus mhv mouse hepatitis virus pdcov porcine δ-cov pedv porcine epidemic diarrhea virus sars-cov severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus tgev transmissible gastroenteritis virus coronaviruses (covs) are enveloped viruses with a positive sense rna genome, that belong to the subfamily coronavirinae within the family coronaviridae, which is part of the nidovirales order. they are classified in four genera (α, β, γ, and δ) and four lineages are recognized whithin the β-cov genus (a, b, c and d). covs cause a variety of respiratory and enteric diseases in mammalian and avian species. until recently, covs were considered to be pathogens with a largely veterinary relevance but with limited impact on human health. however, outbreaks of severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) in - and of middle-east respiratory syndrome (mers) starting in , with fatality rates of % and %, respectively, led covs to be recognized as zoonotic threats with pandemic potential. four other covs are endemic in the human population and cause up to % of mild respiratory tract infections as well as occasional severe disease in young children, the elderly or immunocompromised individuals (isaacs et al., ; su et al., ) . these viruses are hcov-nl and hcov- e (α-covs) as well as hcov-oc and hcov-hku (β-covs). numerous sars-cov and mers-cov-like viruses currently circulate in bats and dromedaries making outbreaks of highly pathogenic human covs a global health threat (ge et al., ; haagmans et al., ; hu et al., ; menachery et al., menachery et al., , sabir et al., ) . the cov virion contains at least four structural proteins: spike (s), envelope (e), membrane (m) and nucleocapsid (n) . in contrast to other β-cov lineages, lineage a covs also encode a hemagglutinin-esterase which serves as receptor-destroying enzyme to facilitate release of viral progeny from infected cells and escape from attachment to non-permissive host cells or decoys (bakkers et al., (bakkers et al., , . s is a class viral fusion protein that promotes host attachment and fusion of the viral and cellular membranes during entry (bosch et al., ) . as a consequence, s determines host range and cell tropism. s is also the main target of neutralizing antibodies elicited during infection and the focus of vaccine design. s is trimeric and each protomer is synthesized as a single polypeptide chain of - residues, depending on the cov species. for many covs, s is processed by host proteases to generate two functional subunits, designated s and s , which remain non-covalently bound in the prefusion conformation (bosch et al., ) . the s subunit comprises the apex of the s trimer, including the receptor-binding domains, and stabilizes the prefusion state of the s fusion machinery, which is anchored in the viral membrane. for all covs, s is further cleaved by host proteases at the so-called s ' site located immediately upstream of the fusion peptide. this cleavage has been proposed to activate the protein for membrane fusion via large-scale, irreversible conformational changes (heald-sargent and gallagher, ; millet and whittaker, ) . although several class viral fusion proteins have been extensively studied, cov s proteins have proven reluctant to structural characterization until recently. structural studies were largely limited to x-ray crystallographic analysis of isolated receptor-binding domains in complex with viral receptor ectodomains or neutralizing antibodies (li et al., a; lu et al., ; peng et al., ; prabakaran et al., ; reguera et al., ; wang et al., ; wong et al., ; wu et al., ; yu et al., ) and of the s postfusion core (duquerroy et al., ; gao et al., ; supekar et al., ; xu et al., a, b; zheng et al., ) with the exception of two low-resolution electron microscopy reports (beniac et al., (beniac et al., , . in the past few years, however, technical advances in single-particle cryo-electron microscopy (cryoem) (bai et al., ; brilot et al., ; campbell et al., campbell et al., , li et al., ; punjani et al., ; scheres, ) together with the implementation of strategies for the stabilization of cov s proteins in prefusion conformation (pallesen et al., ; walls et al., a) led to a surge of structural data for multiple s ectodomain trimers. we review here our current understanding of the mechanism used by covs to infect host cells based on recent structural and biochemical studies of s glycoprotein ectodomains in prefusion and postfusion states as well as complexes with known receptors or neutralizing antibodies. cryoem studies of the s glycoproteins of mouse hepatitis virus (mhv) and hku led to the first structures at high-enough resolution to obtain an atomic model of the prefusion state (kirchdoerfer et al., ; walls et al., a) . these structures revealed that prefusion s ectodomains are Å -long trimers with a triangular cross-section ( fig. a and b) . the s subunit adopts a "v" shaped architecture for β and γ covs (gui et al., ; kirchdoerfer et al., ; shang et al., a; tortorici et al., ; walls et al., a; yuan et al., ) (fig. c) , or a squareshaped organization for αand δ-covs (shang et al., b; walls et al., b; xiong et al., ) . the s subunit folds as β-rich domains designated a, b, c, d. several α-covs harbor a likely duplication of their domain a at the n-terminus of the s glycoprotein walls et al., b) . this additional domain, designated domain , was visualized in the nl s structure and hypothesized to interact with heparan sulfate present at the host cell surface during viral entry (milewska et al., ; walls et al., b) . domain a and domain adopt a galectin-like β-sandwich fold conserved across all cov genera (kirchdoerfer et al., ; peng et al., peng et al., , walls et al., a) (fig. d) . domain b, which shows the highest sequence variability within cov s subunits, has a markedly different architecture between α-, β-, γand δ-covs. b domains of β-covs contain a β-sheet core subdomain decorated with a highly variable external subdomain mediating receptor engagement kirchdoerfer et al., ; li et al., b; lu et al., ; tortorici et al., ; walls et al., a; wang et al., ) (fig. e) . b domains of α-, γand δ-cov form a β-sandwich decorated with loops mediating receptor attachment (reguera et al., ; shang et al., a, b; walls et al., b; wong et al., ; xiong et al., ) . in the context of the s trimer, β/γ cov b domains interact with the a and b domains of another protomer, whereas they pack against the a domain of the same protomer in α/δ-covs (shang et al., a; walls et al., a, b; xiong et al., ) . the s subunit, which is more conserved than s , comprises the fusion machinery and connects to the viral membrane. it is assembled from a large number of α-helices, an antiparallel core β-sheet, a β-rich connector domain and a stem helix leading to the heptad-repeat (hr ) and the transmembrane region (fig. f ) (gui et al., ; kirchdoerfer et al., kirchdoerfer et al., , pallesen et al., ; shang et al., a, b; tortorici et al., ; walls et al., a walls et al., , b, b xiong et al., ; yuan et al., ) . key s features facilitating virus-cell fusion include the fusion peptide, two heptad repeat regions (named hr and hr ) and the transmembrane domain. in the prefusion s conformation, a central helix stretches along the threefold axis, perpendicular to the viral membrane, and is located downstream the hr motif, which folds as four consecutive α-helices (kirchdoerfer et al., ; walls et al., a) . moreover, an upstream helix runs parallel to and is zipped against the central helix via hydrophobic contacts (fig. f ). the cov s subunit shares similarity with the pneumovirus/paramyxovirus f proteins-including a comparable d organization of the core β-sheet, the upstream helix and the central helix-suggesting an evolutionary relatedness between the viral fusion proteins of these different viruses and a conservation of their fusion mechanism (mclellan et al., ; walls et al., a walls et al., , b wong et al., ; xu et al., ; yin et al., ) . a conserved tryptophan-rich segment (y(v/i)kwpw(y/w)vwl) directly preceding the cov s transmembrane region is crucial for proper trimerization. this segment is also required functionally for formation of a fusion pore (schroth-diez et al., ) . furthermore, transmembrane domain interactions within and possibly between s trimers have been proposed to be essential to complete the membrane fusion process (schroth-diez et al., ) . the transmembrane domain is followed by an intraviral/cytoplasmic tail of variable length ( - residues) depending on the coronavirus species, which contains a palmitoylated cysteine-rich region (of about - residues with - cysteines) and a variable c-terminal end (thorp et al., ) . the cytoplasmic tail is involved in assembly, intracellular transport, cell-surface expression and cell-cell fusion (bos et al., ; bosch et al., ; chang et al., ; lontok et al., ; petit et al., ; ye et al., ; youn et al., ) . currently, no structural information is available for any cov full-length s, hindering our understanding of the influence of the transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains on the conformation of exposed antigenic sites, as previously studied for hiv- envelope (chen et al., ; dev et al., ) . cov entry into susceptible cells is a complex process that requires the concerted action of receptor-binding and proteolytic processing of the s protein to promote virus-cell fusion (heald-sargent and gallagher, ; millet and whittaker, ) . domain , domain a and/or domain b can act as receptor-binding domains and both attachment and entry receptors have been described, depending on the cov species. lineage a β-covs attach via their s domain a to -n-acetyl- -oacetyl-sialosides ( -o-ac-sia) found on glycoproteins and glycolipids at the host cell surface to promote entry into susceptible cells (vlasak et al., ) . these include human covs oc and hku , bovine cov (bcov) and porcine hemagglutinating encephalomyelitis virus. we recently identified and visualized by cryoem the hcov-oc s sialoside-binding site, which is located in a groove at the surface of domain a ( fig. a ) (hulswit et al., ; tortorici et al., ) . this site is conserved in all other covs known to attach to -o-ac-sia (β-covs, lineage a) and shares architectural similarity with the ligand-binding pockets of cov hemagglutinin-esterases and influenza virus c/d hemagglutinin-esterase-fusion glycoproteins, highlighting common structural principles of recognition (bakkers et al., (bakkers et al., , hulswit et al., ; rosenthal et al., ; tortorici et al., ) . the current consensus in the field is that hcov-oc only utilizes -o-ac-sialosides as host receptors. in line with this statement, ligand-interacting residues were shown to be essential for s-mediated viral entry (hulswit et al., ; tortorici et al., ) and -o-ac-sia depletion from target cells resulted in severe decrease in virus infectivity (krempl et al., ; vlasak et al., ) . free -o-ac-sia, however, did not trigger s conformational changes associated with membrane fusion . this observation contrasts with data for sars-cov s, for which addition of the human angiotensin-converting enzyme (ace ) ectodomain (the proteinaceous receptor) promoted s refolding to the postfusion state (song et al., ; walls et al., ) . these findings suggested that either -o-ac-sia-containing receptors differ from proteinaceous receptors in their mode of action, or that an interaction with a yet unidentified proteinaceous receptor is required before or after virus internalization for hcov-oc entry into target cells. the sialoside-binding site identified in hcov-oc s is not conserved among covs which are also known to interact with sialoglycans to initiate host cell infection but are outside of the lineage a of β-covs, such as mers-cov (β-cov, lineage c) or infectious bronchitis virus (ibv, δ-cov) wickramasinghe et al., ) . some α-covs such as transmissible gastroenteritis virus (tgev) and porcine epidemic diarrhea virus (pedv) use domain to attach to sialoglycans, presumably to increase virus concentration at the cell surface and enhance subsequent attachment to proteinaceous receptors schwegmann-wessels et al., ) . carbohydrate binding via this domain has been proposed to be a determinant of the tgev enteric tropism since loss of domain appears to correlate with a loss of enteric tropism for porcine respiratory coronavirus (prcov), the latter virus being a naturally occurring tgev variant (krempl et al., ) . covs exploit a limited variety of proteinaceous receptors compared with the large number and diversity of viral species. all covs known to engage proteinaceous receptors do so using domain b with the exception of mhv, which binds ceacam a using domain a (dveksler et al., ; peng et al., ; williams et al., ) . remarkably, viruses from different genera, such as hcov-nl (α-cov) and sars-cov (β-cov), can recognize the same region of ace (entry receptor) using structurally distinct b domains (hofmann et al., ; li et al., a li et al., , wu et al., ). many α-covs, including hcov- e, tgev and prcv, as well as porcine δ-cov (pdcov) utilize aminopeptidase n (apn) as entry receptor (delmas et al., ; delmas et al., ; li et al., ; reguera et al., ; wong et al., ; yeager et al., ) whereas mers-cov uses dipeptidyl peptidase (dpp ) raj et al., ; wang et al., ) . crystal structures of sars-cov, hcov-nl , mers-cov, hcov- e b domains in complex with their cognate receptors provided atomic details of the interacting-interface and identified key residues for cross-species transmission and infection (fig. ) (li et al., a; lu et al., ; wang et al., ; wong et al., ; wu et al., ) . this information will be useful to guide the development of therapeutics and vaccines against human covs. recent cryoem studies revealed that mers-cov s and sars-cov s can adopt open and closed conformations in which the receptor binding site of domain b is exposed and occluded, respectively (gui et al., ; kirchdoerfer et al., ; pallesen et al., ; song et al., ; walls et al., ; yuan et al., ) . in contrast, the mhv, hcov-nl , hcov-hku , pdcov, ibv and hcov-oc s glycoproteins appear to only adopt a closed conformation (kirchdoerfer et al., ; shang et al., a, b; tortorici et al., ; walls et al., a, b; xiong et al., ) and unknown trigger(s), besides proteolytic activation, might be necessary for these viruses to expose their receptor-binding motifs for recognition to occur. these findings suggest that covs have evolved a fine-tuned mechanism to balance masking of the receptor-binding motifs, putatively to avoid neutralization by the host humoral immune response, and their necessary exposure to enable receptor recognition and infection of host cells (walls et al., b wong et al., ) . upon host recognition, covs are internalized via receptor-mediated clathrin-dependent, caveolin-dependent or other uptake pathways (burkard et al., ; eifart et al., ; inoue et al., ; nomura et al., ) . for instance, both clathrin-dependent and clathrin/caveolae-independent entry pathways have been reported for sars-cov (inoue et al., ; wang et al., ) . feline infectious peritonitis virus was suggested to enter host cells via a clathrin/caveolin-independent internalization route (regan et al., ; van hamme et al., ) whereas a caveolin-dependent endocytic uptake has been suggested for hcov- e and hcov-oc (nomura et al., ; owczarek et al., ) . several reports have demonstrated the key role of proteolytic processing of cov s for cell-cell fusion activity and/or virus entry into host cells using experiments of inhibition of intracellular proteases (burkard et al., ; frana et al., ; simmons et al., ; yamada and liu, ) and/or substitutions of residues at the s /s or s ' cleavage sites (belouzard et al., ; millet and whittaker, ; wicht et al., ; yang et al., ) . prior to and/or after uptake of the virion by a host cell, the s protein is proteolytically processed by host proteases at one or two cleavage sites and both receptor-binding and proteolytic processing act in synergy to induce large-scale s conformational changes promoting cov entry. one of the cleavage sites is located at the boundary between the s and s subunits (s /s cleavage site), whereas the other is located immediately upstream of the fusion peptide (s ' cleavage site), reviewed in (millet and whittaker, ) . cleavage at the s /s site can occur upon viral egress, such as for mhv (frana et al., ) , or upon encounter with a target cell, such as for sars-cov (belouzard et al., ; bosch et al., ; shulla et al., ) , to yield two non-covalently associated subunits. this first cleavage event, along with binding to the host receptor, promotes further cleavage at the s ' site for sars-cov s (belouzard et al., ) and mers-cov s (millet and whittaker, ; park et al., ) . proteolysis at the conserved s ' site is essential for fusion activation of all characterized cov s proteins, and it can occur at the host membrane or in internal cellular compartments of the target cell (belouzard et al., ; burkard et al., ; millet and whittaker, ; park et al., ) . cleavage at the mers-cov s /s site by furin during viral egress enables subsequent exposure of the s ' site upon binding to the host receptor and a second cleavage step by serine proteases anchored in the membrane of the target cells, eventually leading to fusion at the cytoplasmic membrane (early entry) . conversely, mers-cov budding with uncleaved s glycoproteins traffic to the endosomes of target cells where cathepsin l or other proteases promote membrane fusion (late entry) . the former mechanism has been proposed to be the route of mers-cov entry into cell types relevant to lung infection, and therefore a significant determinant of mers-cov virulence . moreover, tetraspanin cd has been implicated in clustering dpp and transmembrane serine proteases to promote early entry of mers-cov (earnest et al., (earnest et al., , . pedv, which replicates in the epithelial cells of the small intestine, undergoes s proteolytic activation by trypsin, which is highly abundant in the intestinal lumen . the critical importance of cleavage at the s /s site was also exemplified in studies with the mers-cov-related bat coronavirus hku . although hku s recognizes human dpp , in vitro infectivity assays revealed that entry into human cells required addition of exogenous trypsin, suggesting proteolytic activation of this bat virus did not occur in human cells (wang et al., ) . in line with these findings, various dpp mammalian orthologues, with variable binding affinities for the mers-cov s receptor-binding domain, were shown to support virus or pseudovirus entry into target cells in the presence of an activating protease (barlan et al., ) . these results collectively illustrate how specific s proteolytic cleavage participates in determining the intracellular site of fusion and also viral tropism and pathogenesis of covs. therefore, the zoonotic potential of covs is not only determined by receptor engagement, but also by proteolytic processing of the s protein required for fusion activation. we showed that in vitro trypsin cleavage of mhv, sars-cov and mers-cov s, under limited proteolysis conditions, recapitulated fusion activation by inducing the pre-to postfusion transition (walls et al., b) . the cryoem structure of the mhv s subunit ectodomain trimer revealed that membrane fusion involves large-scale s conformational changes that are reminiscent of the ones described for other class fusion proteins, including the pneumovirus/paramyxovirus f glycoproteins (fig. ) (mclellan et al., ; swanson et al., swanson et al., , walls et al., b; yin et al., ) . these experiments also demonstrated that (i) the s subunits stabilize the s fusion machinery in the spring-loaded, metastable prefusion state before initiation of infection; and (ii) postfusion s is the ground state of the fusion reaction. similarly to the organization of influenza virus hemagglutinins (xiong et al., ) , domain b interacts with the hr -central helix hairpin in prefusion closed s structures likely to stabilize s in the spring-loaded prefusion state. this interaction appears to coordinate receptor engagement with fusion. upon receptor binding and proteolytic cleavage at the s /s and s sites, the s crown is likely shed (as observed for mers-cov s by yuan et al., ) to facilitate a conformational change of s , which involves projection of the fusion peptide to a distance of Å and its insertion into the target membrane (fig. ) (walls et al., a (walls et al., , b . the free energy released upon s refolding from the prefusion to the postfusion state is believed to bring the viral and host membranes in close proximity and promote membrane merger (harrison, ) . recent structural work comparing recombinant s proteins from sars-cov and mers-cov in isolation and in complex with their cognate receptors or neutralizing antibodies suggested an activation mechanism for coronavirus fusion (gui et al., ; kirchdoerfer et al., ; song et al., ; walls et al., ; yuan et al., ) . specifically, sars-cov and mers-cov s structures in complex with neutralizing antibodies isolated from survivors showed both antibodies competitively blocked receptor interaction, in agreement with previous surface plasmon resonance data (corti et al., ; rockx et al., ; traggiai et al., ; walls et al., ) . the anti-sars-cov s antibody, however, functionally mimicked the receptor by promoting s fusogenic conformational rearrangements through a molecular ratcheting mechanism (fig. ) . these observations suggested that upon receptor recognition, bound b domains are locked in the open state, thereby releasing the constraints imposed on the hr -central helix hairpin, allowing refolding of the s fusion machinery and membrane fusion to occur (pallesen et al., ; song et al., ; walls et al., ; yuan et al., ) (fig. ) . proteolytic activation is likely required to ensure that s glycoproteins will work in synergy, with proper spatial and temporal coordination, to drive fusion of the viral and host membranes. a deep knowledge of the organization and chemical composition of carbohydrates obstructing the surface of cov s glycoproteins is key for understanding accessibility to neutralizing antibodies and for guiding the rational development of subunit vaccines and therapeutics. s glycoproteins feature - predicted n-linked oligosaccharides per protomer. a cryoem structure of the hcov-nl s ectodomain allowed to visualize for the first time the extensive n-linked glycans covering the surface of a cov s trimer (walls et al., b) (fig. ) . a subsequent study revealed that numerous glycosylation sites are strictly or topologically conserved between pdcov s and hcov-nl s although the two glycoproteins share only % amino acid sequence identity and the two viruses belong to different genera infecting different hosts (xiong et al., ) . this observation suggested that all covs face similar immune pressure in their respective hosts, and that the areas that are masked by the conserved glycans might be key to the function of s. based on the information gained from the hcov-nl s structure, in which a glycan participates to masking the receptor-binding loops, it was proposed that the s glycan shield is involved in immune evasion, similarly to the well-characterized hiv- envelope trimer (walls et al., b) . comparison of the n-linked oligosaccharides of full-length mers-cov s derived from virions produced in african green monkey veroe cells, or of a purified mers-cov s ectodomain recombinantly produced in hek f cells, revealed an extensive overlap of glycan composition, including the presence of hybrid and complex glycans . processed oligosaccharides were also observed decorating s trimers at the surface of authentic sars-cov virions (krokhin et al., ; ritchie et al., ) . these data indicated that at least a fraction of the mers-cov and sars-cov virions produced in a cell are exposed to the glycan-processing enzymes residing in the golgi apparatus during assembly and budding, in contrast with previous models of cov budding (ng et al., ; stertz et al., ) . a common feature observed in the glycosylation patterns of s glycoproteins is the presence of less densely glycosylated regions surrounding the s /s cleavage site and the conserved fusion peptide, near the s ' cleavage site, probably to allow access to activating host proteases and for membrane fusion to take place (walls et al., b; walls et al., ) (fig. ) . these "glycan holes" could be targeted for epitope-focused immunogen design or new therapeutic development against cov, as supported by the identification of a neutralization epitope within a comparable breach of the hiv- envelope glycan shield (mccoy et al., ) . recent structural and functional characterization of cov s glycoproteins provided insights into the mechanism used by these viruses to infect host cells and suggested possible strategies for rational design of vaccines and therapeutics. introducing stabilizing mutations, which prevent the prefusion to postfusion s transition, led to the elicitation of improved neutralization titers in mice and will be a key tool for the design of subunit vaccines against covs pallesen et al., ) . furthermore, the exposure of the fusion peptide at the surface of prefusion s trimers (walls et al., a) and its conservation among covs indicate it might be an attractive target for broad inhibition of cov entry. major antigenic determinants of mhv and sars-cov s overlap with the fusion peptide region (daniel et al., ; zhang et al., ) and binding of neutralizing antibodies to this site could putatively prevent fusogenic conformational changes, as proposed for influenza virus hemagglutinin or hiv envelope (corti et al., ; kong et al., ; lang et al., ) . finally, masking strain-specific antigenic regions via engineering of additional n-linked glycosylation sites, as implemented for the mers-cov domain b (du et al., ) , bears the promise of focusing the immune response on highly conserved epitopes and eliciting broadly neutralizing antibodies against covs. ribosome structures to near-atomic resolution from thirty thousand cryo-em particles betacoronavirus adaptation to humans involved progressive loss of hemagglutinin-esterase lectin activity coronavirus receptor switch explained from the stereochemistry of protein-carbohydrate interactions and a single mutation receptor variation and susceptibility to middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection activation of the sars coronavirus spike protein via sequential proteolytic cleavage at two distinct sites architecture of the sars 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middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus genetic analysis of determinants for spike glycoprotein assembly into murine coronavirus virions: distinct roles for chargerich and cysteine-rich regions of the endodomain human aminopeptidase n is a receptor for human coronavirus e structure of the uncleaved ectodomain of the paramyxovirus (hpiv ) fusion protein structure of the parainfluenza virus f protein in its metastable, prefusion conformation contribution of trafficking signals in the cytoplasmic tail of the infectious bronchitis virus spike protein to virus infection structural basis for the neutralization of mers-cov by a human monoclonal antibody mers- cryo-em structures of mers-cov and sars-cov spike glycoproteins reveal the dynamic receptor binding domains identification of an antigenic determinant on the s domain of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus spike glycoprotein capable of inducing neutralizing antibodies core structure of s from the human coronavirus nl spike glycoprotein we acknowledge support from the national institute of general medical sciences key: cord- -wfaqim d authors: modjarrad, kayvon title: mers-cov vaccine candidates in development: the current landscape date: - - journal: vaccine doi: . /j.vaccine. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: wfaqim d middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov), an emerging infectious disease of growing global importance, has caused severe acute respiratory disease in more than people, resulting in more than deaths. the high case fatality rate, growing geographic distribution and vaguely defined epidemiology of mers-cov have created an urgent need for effective public health countermeasures, paramount of which is an effective means of prevention through a vaccine or antibody prophylaxis. despite the relatively few number of cases to-date, research and development of mers-cov vaccine candidates is advancing quickly. this review surveys the landscape of these efforts across multiple groups in academia, government and industry. middle east respiratory syndrome (mers-cov) was first isolated in september from a patient in saudi arabia who presented two months earlier with severe acute respiratory infection and acute renal failure [ ] . retrospective testing of samples in jordan identified earlier cases from a nosocomial outbreak in april [ ] . although the majority of mers-cov cases (∼ %) have occurred in saudi arabia, other countries have confirmed imported or autochthonously transmitted cases ( fig. ) [ , ] . the most recent and largest outbreak outside of saudi arabia occurred in south korea in may [ ] , raising concern for an eruption of regional outbreaks or accelerated global spread, similar to the phylogenetically related severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov) that killed nearly a thousand people a decade earlier [ ] . although the definitive host for mers-cov has not yet been established, closely related coronaviruses have been isolated from bats across wide geographic areas [ ] [ ] [ ] . mounting evidence has strongly implicated dromedary camels as the intermediate animal reservoir, as serological surveys throughout the middle east and north africa have demonstrated them to have a high prevalence of mers-cov binding or neutralizing abs [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . additionally, outbreak investigations have suggested epidemiologic linkage between farm camels and human cases [ ] . mers-cov is a spherical, enveloped, single-stranded, positive sense rna beta-coronavirus [ , ] . its genome contains a replicase * tel.: + . locus at the end and codes for structural proteins toward the end. the most immunogenic of the viral proteins is spike (s), a trimeric, envelope-anchored, type i fusion glycoprotein that interfaces with its human host cognate receptor, dipeptidyl peptidase (dpp ), to mediate viral entry [ , ] . s comprises two subunits: s , which contains the receptor-binding domain and determines cell tropism; and s , the location of the cell fusion machinery. although dpp has a broad tissue distribution, most of the clinical manifestations of mers-cov can be attributed to its localization to the lower respiratory tract [ , ] . much like other coronaviruses, mers-cov can also cause significant dysfunction of the gastrointestinal, cardiovascular, renal, and neurologic systems. mers-cov is distinct, though, in its tendency to cause greatest harm to older individuals with concurrent comorbidities of one or more of these organ-systems [ , ] . despite past efforts to develop coronavirus countermeasures in response to the sars-cov pandemic, there are currently no prophylactic or therapeutic interventions of proven efficacy for mers-cov or any other coronavirus infection. although combination treatment with ribavirin and interferons were shown to improve clinical outcomes in mers-cov-infected non-human primates (nhps), treatment was initiated very soon after viral challenge (∼ h) and results have not been replicated in humans [ ] . in fact, no experimental interventions have demonstrated appreciable benefit in acutely ill patients in a consistent or controlled manner. rapidly scaled treatments based on naturally occurring neutralizing antibodies such as convalescent plasma or hyperimmune globulin, on the other hand, have demonstrated mortality reductions for other respiratory infections and may hold promise for mers-cov as well [ ] . their development, however, is limited by logistical challenges, local technical capacity, and donor supply. supportive management, adapted from guidelines developed for sars-cov, has thus far been the mainstay of mers-cov treatment. the global will to develop a coronavirus vaccine faded in the aftermath of sars-cov pandemic but has since gained renewed momentum in the face of the current mers-cov outbreak. previous approaches to coronavirus vaccine development were broad and included whole-inactivated and live-attenuated viruses, recombinant vectors and protein subunits, as well as dna and rna based platforms [ ] . most developers based their immunogen designs on the s surface glycoprotein, the primary target for neutralizing antibodies during any natural coronavirus infection. a number of preclinical and clinical studies showed that the sars-cov s protein subunit, and specifically the rbd at its core, could serve as a dominant target for neutralizing antibodies in mice, non-human primates, and humans [ ] . s , therefore, became the basis for a number of promising sars-cov vaccine candidates. the s protein subunit and rbd have also been the basis for several mers-cov vaccine candidates (fig. ) [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . resolution of rbd crystal structures alone or in complex with the dpp receptor [ , , ] have informed the design of immunogens that have been expressed either as recombinant protein fragments or conjugates to the fragment crystallizable (fc) region of human antibodies. both types of constructs, in formulation with aluminum salt or oil-in-water adjuvants, have elicited neutralizing antibodies of high potency across multiple viral strains. despite their demonstrated immunogenicity in animal models and anticipated safety in humans, rbd or s -subunit based vaccine candidates are limited in their epitope breadth. although the coronavirus genomes are not as variable as other rna viruses, the rbd is the most mutable region, containing mutation sites that define antibody escape variants [ , ] . thus, vaccine candidates that elicit a more diverse antibody repertoire as well as a robust cellular immune response may offer the advantage of broader and more durable protection. full-length s used as an immunogen could at least increase the breadth of the antibody response; however, it has been difficult to express, and may require additional work to produce a stable soluble trimer of the s ectodomain. investigators at the university of maryland, in collaboration with novavax, inc., have overcome this problem through the development of s rosettes that are stable and immunogenic in murine models [ ] . vaccines that mimic natural infection, such as live-attenuated viruses or recombinant viral vectors, may elicit even more robust immunity. live attenuated viruses have historically been among the most immunogenic platforms available, as they have the capacity to present multiple antigens across the viral life cycle in their native conformations. although a live-attenuated mers-cov has yet to be tested, one has been constructed and has the potential to be protective [ ] . however, manufacturing live-attenuated viruses requires containment in a biosafety level or facility. additionally, live-attenuated viruses carry the hazards of inadequate attenuation or reversion to wild type form and causing disseminated disease, particularly in immunocompromised hosts. given that moderately immunocompromised adults with co-morbidities such as diabetes mellitus and chronic kidney disease have suffered the most severe mers-cov disease, these individuals may comprise a target population for immunization, thus making a live-attenuated virus vaccine a less viable option. replication competent viral vectors could pose a similar threat for disseminated disease in the immunosuppressed. replication deficient vectors, however, avoid that risk while maintaining the advantages of native antigen presentation, elicitation of t cell immunity and the ability to express multiple antigens. to date, two recombinant vector platforms-modified although replication deficient vectors are relatively safe and immunogenic, their ability to deliver genetic material for expression could be impeded by pre-existing or developing immunity to the vector itself. one way to overcome this limitation is by administering different vectors in a so-called prime-boost immunization regimen. as this strategy has been effective for other pathogens, it is likely that the same success could be recapitulated for mers-cov. the use of more than one type of platform or antigen in a single vaccine also increases the likelihood of inducing a broad repertoire of antibodies with diverse mechanisms of viral neutralization. one vaccine regimen developed at the us national institutes of health is based on full-length s dna and a truncated s subunit glycoprotein and has elicited neutralizing antibodies in mice directed at both the s -within and outside the rbd-and s subunits. immunization with these constructs also protected nhps from severe lung disease after intra-tracheal challenge with mers-cov [ ] . a dnaonly vaccine, expressing multiple antigens, has also been developed by inovio pharmaceuticals and geneone life science inc. and has been advanced to a phase i first-in-human trial. each of the vaccine candidates that have been mentioned is being developed for prophylactic use. however, as the total number of cases (> ) [ , ] and reproductive rate (∼ . ) of mers-cov are both relatively low [ ] , it will be difficult to define the target populations for vaccination that would support the investment in manufacturing and advanced product development. also, with such low incidence and lack of robust animal models, it would be difficult to achieve a vaccine efficacy result that would be sufficient to support licensure. human mabs, on the other hand, could be used without as much discrimination in an outbreak setting for post-exposure prophylaxis and early treatment. the advantages of mabs over polyclonal antibodies (administered through convalescent plasma or hyperimmune globulin) are their higher potency, greater specificity, more extensive pre-licensing evaluation and consequently improved safety profile. additionally, mabs can help define immunogenic epitopes through crystallographic analysis, thereby providing atomic level detail for the design of better immunogens. however, the timeline for mab development may be longer and potentially cost more than some vaccines. despite requirements for greater upfront investment, several groups have developed highly potent mabs that are currently being advanced through pre-clinical stages of testing (fig. ) . some have been isolated from immunized animals (mice/humanized mice/nhps) [ , ] , while others have been identified from either an antibody human phage library [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] or memory b cells of infected and recovered human survivors [ ] . almost all of the mabs that have been reported target the spike rbd. it is likely that mabs directed at other sites on the spike glycoprotein have been recovered but are not as potent neutralizers. most of those that have been published bind to recombinant spike with picomolar affinity and neutralize mers-cov pseudovirus at a half maximal inhibitory concentration (ic ) of . mcg/l or less. additionally, some have demonstrated protective efficacy in pre-and post-exposure prophylaxis animal models [ , ] . the successes thus far in isolating potent and protective mabs may prove useful for therapeutic development where the target population is well defined. it may prove more challenging to advancing these products to licensure and fullscale production at affordable costs for the purpose of prophylaxis in as of yet undefined populations. the vaguely defined epidemiology of mers-cov has complicated the design and implementation of appropriate public health countermeasures. most transmission events have occurred either in the setting of household clusters or nosocomial outbreaks [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . it is also likely that the virus has been introduced multiple times into human populations from a large zoonotic reservoir, i.e. dromedary camels. given the broad distribution and ownership of camels in the arabian peninsula where most cases have occurred, a targeted vaccine campaign may prove difficult. as the outbreak in the republic of korea revealed, patients and workers in the same healthcare facility as an infected patient are at high risk for secondary acquisition. an optimal strategy may be to use vaccines in conjunction with stringent infection control practices in hospitals where mers-cov cases are being treated. the epidemiologic link of mers-cov between bats, camels, and humans presents an opportunity for a veterinary vaccine to interrupt the transmission cycle. a successful precedent for this so-called "onehealth" approach toward mitigating human disease with a veterinary vaccine exists in the example of equivac ® , a hendra virus vaccine developed solely for horses [ ] . although hendra virus is even more rare than mers-cov, it is highly fatal with no treatment other than intensive supportive management. in , a protein subunit vaccine was licensed and rolled-out in australia, where all outbreaks of the virus occurred. since that time, the incidence in horses has fallen precipitously and no human cases have been detected [ ] . a similar strategy may be applicable to mers-cov; however, a veterinary vaccination in this context would be deployed solely for the sake of protecting humans, as the virus causes only mild upper respiratory illness in camels. safety and reduction in viral shedding would have to be demonstrated in immunization, challenge and transmission studies of camel or camelid populations, one of which has shown efficacy [ ] . one of the primary challenges to developing countermeasures to mers-cov is the lack of an appropriate animal model that recapitulates the natural history of human disease. much of the difficulty originates from the absence of the virus's cognate dpp receptor. one group approached this problem by successfully transducing mice with an adenoviral vector expressing human dpp [ ] . although more relevant than a standard murine model, transient transduction of the desired protein may result in inconsistent tissue expression of adenovirus antigens. agrawal et al. made an important advance with the development of a transgenic mouse model that demonstrated productive, disseminated mers-cov infection [ ] . although rhesus macaques do not manifest full clinical disease, they develop a transient lower respiratory infection that can be quantified and evaluated by computed tomography. investigators at the nih rocky mountain laboratories (rml) and integrated research facility (irf) have also independently been developing potentially lethal marmoset models that could be used for the evaluation of vaccines, mabs and therapeutics [ ] . as mers-cov vaccines-both active and passive-are developed and tested, not only will more relevant animal models be required, but there will also be a need for a more detailed understanding of the epidemiology, immunology, and pathogenesis of the virus. in the aftermath of the west african ebola virus epidemic and in the face of the current zika virus outbreak, the global health community has coalesced around the realization that a multi-faceted plan is required to quickly and efficiently respond to global public health emergencies. the world health organization is currently developing a blueprint by which that preparation and response can follow, with mers-cov highlighted as a case study. although mers-cov still causes relatively few cases in a limited geographic distribution, its high case fatality and sudden outbreak in in korea have proven it to be a pathogen of public health concern. the concentration of the epidemic to saudi arabia also raises the specter of international spread every year during hajj, one of the largest mass gathering events in the world. ultimately, the development of a safe and effective vaccine for mers-cov may not yield its greatest benefit for the current epidemic but for the knowledge gained in creating a platform for combating coronaviruses as a whole. the opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and should not be construed as official or representing the views of the us department of defense or the department of the army. isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia epidemiological 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syndrome coronavirus neutralization escape and fitness purified coronavirus spike protein nanoparticles induce coronavirus neutralizing antibodies in mice engineering a replication-competent, propagation-defective middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus as a vaccine candidate middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus spike protein delivered by modified vaccinia virus ankara efficiently induces virus-neutralizing antibodies protective efficacy of recombinant modified vaccinia virus ankara delivering middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus spike glycoprotein systemic and mucosal immunity in mice elicited by a single immunization with human adenovirus type or vector-based vaccines carrying the spike protein of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus immunogenicity of an adenoviral-based middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus vaccine in balb/c mice estimation of mers-coronavirus reproductive number and case fatality rate for the spring saudi arabia outbreak: insights from publicly available data distinct immune response in two mers-cov-infected patients: can we go from bench to bedside? potent neutralization of mers-cov by human neutralizing monoclonal antibodies to the viral spike glycoprotein exceptionally potent neutralization of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus by human monoclonal antibodies identification of human neutralizing antibodies against mers-cov and their role in virus adaptive evolution preand postexposure efficacy of fully human antibodies against spike protein in a novel humanized mouse model of mers-cov infection prophylactic and postexposure efficacy of a potent human monoclonal antibody against mers coronavirus family cluster of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections hospital-associated outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: a serologic, epidemiologic, and clinical description middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: a case-control study of hospitalized patients hospital outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus hospital-associated middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections hospital-associated middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections hendra virus vaccine, a one health approach to protecting horse, human, and environmental health hendra virus an orthopoxvirus-based vaccine reduces virus excretion after mers-cov infection in dromedary camels rapid generation of a mouse model for middle east respiratory syndrome generation of a transgenic mouse model of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection and disease animal models of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection key: cord- -bvh o r authors: galasiti kankanamalage, anushka c.; kim, yunjeong; damalanka, vishnu c.; rathnayake, athri d.; fehr, anthony r.; mehzabeen, nurjahan; battaile, kevin p.; lovell, scott; lushington, gerald h.; perlman, stanley; chang, kyeong-ok; groutas, william c. title: structure-guided design of potent and permeable inhibitors of mers coronavirus cl protease that utilize a piperidine moiety as a novel design element date: - - journal: european journal of medicinal chemistry doi: . /j.ejmech. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: bvh o r abstract there are currently no approved vaccines or small molecule therapeutics available for the prophylaxis or treatment of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infections. mers-cov cl protease is essential for viral replication; consequently, it is an attractive target that provides a potentially effective means of developing small molecule therapeutics for combatting mers-cov. we describe herein the structure-guided design and evaluation of a novel class of inhibitors of mers-cov cl protease that embody a piperidine moiety as a design element that is well-suited to exploiting favorable subsite binding interactions to attain optimal pharmacological activity and pk properties. the mechanism of action of the compounds and the structural determinants associated with binding were illuminated using x-ray crystallography. proteins, s (spike glycoprotein), e (envelope protein), m (membrane glycoprotein), and n (nucleocapsid protein), which play a critical role in virion-cell receptor binding, replication and virion assembly, are located at the end of the genome [ , ] . coronavirus entry is initiated by the binding of the spike protein (s) to cell receptors, specifically, dipeptidyl peptidase (ddp ) and angiotensin converting enzyme (ace ) for mers-cov and sars-cov, respectively [ e ] . entry into cells requires host proteases for cleavage at two sites in the s protein, in the case of most cov [ , ] translation of the genomic mrna of orf a yields polyprotein pp a, while a second polyprotein (pp b) is the product of a ribosomal frame shift that joins orf a together with orf b. orf a encodes a papain-like cysteine protease (plpro) and a c-like cysteine protease ( clpro). polyproteins pp a and pp b are processed by clpro ( cleavage sites) and plpro ( cleavage sites) resulting in sixteen mature nonstructural proteins, including rna-dependent rna polymerase (rdrp) and helicase, which play important roles in the transcription and replication of coronaviruses (fig. ). both proteases are essential for viral replication, making them attractive targets for drug development [ , , e ] . mers-cov clpro is a chymotrypsin-like cysteine protease having a catalytic cys -his dyad and an extended binding site [ e ] . the protease displays a stringent primary substrate specificity for a p gln residue [ ] and has a strong preference for a p leu residue. the p residue side chain is oriented toward the solvent while the s subsite is shallow, preferring a small hydrophobic p residue (ala). functional and structural studies have delineated the similarities between the clpro of coronaviruses that can be exploited in the design of broad-spectrum inhibitors [ ] . we have recently reported the first demonstration of clinical efficacy of a coronavirus protease inhibitor (a dipeptidyl aldehyde bisulfite adduct inhibitor designated gc ) [ , ] . specifically, administration of gc to cats infected with fipv, a coronavirus that is % fatal in cats, reversed the progression of fatal fip and resulted in clinical remission in a majority of animals (> %). since fip disease progression is quite rapid and its pathogenesis primarily immune-mediated, features shared by mers-cov, we hypothesized that a viral protease inhibitor could reverse the pathogenesis of mers-cov in affected hosts. interrogation of this hypothesis entailed, as a first step, the design of a new and versatile class of peptidomimetic inhibitors of mers-cov cl protease. we describe herein the structure-guided design of inhibitors of mers-cov clpro that embody a piperidine moiety as a novel design element, as well as pertinent structural and biochemical studies. these inhibitors were also examined against other coronaviruses, including sars-cov, fipv and mhv to evaluate the spectrum of activity against multiple coronaviruses. the structure-guided design of inhibitor (i) encompassed the following steps: (a) we first determined a high resolution x-ray crystal structure of mers-cov clpro in complex with gc ( fig. /panel a) . examination of the active site of the complex revealed that the aldehyde bisulfite adduct had reverted to the precursor peptidyl aldehyde, which subsequently formed a tetrahedral hemi-thioacetal upon reaction with the active site cys . notably, the electron density at this stereocenter was consistent with the formation of both r and s enantiomers at the covalent binding site (also observed for the other structures described in the following sections). the structure reveals a network of backbone hydrogen bonds which ensure correct positioning of the inhibitor to the active site, as well as two critical hydrogen bonds with the p gln surrogate [ ] side chain. the inhibitor p leu side chain is ensconced in the hydrophobic s subsite of the enzyme. importantly, the structure shows a hydrophobic-driven interaction between the benzyl group of the inhibitor and the g-lactam ring of the gln surrogate side chain; (b) based on the forgoing, we reasoned that extending the "cap" would allow the inhibitor to assume an extended conformation and orient the phenyl ring toward the hydrophobic s pocket of the enzyme. validation of this idea was obtained by synthesizing extended inhibitor gc and determining a high resolution x-ray crystal structure of the mers-cov clpro:gc complex ( fig. /panel b) . the m-cl phenethyl side chain is clearly shown to occupy the hydrophobic s subsite. in addition to an array of h-bonds with gln , glu , and gln and the backbone of the inhibitor, which serve to correctly position the inhibitor at the active site, the inhibitor interacts with the s , s and s subsites, but not the s subsite; (c) we hypothesized that the attachment of a piperidine ring to the peptidyl component would yield a structurally novel peptidomimetic (i) capable of ( ) orienting recognition elements r and r in a correct vector relationship for optimal interactions with the s and s subsites, ( ) rendering a dipeptidyl inhibitor equivalent to a tetrapeptidyl inhibitor with potentially diminished pk liabilities and, ( ) providing a flexible means for the structure-guided parallel optimization of admet/pk and physicochemical properties using diversity sites r and r in inhibitor (i) (fig. ) . in summary, the piperidine-based design strategy is a hitherto unrecognized effective means of rendering a dipeptidyl inhibitor equivalent to a tetrapeptidyl inhibitor capable of engaging in optimal binding interactions with all four s -s subsites but which, however, is anticipated to display diminished pk liabilities due to its reduced peptidyl character. furthermore, the aforementioned piperidine-based design strategy has wide applicability and can be extended to any protease with an extended binding site. preliminary evidence in support of this approach is provided by the results of enzyme and cell-based screening of derivatives of (i) (tables and ) , as well as the results of structural studies (vide infra) (see table ). the synthesis of final compounds (a-f) and (a-f) is outlined in scheme . -boc- -piperidinone was reacted with different grignard reagents to yield the corresponding -boc- -piperidinol derivatives ( c and e). refluxing (l) leucine methyl ester hydrochloride with trichloromethyl chloroformate yielded the isocyanate which was reacted with ( c and e, or commercially-available nsubstituted -piperidinol a) to form the corresponding carbamate adducts ( a, c and e) that were hydrolyzed to the corresponding acids ( a, c and e) with lithium hydroxide in aqueous thf. subsequent coupling with glutamine surrogate methyl ester hydrochloride afforded the desired dipeptidyl esters ( a, c and e) which were either treated with lithium borohydride directly or were first treated with dry hcl in dioxane followed by reaction with an alkyl sulfonyl chloride or alkyl chloroformate, to yield esters ( b, d and f) prior to reduction with lithium borohydride, to yield alcohols (a-f). dess-martin oxidation, followed by flash chromatography, yielded pure aldehydes (a-f). the enantiomeric purity of the aldehydes was consistently high, with the amount of epimerized aldehyde ranging between and %. the corresponding bisulfite adducts (a-f) were readily obtained as white solids by stirring the aldehydes with sodium bisulfite in an ethyl acetate/ water mixture. the synthesized compounds are listed in table . the inhibitory activity of the synthesized compounds against clpro of mers-cov, sars-cov or fipv, and the antiviral activity of two representative compounds (compounds a and c) in a cellbased system including mers-cov, fipv and mhv were evaluated as described in the experimental section. the ic , ec , and cc values, are listed in tables and these are the average of at least two determinations. it is evident that derivatives of (i) function as highly potent inhibitors of all tested coronaviruses in enzyme (table ) and cell based assays (table and fig. ). more importantly, representative aldehyde bisulfite adduct compounds a and c display potent inhibition toward mers-cov in both enzyme and cell-based systems, with low cytotoxicity (cc > mm) ( table and fig. ). for example, compound a has a selectivity index (si ¼ cc /ec ) of > . with the exception of compounds e- e, the aldehyde and aldehyde bisulfite adducts were found to have comparable in vitro potency toward mers-cov clpro. furthermore, pharmacological activity was found to be dependent on the nature of the r group (compounds e- e are -fold less active toward mers-cov clpro than compounds a-d, a-d and f- f). in order to establish the mechanism of action of (i), as well as obtain structural information that can be used to guide the optimization of pharmacological activity, the high resolution x-ray crystal structures of several derivatives of (i) bound to mers-cov clpro were determined, including the cocrystal structure of the mers-cov clpro:inhibitor c complex (fig. a) . the formation of a tetrahedral adduct via the reaction of the aldehyde, generated from aldehyde bisulfite adduct c under the crystallization conditions used [ , ] , with the active site cysteine (cys ) is clearly evident, confirming the mechanism of action of (i). inspection of the structure reveals the presence of prominent electron density consistent with the structure of inhibitor c; however, the n-bocpiperidinyl moiety was disordered. the position and orientation of the benzyl group suggest that the piperidine ring is likely projecting toward the s subsite. inhibitor c is bound to the active site of the enzyme via a network of backbone h-bonds with gln , gln , and glu (fig. b ). additionally, a h-bond with his serves to stabilize the hemi-thioacetal tetrahedral adduct. also clearly evident are three critical h-bonds involving the p gln surrogate ring oxygen and nitrogen with glu , his and phe . the h-bonding interactions are near identical to those of inhibitor gc (fig. /panel b) . the structural complementarity of inhibitors c and gc is also evident in the electrostatic surface representation of the enzyme with the two inhibitors nestled in the active site (fig. ) . the cocrystal structure of the mers-cov clpro:aldehyde bisulfite adduct e complex also showed that, under the crystallization conditions used, the aldehyde bisulfite adduct reverted to the precursor aldehyde, which subsequently formed a tetrahedral adduct with the active site cysteine (cys ) (fig. a ). the piperidinyl moiety was disordered and consequently its precise location could not be discerned. however, inhibitor e is engaged in the same h-bonding interactions as inhibitor c (fig. b ). mers-cov constitutes a global public health concern. there are currently no licensed vaccines or antiviral drugs for the prevention and treatment of coronavirus infections. we disclose herein for the first time the design and utilization of a general class of piperidinebased peptidomimetic inhibitors of coronavirus cl proteases. attachment of the piperidine moiety to a dipeptidyl component permits the resultant hybrid inhibitor to engage in favorable binding interactions with the s and s subsites of the enzyme. more importantly, the approach disclosed herein can be extended to other proteases of medical relevance. finally, the disclosed compounds potently inhibit mers-cov, and their mechanism of action and mode of binding to mers-cov cl protease have been illuminated using x-ray crystallography. reagents and dry solvents were purchased from various chemical suppliers (aldrich, acros organics, chem-impex, tci america, and bachem) and were used as obtained. silica gel ( e mesh) used for flash chromatography was purchased from sorbent technologies (atlanta, ga). thin layer chromatography was performed using analtech silica gel plates. visualization was accomplished dropwise under a n atmosphere to a solution of -boc- piperidinone ( mmol) in dry thf ( ml) in an ice bath kept at c. the reaction mixture was stirred for h at room temperature under a n atmosphere while monitoring completion of the reaction by tlc. the reaction mixture was diluted with water ( ml) and the solution was acidified to ph~ using % hydrochloric acid. the solvent was removed on the rotary evaporator and the residue was extracted with ethyl acetate ( ml) and the layers separated. the organic layer then washed with brine ( ml) and dried over anhydrous sodium sulfate, filtered and concentrated to yield a colorless oily product which was purified by flash chromatography to yield c and e. . . . synthesis of (l) leucine methyl ester isocyanate (l) leucine methyl ester hydrochloride ( mmol) was placed in a dry -ml rb flask and then dried overnight on the vacuum pump. the flask was flushed with nitrogen and dry dioxane ( ml) was added followed by trichloromethyl chloroformate ( . g, mmol), and the reaction mixture was refluxed for h. the solvent was removed on the rotary evaporator and the residue was vacuum distilled to yield pure isocyanate as a colorless oil [ , ] . table crystallographic data for mers-cov clpro in complex with compounds gc , gc , c and e. mers-cov clpro: gc mers-cov clpro: compound c mers-cov clpro: compound e hkl. c r factor ¼ Ʃ hkl jjf obs (hkl) j -jf calc (hkl) jj/Ʃ hkl jf obs (hkl)j; rfree is calculated in an identical manner using % of randomly selected reflections that were not included in the refinement. d r meas ¼ redundancy-independent (multiplicity-weighted) r merge. [ , ] r pim ¼ precision-indicating (multiplicity-weighted) r merge. [ , ] . e cc / is the correlation coefficient of the mean intensities between two random half-sets of data [ , ] . . . . synthesis of substituted piperidine-derived carbamates a, c and e. general procedure a solution of substituted or unsubstituted -boc- -piperidinol ( c, e or a) ( mmol) in dry acetonitrile ( ml) was treated with triethylamine ( . g, mmol) followed by the amino acid methyl ester isocyanate ( mmol). the resulting solution was refluxed for h and then allowed to cool to room temperature. the solution was concentrated and the residue was taken up in ethyl acetate ( ml). the organic layer was washed with % hcl (  ml) and brine ( ml). the organic layer was dried over anhydrous sodium sulfate, filtered and concentrated, leaving compounds a, c and e as colorless oils. . . . synthesis of acids a, c and e. general procedure a solution of ester ( a, c or e) ( mmol) in tetrahydrofuran ( ml) was treated with m lioh ( ml). the reaction mixture was stirred for h at room temperature and the disappearance of the ester was monitored by tlc. most of the solvent was evaporated off and the residue was diluted with water ( ml). the solution was acidified to ph~ using % hydrochloride acid ( ml) and the aqueous layer was extracted with ethyl acetate (  ml). the combined organic layers were dried over anhydrous sodium sulfate, filtered, and concentrated to yield the corresponding compounds a, c and e as colorless oils. . . . synthesis of compounds a, c and e. general procedure edci ( . g, . mmol, . eq) and hobt ( . g, . mmol, . eq) were added to a solution of compound ( a, c or e) ( mmol) in dry dmf ( ml) and the mixture was stirred for min at room temperature. in a separate flask, a solution of deprotected glutamine surrogate ( . g, mmol) in dmf ( ml) cooled to e c was treated with diisopropylethylamine (diea) ( . g, mmol, eq), stirred for min, and then added to the reaction mixture containing the acid. the reaction mixture was stirred for h while monitoring the reaction by tlc. the solvent was removed and the residue was partitioned between ethyl acetate ( ml) and % citric acid (  ml). the layers were separated and the ethyl acetate layer was further washed with saturated aqueous nahco ( ml), followed by saturated nacl ( ml). the organic layer was dried over anhydrous sodium sulfate, filtered and concentrated to yield a yellow-colored oily product. purification by flash chromatography yielded esters a, c and e as white solids. . . . synthesis of compounds b, d and f. general procedure m hcl in dioxane ( ml) was added to a solution of compound ( a, c and e) ( mmol) in dry dcm ( ml) and the mixture was stirred for h at room temperature. the solvent was removed and the residue was dried under high vacuum for h before the product was dissolved in dry thf ( ml). an appropriate alkyl sulfonyl chloride or alkyl chloroformate derivative ( mmol/ . eq) was added to the solution with stirring. the reaction mixture was stirred for h at room temperature and the residue was dissolved in ethyl acetate ( ml) and washed with % hcl (  ml). the ethyl acetate layer was further washed with saturated nacl ( ml). the organic layer was dried over anhydrous sodium sulfate, filtered and concentrated to yield a crude product. purification by flash chromatography yielded the corresponding esters b, d and f as white solids. lithium borohydride ( m in thf, . ml, mmol) was added dropwise to a solution of ester ( or ) ( mmol) in anhydrous thf ( ml), followed by absolute ethyl alcohol ( ml) and the reaction mixture was stirred at room temperature overnight. the reaction mixture was then acidified by adding % hcl and the ph adjusted tõ . removal of the solvent left a residue which was taken up in ethyl acetate ( ml). the organic layer was washed with brine ( ml), dried over anhydrous sodium sulfate, filtered, and concentrated to yield compounds (a-f) as white solids. compound (a-f) ( mmol) was dissolved in anhydrous dichloromethane ( ml) under a nitrogen atmosphere and cooled to c. dess-martin periodinane reagent ( . g, . mmol, . eq) was added to the reaction mixture with stirring. the ice bath was removed and the reaction mixture was stirred at room temperature for h (monitoring by tlc indicated complete disappearance of the starting material). a solution of % aqueous sodium thiosulfate ( ml) was added and the solution was stirred for another min. the aqueous layer was removed and the organic layer was washed with % aqueous sodium thiosulfate ( ml), followed by saturated aqueous sodium bicarbonate (  ml), water (  ml) and brine ( ml). the organic layer was dried over anhydrous sodium sulfate, filtered and concentrated. the yellow residue was purified by flash chromatography (silica gel/methylene chloride/ ethyl acetate/methanol) to yield a white solid (a-f). absolute ethanol ( ml) was added to a solution of aldehyde (a-f) ( mmol) in dry ethyl acetate ( ml) with stirring, followed by a solution of sodium bisulfite ( mg; mmol) in water ( ml) and the reaction mixture was stirred for h at c. the reaction mixture was allowed to cool to room temperature and then vacuum filtered. the solid was thoroughly washed with absolute ethanol and the filtrate was dried over anhydrous sodium sulfate, filtered, and concentrated to yield a yellowish oil. the oily product was treated with ethyl ether (  ml) to form a white solid. the white solid was stirred with ethyl ether ( ml) and ethyl acetate ( ml) for min. careful removal of the solvent using a pipette left the corresponding aldehyde bisulfite adducts (a-f) as white solids. the fret protease assay was performed by preparing stock solutions of the substrate (dabcyl-ktsavlq/sgfrkme-edans derived from the cleavage sites on the viral polyproteins of sars-cov) and inhibitor in dmso and diluting into assay buffer which was comprised of mm hepes buffer, ph , containing nacl ( mm), edta ( . mm), glycerol ( %), and mm dithiothreitol (dtt). the expression and purification of the clpro of mers-cov, sars-cov or fipv was performed by a standard method described previously by our lab [ , ] . the protease ( clpro of mers-cov, sars-cov or fipv) was mixed with serial dilutions of each compound or with dmso in ml of assay buffer and incubated at c for min, followed by the addition of ml of assay buffer containing substrate. fluorescence readings were obtained using an excitation wavelength of nm and an emission wavelength of nm on a fluorescence microplate reader (flx ; biotec, winoosk, vt) h following the addition of substrate. relative fluorescence units (rfu) were determined by subtracting background values (substrate-containing well without protease) from the raw fluorescence values, as described previously [ ] . the dosedependent fret inhibition curves were fitted with a variable slope by using graphpad prism software (graphpad, la jolla, ca) in order to determine the ic values of the inhibitors. the effects of compounds a and c on the replication of mers-cov, fipv or mhv-a were examined in vero , crfk or ccl . cells, respectively [ ] . briefly, confluent and semi-confluent cells were infected at an moi of . pfu/cell. following adsorption, cells were incubated with medium containing dmso (< . %) or each compound (up to mm) for h. after incubation, viral titers were determined with a tcid (fipv or mhv) or plaque assay (mers-cov). ec values were determined using graphpadprism software [ ]. the cytotoxic dose for % cell death (cc ) for compounds a and c was determined in vero , crfk or ccl . cells. confluent cells grown in -well plates were treated with various concentrations ( e mm) of each compound for h. cell cytotoxicity was measured by a cytotox nonradioactive cytotoxicity assay kit (promega, madison, wi). the in vitro therapeutic index was calculated by dividing the cc by the ec . purified mers-cov clpro, in mm nacl, mm tris ph . , was concentrated to mg/ml ( . mm). stock solutions of mm gc , gc , compound c or compound e were prepared in dmso and the complex with mers clpro was prepared by mixing the concentrated protein supplemented with mm compound and incubating overnight at c. all crystallization experiments were conducted using compact (rigaku reagents) sitting drop vapor diffusion plates at c using equal volumes of protein and crystallization solution equilibrated against ml of the latter. crystals of mers clpro in complex with gc , compound c and compound e that displayed a prismatic morphology were obtained from the index ht screen (hampton research) condition g ( % (w/v) peg , mm bis-tris ph . , mm mgcl ) in e days. crystals of the gc complex were obtained from the index ht screen (hampton research) condition e ( % (v/v) peg mme, mm bis-tris ph . , mm cacl ). samples were transferred to a fresh drop containing % crystallant and % (v/v) peg before storing in liquid nitrogen. x-ray diffraction data were collected at the advanced photon source beamline -id using a dectris pilatus m pixel array detector. intensities were integrated using xds [ , ] using autoproc [ ] and the laue class analysis and data scaling were performed with aimless [ ] , which suggested that the highest probability laue class was /m and space group c . structure solution was conducted by molecular replacement with phaser [ ] using a previously determined isomorphous structure of mers clpro (pdb: rsp [ ] ) as the search model. structure refinement and manual model building were conducted with phenix [ ] and coot [ ] , respectively. disordered side chains were truncated to the point for which electron density could be observed. structure validation was conducted with molprobity [ ] and figures were prepared using the ccp mg package [ ] . coordinates and structure factors for the mers clpro inhibitor complexes were deposited to the worldwide protein data bank (wwpdb) with the accession codes: wkj (gc ), wkk (gc ), wkl (inhibitor c) and wkm (inhibitor e). coronaviridae in field's virology coronaviruses: important emerging human 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https://doi.org/ . /j.ejmech. . . . key: cord- -xjoyrdhj authors: gunaratne, gihan s.; johns, malcolm e.; hintz, hallie m.; walseth, timothy f.; marchant, jonathan s. title: a screening campaign in sea urchin egg homogenate as a platform for discovering modulators of naadp-dependent ca + signaling in human cells date: - - journal: cell calcium doi: . /j.ceca. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: xjoyrdhj abstract the ca + mobilizing second messenger nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide phosphate (naadp) regulates intracellular trafficking events, including translocation of certain enveloped viruses through the endolysosomal system. targeting naadp-evoked ca + signaling may therefore be an effective strategy for discovering novel antivirals as well as therapeutics for other disorders. to aid discovery of novel scaffolds that modulate naadp-evoked ca + signaling in human cells, we have investigated the potential of using the sea urchin egg homogenate system for a screening campaign. known pharmacological inhibitors of naadp-evoked ca + release (but not cadpr- or ip -evoked ca + release) in this invertebrate system strongly correlated with inhibition of mers-pseudovirus infectivity in a human cell line. a primary screen of compounds yielded eighteen ‘hits’ exhibiting > % inhibition of naadp-evoked ca + release. a validation pipeline for these candidates yielded seven drugs that inhibited naadp-evoked ca + release without depleting acidic ca + stores in a human cell line. these candidates displayed a similar penetrance of inhibition in both the sea urchin system and the human cell line, and the extent of inhibition of naadp-evoked ca + signals correlated well with observed inhibition of infectivity of a middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) pseudovirus. these experiments support the potential of this simple, homogenate system for screening campaigns to discover modulators of naadp, cadpr and ip -dependent ca + signaling with potential therapeutic value. ca + signals originating from the 'acidic' ca + stores of endosomes and lysosomes regulate a steadily growing list of cellular and developmental processes [ ] . one important endolysosomal ca + release pathway is activated by nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide phosphate (naadp), a potent ca + releasing second messenger in many cells and tissues [ ] [ ] [ ] . naadp mobilizes intracellular ca + stores by engaging the activity of members of the two-pore channel (tpc) family ( [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , but see [ , ] ). tpcs are broadly expressed ion channels and evolutionarily ancient members of the voltage-gated ion channel superfamily [ , ] . their identification and subsequent study has facilitated resolution of many pathophysiology processes dependent upon endolysosomal ca + release [ ] [ ] [ ] . for example, using knockdown or knockout approaches, a role for tpcs has been shown during viral infectivity [ ] , parkinson disease [ ] , muscle function and development [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] , late-onset obesity [ ] and susceptibility to non-alcoholic fatty liver disease [ ] . such discoveries prioritize the importance of identifying small molecule modulators of tpc-and naadp-dependent ca + signaling pathways as research tools and perhaps, over the longer term, as a therapeutic avenue. for example, the natural product tetrandrine recently identified as a tpc blocker and inhibitor of naadp-evoked ca + signaling improved survival in mice infected with ebola [ ] . modulators of naadpdependent signaling have been shown to be effective against other eukaryotic pathogens [ ] and viral infections [ , ] as well as regulators of neoangiogenesis [ , ] . current pharmacological tools for inhibiting naadp-evoked ca + signals comprise several groups. first, compounds that generally perturb the mobilizable, organellar ca + pool (e.g. bafilomycin, a vacuolar derivatives [ ] . finally, a flotilla of other compounds working through the above mechanisms that have inhibitory actions over a range of tens of micromolar. these include alkyl pyridinium analogs (ic ∼ μm, [ ] ) na v blockers (ic > μm, [ ] ) and naringenin (ic ∼ μm, [ ] ). overall, there is scope for identifying an improved pharmacopeia of selective, potent modulators of the naadp-evoked ca + release pathway. one approach for executing an unbiased screening campaign targeting naadp-sensitive ca + signaling is based upon interrogation of ca + release responses in the sea urchin egg homogenate system, the preparation in which the ca + releasing activity of naadp (and cyclic adp ribose, cadpr) was first discovered [ , ] . the sea urchin egg homogenate system represents a simple, yet robust preparation [ ] : it is an easily prepared cell-free system that, within each independent preparation, provides reproducible and robust responsiveness to multiple ca + -releasing second messengers (naadp, cadpr and ip ) within a minaturizable, high signal-to-noise, room temperature assay. homogenate can be prepared in bulk, and stored as frozen aliquots which remain responsive for many years. for all these reasons, the system has long been regarded as the 'gold-standard' for studying naadp action [ , ] , and has been frequently used to assess the action of molecules eliciting ca + release through each of the discrete, endogenous ca + mobilization pathways [ , , , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . although the system is clearly amenable to high throughput profiling, no screening campaign has, to our knowledge, yet been reported. this is surprising given the many advantages of this preparation, not in the least the intrinsic sensitivity to the three ca + -releasing second messengers that permits counter-screening of small molecule specificity. here, we have performed a pilot screen for novel modulators of naadp-sensitive ca + release in the sea urchin egg homogenate system and assessed tractability of the resulting 'hits' against both endogenous naadp-evoked ca + responses and a pseudotyped mers-cov translocation assay in human cell lines [ ] . chemicals were sourced as follows: fluo- am and lysotracker red (ltr, thermo scientific); fluo- pentapotassium salt (biotium). gly-phe-β-naphthylamide (gpn, santa cruz biotechnology); pf- , skf hydrochloride, ly- , hydrochloride, pdmp hydrochloride, and ppads tetrasodium salt (cayman chemical); fluphenazine dihydrochloride, gbr- dihydrochloride, racecadotril, clemastine fumarate, prochlorperazine dimaleate salt, thioridazine hydrochloride, salmeterol xinafoate, oxybutynin chloride, trifluoperazine dihydrochloride, naringenin, hepes, chaps, potassium gluconate, n-methylglucamine, nad, naad, nadp, nicotinamide mononucleotide, nicotinic acid, nicotinamide, atp, and dtt (sigma aldrich); a- , -( h-imidazol- -yl)propyl di(p-fluorophenyl)methyl ether hydrochloride (ipfme), st- , tmb- hydrochloride, and trans-ned- (santa cruz biotechnology); dilazep hydrochloride (tocris); complete™ edta-free protease inhibitor cocktail (roche). naadp and cadpr were synthesized in house using previously described methods [ , ] . the libraries used for screening activities were sourced from sigma (lopac ® , library of pharmacologically active compounds, compounds) and selleck (gpcr compound library, compounds). for the lopac ® library all compounds were screened in triplicate (n = , independent assays). for the smaller gpcr library, compounds were screened in duplicate (n = , independent assays), owing to limitations on material. strongylocentrotus purpuratus homogenates ( %) were prepared as previously described [ ] and stored at − °c for subsequent usage. homogenates were loaded with ca + and fluo- by incubation at °c in an intracellular medium, consisting of mm potassium gluconate, mm n-methyl-d-glucamine, mm hepes, mm mgcl , ph . , supplemented with . mg/ml creatine kinase, . mm atp, mm phosphocreatine, and μm fluo- [ ] . homogenate was diluted in a step-wise fashion over the course of h to a final concentration of . % homogenate. fluo- fluorescence was monitored using a tecan infinite m pro plate reader (λ ex = ± nm, λ em = ± nm). baseline fluorescence readings from samples in the presence of individual drugs were measured, followed by stimulation with a submaximal concentration of naadp. the screening studies were performed in -well assay plates (corning flat bottom, transparent) and each library was screened at a final concentration of μm. an epmotion ® liquid handling workstation (eppendorf) was used to dispense homogenate and naadp into assay plates. fluo- fluorescence was monitored using a tecan infinite m pro plate reader. for all screening experiments, fluo- fluorescence changes were monitored in the presence of compound for cycles ( min) prior to the addition of an ec concentration of naadp ( nm final concentration). for the lopac ® library, . ul of vehicle (dmso) or compound ( mm) was dispensed into the assay plates using a labcyte ech acoustic nanoliter dispensing system. the assay was started by addition of . μl of sea urchin egg homogenate. for experiments screening the selleck gpcr compound library, baseline fluo- fluorescence of the homogenate ( . ul) was monitored for . min prior to the addition of . ul vehicle (dmso) or compound ( mm) using the epmotion ® . z' values were calculated to assess separation of distributions of positive and negative controls, as described elsewhere [ ] . . . p-naadp binding and ca + release assays in sea urchin egg homogenate [ p]-naadp was synthesized from [ p]-nad and used for binding studies as previously described [ , ] . for imaging experiments to assess changes in lysosome properties and ca + content, human u os cells (bone osteosarcoma) were seeded in optical bottom black walled -well plates (thermo scientific) at a density of × cells per well. after h at °c and % co , cells were loaded with lysotracker ® red (ltr) and fluo- am according to the vendors' respective protocols. cells were then thoroughly rinsed and media was replaced with hanks balanced salt solution (hbss, thermo scientific). fluorescence of ltr (λ ex = ± nm, λ em = ± nm) and fluo- (λ ex = ± nm, λ em = ± nm) were simultaneously monitored using a tecan infinite m pro plate reader at °c. baseline fluorescence values were monitored for cycles, followed by addition of either vehicle or drug (final concentration, μm) and changes in fluorescence values were monitored for an additional cycles. cells were then treated with gpn (final concentration, μm) to stimulate osmotic disruption of lysosomes and ca + release with fluorescence monitored for a further cycles. changes in lysosomal ca + content due to drug treatment were quantified by assessing fluorescence ratios (f/f ) during gpn treatment in control and drug-treated samples, where 'f' represents fluo- fluorescence at peak, and f represents fluorescence at time = . changes in lysosomal labelling due to drug treatment were quantified by assessing fluorescence ratios (f/f ) of ltr during drug treatment, where again 'f' represents minimum ltr fluorescence ratio after drug addition prior to gpn treatment, and 'f ' represents ltr fluorescence at time = . naadp microinjection assays in human u os cells were performed as described in the companion paper [ ] . u os cells were seeded in white -well plates (corning) at a density of × cells per well. the following day, cell cultures were supplemented with test compounds or vehicle for h at °c and % co . viability of the cells was assessed using celltiter-glo . (promega) according to the vendor's protocol. atp-dependent luciferase activity from celltiter-glo . reagent was quantified using a plate reader (tecan infinite m pro). mers pseudovirus experiments were performed in huh cells (human hepatocyte-derived carcinoma) as described in the companion paper [ ] . in brief, mers-cov spike pseudotyped retroviruses expressing a luciferase-encoding reporter gene was generated by transfecting hek t cells with plasmid carrying env-defective, luciferaseexpressing hiv- genome (pnl - .luc.re) and plasmid encoding mers-cov spike protein. following receptor-mediated endocytosis of the mers-pseudovirus, translocation of the viral particle from the lumen of the endolysosomal system to the cytosplasm is detected h post infection by measuring luciferase activity. as an initial feasibility test for the validity of screening sea urchin egg homogenate to discover leads with mammalian activities, we took advantage of our existing compound dataset resulting from the mers pseudovirus bioassay [ ] . a set of compounds, known to display various degrees of attenuation of mers pseudovirus infectivity, were screened for inhibition of ca + release in the sea urchin egg homogenate system. a typical experiment is shown in fig. a , which resolves ca + release kinetics evoked by naadp, or cadpr or ip in the absence and presence of fangchinoline. fangchinoline, an inhibitor of naadpevoked ca + signals and mers pseudovirus translocation in a human cell line [ ] , decreased the magnitude of naadp-evoked ca + release (peak amplitude ± % of control response, blue traces in fig. a ) with lesser effects on the size of ip or cadpr-evoked ca + transients (fig. a) . ca + release assays were performed for ∼ other ligands shown to be inhibitors in the mers pseudovirus translocation assay, and then the impact of these ligands on ca + signals evoked by naadp-, cadpr-and ip were correlated with effects in the viral assay (fig. b) . inspection of regression plots from each dataset revealed that compounds that inhibited naadp-evoked ca + release were associated with blockade of mers pseudovirus translocation, with more effective naadp inhibitors causing greater decreases in infectivity (fig. b) . no positive correlation was seen for the identical set of compounds between modulation of either cadpr or ip -evoked signals and mers pseudovirus translocation (fig. b) . overall, these data establish that identification of pharmacological inhibitors of naadp-evoked ca + signals in the sea urchin system has potential utility for discovering modulators of naadp dependent processes in human cells, such as mers pseudovirus translocation [ ] . this provides rationale for a broader screening campaign against sea urchin egg homogenate to discover novel modulators of naadp-evoked ca + release. a schematic overview of the four-step screening workflow is shown in fig. a . the primary screen (fixed concentration of μm, compounds), and secondary validation of potential 'hits' (full concentration response curve analysis), were both performed using sea urchin egg homogenate (steps ' ' and ' ') in a miniaturized format ( well plate). these activities would be predicted to yield a smaller number of candidates for the subsequent, more laborious validation approaches in a human cell line (u os). these final activities (steps ' ' and ' ') encompassed: (i) counter-screening for more generalized actions against acidic ca + stores, for example lysosomotropism [ , ] , (ii) quantifying effects on naadp-evoked ca + signals evoked by single cell microinjection of naadp, and (iii) correlating effects on ca + release with bioactivities in the mers pseudovirus translocation assay. and are expressed as mean ± sem. b, correlation plot comparing the extent of inhibition of naadp-(blue) ip -(red) or cadprevoked ca + release (green) observed with individual ligands ( μm) correlated with the extent of inhibition of mers-pseudovirus translocation evoked by the same ligands (at the same concentration, μm). none of these tested ligands evoked ca + release by themselves. solid (naadp) and dotted lines (ip , cadpr) represent linear regression of datapoints. ligand key: = dmso, =cycleanine, = tubocurarine, =nimodipine, =procaine, =chondocurine, =benzocaine, =hernandezine, =berbamine, =nicardipine, =verapamil, =tetrandrine, =fangchinoline, =amitriptyline, =loperamide, =ned- , =bafilomycin, =u a, = ym , =fluoxetine, =citalopram, =desipramine, =siramesine. mers-pseudovirus infectivity was measured using a luciferase-based cell entry assay, assay methodology and inhibition of naadpevoked ca + shown in this figure are described in detail in the companion paper [ ] . the overall pipeline would therefore evaluate the translatability of compounds discovered from urchin screening platform for modulating naadp-evoked ca + signaling in mammalian cells. first, we optimized conditions for executing the miniaturized screen in sea urchin egg homogenate, defining a basic protocol depicted in fig. b . compounds were preincubated with homogenate for min ( st addition) during which fluorescence readings were monitored, followed by a single subsequent addition of naadp ( nm, nd addition). the positive control was naadp itself ( st addition, fig. c ), known to selfdesensitize the sea urchin naadp-evoked ca + release pathway [ ] . the negative control was dual additions of vehicle (fig. d ). these positive (naadp) and negative vehicle (dmso) controls were run in parallel for each plate. the robustness of the screening platform was assessed by calculating the z' factor (z'), a widely employed indicator of assay quality in screening applications [ ] . z' values over . are considered a prerequisite for executing reliable higher throughput screens. calculations of z' were therefore made using peak fluorescence values during the naadp-evoked ca + mobilization response after initial preincubation with vehicle control versus dual vehicle additions (fig. d) , averaging replicate wells within a well plate. using this protocol, z' = . ± . , an acceptable value defining assay conditions for subsequent experiments. the primary screen ( compounds) was then performed using two libraries (lopac ® , compounds; and a g protein coupled receptor (gpcr) library, compounds). results of the dual library screens are presented together in fig. a which collates the averaged magnitude of the naadp-evoked ca + signal observed following preincubation with each compound. these data were then replotted (fig. b ) as a progressive ranking of inhibition from the most penetrant inhibitor (pf- ) through to compounds that showed potentiation versus the control naadp signal (phenytoin). most compounds (∼ % of those screened) fell within a ± % range of control values (shaded area, fig. b ). reassuringly, two established inhibitors of naadpevoked ca + release and p-naadp binding in the sea urchin egg homogenate systemthe purinergic blockers ppads and ppnds [ ] displayed clear inhibitory effects in the primary screen, with naadpevoked ca + release reduced to ± % (ppads) and ± % (ppnds) of control values (fig. c) . as our focus here was on identifying novel, penetrant inhibitors of naadp signaling, an arbitrary cut-off of > % inhibition of the control naadp-evoked ca + signal amplitude was used for candidate prioritization (red box, fig. d ), a threshold which corralled compounds. compounds that caused changes or elevations of baseline fluorescence values during the preincubation period were also excluded from subsequent analysis, one example being the ionophore a (fig. ) . another example was the serca inhibitor thapsigargin, which depleted the er ca + content, but did not abrogate naadp responsiveness from the acidic ca + stores (fig. c) . also excluded were known modulators of naadp-evoked ca + signaling such as thio-nadp (known to contain contaminating naadp [ ] , fig. c ). following this pruning, a top cohort of putative inhibitors was prioritized and ranked (# , pf- through # , trifluoperazine; fig. d ). analysis of the known pharmacological activities of the screened ligands, and comparison with the subset of these top eighteen candidate inhibitors, revealed enrichment of the 'neurotransmission' classification and dopaminergic modulators in particular ( supplementary fig. ). table collates the ranking of these candidate hits from the primary screen and subsequent data from other assays in the screening pipeline. three compounds showed > % inhibition of naadp-evoked ca + signaling in the primary screen (fig. e) . the top two hits were pf- (rank # , . ± . % of control naadp response) and skf (rank # , . ± . % of control naadp response). pf- is a cell permeable inhibitor of sphingosine kinase (k i ∼ nm, [ ] ), which catalyzes the formation of sphingosine -phosphate from sphingosine; skf is a lva t-type ca v blocker, with additional antagonist action at trpc channels and other ca v s [ , ] . secondary validation of the primary screening hits was then performed (step ' ', fig. ). for each of the top hits, full concentration response curves for inhibition of naadp-evoked ca + release in the sea urchin egg homogenate was performed. representative curves are shown in fig. a , and ic values for each compound are collated in table . each of the eighteen prioritized candidates elicited a concentration-dependent inhibition of naadp-evoked ca + release, validating the robustness of the primary screen. ic values spanned from low micromolar (e.g. racecadotril, ic = . ± . μm) to tens of micromolar, a range that compares favorably with data obtained with currently used inhibitors of naadp evoked ca + signals, including ppads (ic = . ± . μm) and the lower potency of commercially sourced trans-ned- in our hands ( ± μm, but compare with [ ] ). a recently proposed tpc inhibitor -naringenin [ ] also displayed little inhibitory activity in this system. the selectivity of inhibition of the naadp pathway was assessed by monitoring effects of the same candidate ( μm) on ip -evoked ca + signals, cadpr-evoked ca + signals and naadp-evoked ca + signals. representative compounds in this assay are shown in fig. b . finally, the effects of compound on p-naadp binding was also examined, as one potential mechanism for inhibition of naadp-evoked ca + responses. except for naadp and the positive control ppads, none of the compounds displayed significant inhibition of p-naadp binding in sea urchin egg homogenates (fig. c) . these data were also consistent with a failure of the candidates to displace a photoaffinity probe [ , , [ ] [ ] [ ] from the naadp receptor binding protein in mammalian u os cell extracts (data not shown). these sea urchin screening activities generated a group of eighteen compounds that merited assessment for activities against naadpevoked ca + signaling in human cells (steps ' ' and ' ', fig. a ). to generate a priority order for assessing inhibition of responses to numbered - ) . b, results from both libraries were combined and compounds were ranked by amplitude of response from greatest inhibition (rank # , left) to potentiation (rank # , right). the majority of compounds were in a range ± % of control response (shaded box). compounds that exhibited > % inhibition of naadp-evoked ca + release were prioritized (red box) and selected for further characterization (table ) . c, raw data from the primary screen for selected compounds -ppads, ppnds, thapsigargin, a , thio-nadp and vehicle control (dmso). d, enlargement of red box from 'b' showing ranking of top eighteen hits after pruning, which displayed > % inhibition of naadp-evoked ca + release. pruned compounds were thio-nadp and a ( th and th top hits), shown in grey. e, traces of naadp-evoked ca + release in the presence of the two top ranked candidates (# , pf- ; # , skf ; coloured lines, μm). microinjected naadp in single cells, which is a relatively time-consuming process, we first counter-screened the compounds for deleterious effects on cell viability, or non-specific actions on the acidic ca + stores. the cell viability screen was performed using a luciferase based system to quantify cellular atp levels following incubation of u os cells (bone osteosarcoma) with each compound. none of the compounds exhibited toxicity over this treatment paradigm compared to control samples ( supplementary fig. ) . next, the effects of the candidate drugs on lysosomal number and ca + content were assessed by simultaneously monitoring changes in lysotracker ® fluorescence and cytoplasmic ca + following addition of gpn (glycyl-l-phenylalanine- -naphthylamide). gpn causes lysosomal permeabilization and ca + release, concomitant with loss of lysotracker ® staining intensity [ , ] . decreased lysosomal ca + content in drug-treated samples relative to controls assessed after gpn addition, or decreases in lysotracker ® signals on initial drug addition ('lysosomotropism' [ , ] ) were regarded as more generalized actions of the drug candidates on the lysosomal ca + stores distinct from activity against the naadp-evoked ca + release pathway. representative traces showing ratios (f/f o ) of green (fluo- ) and red (lysotracker ® ) fluorescence signals over time are shown in fig. a for several of the candidates (examples lacking and displaying effects) and controls (vehicle, no gpn, bafilomycin and a protease inhibitor cocktail to impair gpn action). several of the candidate drugs (for example, prochlorperazine and trifluoperazine in fig. a ) caused a rapid decrease in lysotracker ® staining (fig. a, bottom) and a decrease in mobilizable lysosomal ca + content on gpn addition (fig. a, top) . these effects were related, with a strong observed correlation between loss of lyso-tracker ® staining and gpn-evoked ca + transient amplitude (fig. b) . data from the portfolio of all candidates are shown in fig. b , identifying three broad groupings -(i) compounds with no effect on lysotracker ® or gpn signal intensity, clustering with negative controls (water, dmso; boxed in fig. b ), (ii) compounds with penetrant effects on both lysotracker ® and gpn signal intensity (the positive control bafilomycin, and several phenothiazines: prochlorperazine (rank # ), thioridazine (rank # ) and trifluoperazine (rank # ) and (iii) a group of compounds with a profile intermediate between these groupings (∼ - % decrease in fluorescence ratio versus controls). only the seven candidates with no effect on gpn-mobilizable ca + or ltr staining -the first grouping, pf- (rank # ), skf (rank # ), racecadotril (rank # ), a- (rank # ), ly- , (rank # ), pdmp (rank # ) and salmeterol (rank # ) -were advanced for further validation. the remaining candidates were not pursued further in the context of this study (shaded rows in table ). the effects of the remaining seven candidates on the amplitude of naadp-evoked ca + signals in human u os cells was examined. these experiments were performed by monitoring ca + release kinetics following microinjection of naadp into single cells (fig. ) . whereas injection of buffer alone evoked only a small stimulus artefact, injection of naadp evoked a robust ca + transient (peak f/f o = . ± . , n = injections, fig. a ). the action of naadp was then examined in cells preincubated with the candidate inhibitors ( μm, min pretreatment), as well as other compounds of interest. ppadsthe positive control naadp inhibitor from sea urchin assays [ ] -decreased the amplitude of the naadp-evoked ca + transient to . ± . % of control values (fig. a) . however, neither ned- , nor naringenin significantly attenuated ca + signal amplitude following naadp microinjection (fig. a) . examination of each candidate inhibitor revealed varying degrees of inhibition of naadp-evoked ca + responses under the preincubation conditions ( μm) with the most effective compounds being skf ( . ± . % of control values), pf- ( . ± . % of control values) and racecadotril ( . ± % of control values). these compounds were highly ranked in the sea urchin screen (skf (rank # ), pf- (rank # ) and racecadotril (rank # )) and compared well with ppads ( . ± . % of control values). pdmp (rank # ) caused the lowest extent of inhibition table summary of compounds from primary screen with > % inhibition of naadp-evoked ca + release. compounds were ranked (# through # ) in order of maximum average inhibition of naadp-evoked ca + release in the primary screen (fig. ) . hits were then further assessed in concentration-response and p-naadp binding experiments in sea urchin egg homogenate (fig. ) . counter-screening activities were performed in u os cells, with the cut-off threshold for nonpursuit of the candidates being > % decrease in fluorescence ratios in either ca + release or ltr assays. validation assays represent extent of inhibition of naadpevoked ca + release signals, and mers pseudovirus translocation by the remaining seven candidates (bold in compound list). ipfme (rank # ): -( h-imidazol- -yl) propyl di(p-fluorophenyl)methyl ether hydrochloride. ( . ± . % of control values) which was none-the-less still a considerable improvement over both ned- and naringenin in our hands. finally, in the companion paper [ ] , we had established that inhibition of either naadp-sensitive ca + release, or tpc /tpc activity, impaired the translocation of a mers pseudovirus through the endolysosomal system. the unbiased screening approach described here generated an additional panel of inhibitors of naadp-evoked ca + signaling. therefore, the potential effectiveness of these compounds in the mers pseudovirus infectivity assay was assessed. results from this mers pseudovirus bioassay were plotted along with the ca + release inhibition data in fig. b . visual inspection of the results from both datasets revealed a strong correlation between results from these independent assays, further supporting the conclusions of the companion paper that ligands targeting the naadp pathway inhibit mers pseudovirus translocation [ ] , while highlighting new scaffolds for manipulation of naadp-dependent signaling processes in mammalian cells. here we have performed a 'proof of principle' unbiased screen in the sea urchin egg homogenate system with the goal of using this system as an entry point to a validation pipeline aimed at discovering novel chemical scaffolds to inhibit naadp-evoked ca + release. discovery of modulators of naadp-evoked ca + signaling is important as appreciation grows of the role of this pathway in (dys)regulating cellular processes [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . there is certainly room for improvement in defining ligands with improved selectivity and reliable activity against the naadp signaling pathway. the small pilot screen ( compounds) was robust in terms of signal amplitude (fig. ) , the population spread of inhibitory values (fig. b) and most importantly success in identifying known blockers of naadp-evoked ca + release within the screened inventory. examples of such compounds which ranked highly in the primary screen include (i) [ p]-naadp binding inhibitors, ppnds (primary screen rank # , [ ] ) and ppads (rank # [ ] ), and (ii) previously identified ca v blockers, nicardipine (rank # , [ ] ), diltiazem (rank # [ ] ), verapamil (rank # [ ] ), and nifedipine (rank # [ ] ). other ca v modulators found within the top hundred 'hits' included fpl (rank # ), nitrendipine (rank # ) and methoxyverapamil (rank # ), as well as the highly ranked hit skf (rank # , discussed below [ , ] ). these ca v blockers would be predicted to serve as tpc pore blockers, as supported by virtual docking analyses and microinjection studies [ ] . table . b, averaged peak ca + release in the presence of drug ( μm, min preincubation time) relative to vehicle controls, in response to ec concentrations of naadp ( nm), cadpr ( nm), or ip ( nm). c, analysis of effects of all candidates on specific p-naadp radioligand binding levels in the presence of drug ( μm), relative to vehicle controls. p-values: ** p < . relative to dmso controls. here, we prioritized candidates showing ≥ % inhibition of the peak naadp-evoked ca + signal. this comprised eighteen candidates, seven of which progressed through validation in subsequent assays. this 'hit' proportion (∼ . % from compounds) is consistent with discovery rates observed in other screens, and is especially agreeable given the low execution cost for the urchin screening platform. prior reticence to use this system for unbiased screening may have related to concern over tractability of structure-activity relationships from the urchin to human pathways. differences in sensitivities between sea urchin and mammalian systems have previously been noted for structural analogs of naadp [ ] implying differences in naadp binding protein specificity [ , ] . however, this relates to finer structure-activity relationships within defined chemical series, rather than discovery of new scaffolds. while obviously data reflects the sensitivities and specificities of an invertebrate ca + release system, the utility of c. elegans and drosophila as drug screening models is noted [ ] . in our opinion, the advantages of high assay throughput in the sea urchin system offsets the need for subsequent validation of 'hits' against naadp-evoked responses in human cells. even so a similar ordering of potency was ultimately observed between the sea urchin and human cell bioassays: skf , pf- and racecadotril were the most penetrant inhibitors in both systems (fig. , table ). identification of these three novel hits ( table ) that (i) inhibited ca + release by > % in a human cell line, more than seen with tetrandrine under identical conditions [ ] , (ii) reduced mers pseudovirus translocation to levels observed with fangchinoline ( fig. , [ ] ), and (iii) lacked demonstrable action in the counterscreen provides strong support for execution of a higher throughput screening campaign using sea urchin egg homogenate. screening large compound libraries against endogenous naadp-evoked signals mediated via tpcs within their acidic store native environment in mammalian cells would be a much more daunting prospect. screens of tpcs targeted to the cell surface [ ] fig. ). numerous compounds and chemical scaffolds have been shown to accumulate within the acidic ca + store lumen where they can modulate (e.g. functional inhibitors of acid sphingomyelinase, fiasmas [ , ] ) or act as substrates of luminal enzymes [ ] to alter the structure and/or function and even integrity of the lysosome (e.g. osmotic lysis by gpn). examples of compounds dropped from the pipeline based on counter-screening assays, that are known to fall within this category [ , ] are multiple phenothiazine compounds (rank # , # , # , # ), clemastine (rank # ) and dilazep (rank # ). these compounds display higher lipophilicity (average clogp, . ) and basic pka (average pka, . ) than the remaining dataset. other excluded compounds (gbr- , ipfme, st- , tmb- and oxybutynin) are new lysosomotropic suspects. this does not equate to a lack of usefulness as research tools, or even clinical drugs, as many approved therapeutics show marked lysosomotropism, a feature that may actually contribute to their clinical efficacy [ , , ] . this is especially relevant for novel uses of existing clinical agents to target pathogens that traverse the endolysosomal system, where drug accumulation with acidic ca + stores would be a desirable attribute for pathogen targeting [ , ] . such activities may have good repurposing potential, but for our purposes here, inhibition of naadp-evoked ca + release by these candidates is likely indirect. the seven candidates advanced through the pilot screen pipeline deserve further scrutiny. all inhibited naadp evoked ca + signals responses in the human cell line (fig. ) under conditions less penetrant than the counterscreen where no changes in lysosomal properties were observed (fig. ) . the three top ranked hits -skf , pf- and racecadotrilhave not previously been shown to impair naadpevoked ca + signaling. none of these compounds interfered with specific p-naadp binding implying inhibition through other fig. . characterization of candidate inhibitors on lysosomal ca + stores in u os cells. a, representative traces of gpn induced ca + release (top) and lysosomal disruption (bottom). u os cells were loaded with fluo- am and lysotracker ® red (ltr). baseline fluorescence values were recorded for min before addition of test compounds ( μm). fluorescence was then monitored for min before addition of gpn ( μm) to release lysosomal ca + . measurements were made to quantify gpn evoked ca + release (top) and loss of ltr fluorescence following initial drug addition (bottom) by assessing fluorescence ratio values in the regions highlighted by the green (peak f/f o ratio) and red bars (minimal f/f o ratio). pic, protease inhibitor cocktail; bafa , bafilomycin a . b, correlation plot depicting relationship between measurements of gpn induced calcium release (y-axis, green) and drug-induced lysosome disruption (xaxis red). values are replotted from highlighted regions in (a). the cluster of non-lysomotropic compounds is highlighted (box). data represents peak fluo- fluorescence ratios (f fluo /f , where 'f fluo ' represents fluo- fluorescence at peak, and f represents fluorescence at time = ) and minimum lysotracker ® fluorescence ratios (f ltr /f , where 'f ltr ' represents minimum lysotracker ® red fluorescence prior to gpn addition, and f represents fluorescence at time = ). compounds are labeled according to ranking # in table . mechanisms (fig. c ). skf is a low voltage-activated t-type ca v blocker, with antagonist action at other ca v s and trpc channels [ , ] . this polypharmacological profile may now extend to tpcs. direct electrophysiological analysis will be needed to confirm if the observed inhibition of naadp action in ca + -free extracellular media by skf (fig. a ) results from tpc pore blocking ability. our data also suggest caution in attribution of the mechanistic basis of effects of skf in studies of ca + signaling [ ] . pf- is a cell-permeant inhibitor of sphingosine kinase [ ] , application of which causes a dose-dependent increases in cellular sphingosine levels. elevated sphingosine levels attenuate acidic ca + store signaling, as evidenced by impaired responses to naadp in patients with niemann-pick type fig. . validation of naadp-inhibitors in mammalian cells. a, ca + traces resolved by fluo- fluorescence in response to naadp microinjection ( nm pipette concentration) in u os cells treated with indicated drugs ( μm, min pretreatment). individual traces shown in red, averaged response shown in black. b, quantification of peak amplitude of naadp-evoked ca + transients in microinjected u os cells relative to control (blue bars) following preincubation with indicated drugs as shown in (a). red bars report luciferase levels in a mers-pseudovirus cell translocation assay in huh cells relative to controls (h o, dmso) following treatment with the same panel of drugs ( μm for h prior to exposure to mers-pseudovirus for a h period). mers-pseudovirus cell entry was detected days post infection by measuring luciferase activity as described fully in the companion paper [ ] . p-values: * p < . , ** p < . relative to dmso controls. c disease [ ] . this inhibition may be caused by sphingosine-dependent tpc activation [ ] , impaired lysosomal ca + uptake and/or lysosomal permeabilization [ , ] . action of pf- through any of these mechanisms would result in the observed inhibition of naadpevoked ca + signals. racecadotril (acetorphan) is a neutral endopeptidase inhibitor (nep), used therapeutically as an antidiarrheal agent by blocking enkephalin-mediated intestinal fluid secretion. it is also a prodrug, being rapidly converted to thiorphan, a low nanomolar nep inhibitor. inhibition of neprilysin (an amyloid β (aβ) peptide degrading enzyme) by infusion of thiorphan in a mouse model of alzheimer's disease is associated with extensive lysosomal accumulation of aβ as well as changes in lysosomal number and size [ ] . these data evidence lysosomal alterations which, as seen in other neurodegenerative models [ ] , dysregulate naadp action. further experiments will be needed to define mechanistically how these drugs impair naadp action. in conclusion, interrogation of the sea urchin egg homogenate platform provided new leads for inhibiting naadp-dependent processes -naadp-evoked ca + signaling, as well as mers pseudovirus infectivityin human cells. even though only a small number of compounds were profiled in this initial unbiased pilot screen, the effectiveness of the highly ranked compounds was as good as achieved through structure-activity based screening around the known tetrandrine scaffold (see companion study, [ ] ). these data provide strong support for execution of a higher throughput screening campaign using the sea urchin egg homogenate system to discover new ligands for manipulation of naadp signaling, as well as for modulators of cadpr and ip action. none. molecular mechanisms of endolysosomal ca + signalling in health and disease nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide phosphate (naadp)-mediated calcium signaling a primer of naadp-mediated ca( +) signalling: from sea urchin eggs to mammalian cells essential requirement for two-pore channel in naadp-mediated calcium signaling naadp mobilizes calcium from acidic organelles through two-pore channels the two-pore channel tpcn mediates naadpdependent ca( +)-release from lysosomal stores convergent regulation of the lysosomal two-pore channel- by mg( )(+), naadp, pi( , )p( ) and multiple protein kinases expression of ca( )(+)-permeable two-pore channels rescues naadp signalling in tpc-deficient cells tpc: the naadp discovery channel? tpc proteins are phosphoinositide-activated sodium-selective ion channels in endosomes and lysosomes ren, mtor regulates lysosomal atp-sensitive two-pore na(+) channels to adapt to metabolic state an ancestral deuterostome family of two-pore channels mediates nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide phosphate-dependent calcium release from acidic organelles two-pore channels provide insight into the evolution of voltage-gated ca + and na + channels two-pore channels: catalyzers of endolysosomal transport and function from mucolipidosis type iv to ebola: trpml and two-pore channels at the crossroads of endo-lysosomal trafficking and disease function and dysfunction of two-pore channels ebola virus. two-pore channels control ebola virus host cell entry and are drug targets for disease treatment dysregulation of lysosomal morphology by pathogenic lrrk is corrected by two-pore channel inhibition ca( +) release via twopore channel type (tpc ) is required for slow muscle cell myofibrillogenesis and myotomal patterning in intact zebrafish embryos two-pore channels (tpc s) and nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide phosphate (naadp) at lysosomal-sarcoplasmic reticular junctions contribute to acute and chronic beta-adrenoceptor signaling in the heart lysosomal two-pore channel subtype (tpc ) regulates skeletal muscle autophagic signaling absence of intracellular ion channels tpc and tpc leads to mature-onset obesity in male mice, due to impaired lipid availability for thermogenesis in brown adipose tissue high susceptibility to fatty liver disease in two-pore channel -deficient mice ned- inhibition of parasite growth and multiplication suggests a role for naadp mediated signalling in the asexual development of plasmodium falciparum inhibition of two-pore channels blocks middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus translocation through the endolysosomal system vegf-induced neoangiogenesis is mediated by naadp and two-pore channel- -dependent ca + signaling naringenin impairs two-pore channel activity and inhibits vegf-induced angiogenesis quantitation of the lysosomotropic character of cationic amphiphilic drugs using the fluorescent basic amine red dnd- identification of a chemical probe for naadp by virtual screening ppads is a reversible competitive antagonist of the naadp receptor pharmacological properties of the ca +-release mechanism sensitive to naadp in the sea urchin egg cell-permeant small-molecule modulators of naadp-mediated ca + release calcium mobilization by dual receptors during fertilization of sea-urchin eggs a derivative of nadp mobilizes calcium stores insensitive to inositol trisphosphate and cyclic adp-ribose preparation and use of sea urchin egg homogenates for studying naadp-mediated ca( )(+) release carvedilol inhibits cadpr-and ip -induced ca( +) release scaffold hopping with virtual screening from ip to a drug-like partial agonist of the inositol trisphosphate receptor triazine dyes are agonists of the naadp receptor nicotinic acid dinucleotide phosphate analogs containing substituted nicotinic acid: effect of modification on ca + release analogues of the nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide phosphate (naadp) antagonist ned- indicate two binding sites on the naadp receptor activity of nicotinic acid substituted nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide phosphate (naadp) analogs in a human cell line: difference in specificity between human and sea urchin naadp receptors synthesis and characterization of antagonists of cyclic-adpribose-induced ca + release pyridine nucleotide metabolites stimulate calcium release from sea urchin egg microsomes desensitized to inositol trisphosphate photoaffinity labeling of high affinity nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide phosphate (naadp)-binding proteins in sea urchin egg activation and inactivation of ca + release by naadp+ a simple statistical parameter for use in evaluation and validation of high throughput screening assays thio-nadp is not an antagonist of naadp modulation of cellular s p levels with a novel, potent and specific inhibitor of sphingosine kinase- the transient receptor potential channel antagonist skf is a potent blocker of low-voltage-activated t-type calcium channels sk&f , a novel inhibitor of receptor-mediated calcium entry photoaffinity labeling of nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide phosphate (naadp) targets in mammalian cells nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide '-phosphate binding proteins in t lymphocytes the molecular basis for ca + signalling by naadp: two-pore channels in a complex use of glycyl-l-phenylalanine -naphthylamide, a lysosome-disrupting cathepsin c substrate, to distinguish between lysosomes and prelysosomal endocytic vacuoles activity-dependent exocytosis of lysosomes regulates the structural plasticity of dendritic spines drug discovery in fish, flies, and worms a screening campaign in sea urchin egg homogenate as a platform for discovering modulators of naadp-dependent ca + signals in human cells an naadp-gated two-pore channel targeted to the plasma membrane uncouples triggering from amplifying ca + signals structure of the voltage-gated two-pore channel tpc from arabidopsis thaliana structure, inhibition and regulation of two-pore channel tpc from arabidopsis thaliana structural insights into the voltage and phospholipid activation of the mammalian tpc channel identification of novel functional inhibitors of acid sphingomyelinase functional inhibitors of acid sphingomyelinase (fiasmas): a novel pharmacological group of drugs with broad clinical applications lysosomotropic agents: impact on lysosomal membrane permeabilization and cell death a high content screening assay for identifying lysosomotropic compounds acid sphingomyelinase-ceramide system mediates effects of antidepressant drugs acid sphingomyelinase inhibition prevents development of sepsis sequelae in the murine liver repurposing of clinically developed drugs for treatment of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide phosphate plays a critical role in naive and effector murine t cells but not natural regulatory t cells niemann-pick disease type c is a sphingosine storage disease that causes deregulation of lysosomal calcium intracellular sphingosine releases calcium from lysosomes activation of the amyloid cascade in apolipoprotein e transgenic mice induces lysosomal activation and neurodegeneration resulting in marked cognitive deficits supplementary material related to this article can be found, in the online version, at doi:https://doi.org/ . /j.ceca. . . . key: cord- - tkevj v authors: edholm, christina j.; emerenini, blessing o.; murillo, anarina l.; saucedo, omar; shakiba, nika; wang, xueying; allen, linda j. s.; peace, angela title: searching for superspreaders: identifying epidemic patterns associated with superspreading events in stochastic models date: - - journal: understanding complex biological systems with mathematics doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: tkevj v the importance of host transmissibility in disease emergence has been demonstrated in historical and recent pandemics that involve infectious individuals, known as superspreaders, who are capable of transmitting the infection to a large number of susceptible individuals. to investigate the impact of superspreaders on epidemic dynamics, we formulate deterministic and stochastic models that incorporate differences in superspreaders versus nonsuperspreaders. in particular, continuous-time markov chain models are used to investigate epidemic features associated with the presence of superspreaders in a population. we parameterize the models for two case studies, middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) and ebola. through mathematical analysis and numerical simulations, we find that the probability of outbreaks increases and time to outbreaks decreases as the prevalence of superspreaders increases in the population. in particular, as disease outbreaks occur more rapidly and more frequently when initiated by superspreaders, our results emphasize the need for expeditious public health interventions. ebola outbreak to date [ ] . this spread might have been increased due to infected health-care workers' close contact with susceptible individuals. additionally, burial ceremonies may increase contact with infectious deceased bodies that contain the virus. the incubation period, defined as the time of infection to onset of symptoms, ranges from to days [ ] . individuals can recover from ebola; however, mortality rates range from to %. in , the who announced that the first vaccine trial implemented in guinea was % effective [ , ] . the recent preventive measures announced by the centers for disease control and prevention (cdc) include: reducing contacts with infected animals or bodily fluids of infected individuals, isolating infected and deceased individuals, early detection of infected individuals, and maintaining a clean environment [ ] . mers was first identified in from an outbreak that occurred in saudi arabia [ ] . the source of infection was identified as dromedary camels. however, most cases are not due to camel-to-human infections. mers outbreaks among humans arise from human-to-human interactions, where many cases occur in healthcare settings with poor health prevention and control practices. in , an outbreak of mers in south korea was driven by three ss, initiated with one ss contracting mers during international travel. the first ss was responsible for secondary infections through various clinical visits. two subsequently infected individuals were responsible for tertiary infections [ , ] . individuals infected with mers can be asymptomatic, while others may experience the following symptoms: fever, coughs, shortness of breath, diarrhea, and pneumonia. nearly, % of mers cases resulted in death. while no vaccine or treatments are available, individuals are advised to maintain good hygiene when coming into contact with animals, particularly camels, such as washing hands and avoiding contact with sick animals. additional prevention strategies include consuming thoroughly cooked and prepared animal products [ ] . mathematical models formulated for recent outbreaks of mers and ebola have applied the compartmental setting with various disease stages such as susceptible, exposed, infectious, and recovered (seir) or performed statistical analyses to identify important parameters in spread of the disease ( [ , , ] mers and [ , , , ] ebola). additional classes for asymptomatic, hospitalized, or isolated individuals were also included in mers models [ , ] . time-dependent transmission parameters accounted for superspreading events (e.g., [ ] [ ] [ ] ). superspreading events have also been investigated with multitype branching processes by including individual heterogeneity in offspring generating functions [ , ] . all of these models have contributed to a better understanding of the role of superspreaders in disease outbreaks. our models incorporate the compartmental framework and apply stochastic simulations with theory from branching processes to further elucidate the role of superspreaders in disease dynamics. in this investigation, we develop a mathematical modeling framework that incorporates the heterogeneity of hosts through differences in transmission rates to assess the role of ss in disease spread at the population level. specifically, we aim to study the disease dynamics in a heterogeneous population consisting of ss and ns individuals, and develop a deterministic model based on ordinary differential equations (odes) which is expanded to a stochastic model that is implemented as a continuous-time markov chain (ctmc) system and approximated by a multitype branching process [ , ] . we incorporate estimated parameter values from published data of prior mers and ebola epidemics into our models. next, we compute the basic reproduction number for the ode model, and perform sensitivity analysis using latin hypercube sampling and partial rank correlation. by varying the initial size of ss and model parameters of the ctmc model, we derive and verify analytical estimates obtained using multitype branching process approximations with model simulations to predict the probability of an epidemic outbreak. in further numerical simulations of the ctmc model, we compute sample paths, probability of outbreak, number of deaths, time to outbreak, time to peak infection, and peak number of infectious individuals. our analyses and numerical simulations reveal how ss influence the dynamics of epidemic outbreaks, which may provide useful insight for public health interventions. we formulate a simple modeling framework for host heterogeneity due to differences in individuals that account for either ss or ns. in particular, ss or ns may differ in transmission, transitions between disease stages, deaths, recovery, or population size. the ss and ns mix homogeneously, such as in a hospital setting (mers) or at a large gathering such as a funeral (ebola). our basic modeling framework is a system of odes with five disease stages for ss and ns as described by the compartmental diagram in fig. and by the differential equations in ( . ), where i = is ns and i = is ss. the description of the model variables are summarized in table . such types of models have been used in metapopulation settings and are referred to as multigroup models (e.g., [ , ] ). for the ode model, we assume that the disease duration is short and, therefore, we do not include birth or natural death rates. in addition, we make the simplifying assumption that ns cannot become ss and vice versa. we make this assumption due to the short duration of the epidemic period and the fact that no control measures are applied (which could change the transmission patterns). in the model, the number of susceptible ns and ss are denoted by s and s , respectively. susceptible individuals transition into their respective exposed classes, e and e , at a rate of where β is the transmission rate of the ns asymptomatic a and infective i classes with n as the total number of ns and similarly for ss variables. the total number of individuals is . from the exposed class, individuals transition to the asymptomatic class, a and a , at a rate of α or α . in the asymptomatic class, there is diseaseinduced mortality with rates μ a or μ a , respectively. asymptomatic individuals do not display symptoms but are infectious. individuals transition into the infective class at a rate of δ or δ , where the disease-induced mortality rates are μ i or μ i . [ ] ( . , ) × − μ ji disease-induced death rate . [ ] ( . , . ) . [ ] ( . , . ) γ i recovery rate . [ ] ( . , . ) . [ , ] table . for ebola parameter values, we used the outbreak in sierra leon in [ , , , ] and for the mers outbreak in south korea [ , , , ] . note that these parameter values are taken from a single outbreak of mers and ebola, which means that they vary from other outbreaks and may present some constraints when asserting conclusions for outbreaks of the same infectious disease [ , ] . however, the parameter values used from the two outbreaks provide an excellent baseline for our model simulations. we compute the reproduction number for the ode system ( . ) using the nextgeneration matrix [ ] . the basic reproduction number, r , is defined as the number of secondary cases produced by the introduction of a single infected individual into a fully susceptible population. if r > , an outbreak occurs in the ode model. we start by defining two matrices, f and v , where the f matrix represents the newly infected rates in the system, and v represents the remaining rates in the infected compartments, eqs. ( ) and ( ) respectively. the matrix f −v is the jacobian matrix of the infected compartments evaluated at the disease-free equilibrium (dfe), wherē s i = n i ( ) and e i = a i = i i = r i = , i = , . we find the spectral radius of the matrix f v − (appendix ), which equals the basic reproduction number, ( . ) the basic reproduction number has the form typical of a multigroup/stage progression model [ ] . it is the sum of two basic reproduction numbers, one for each group, ns when i = and ss when i = . in particular, the two terms in the preceding expression represent new infections resulting from either the asymptotic stage a i or from the infectious stage i i , i = , . in addition for group i, the term β i (n i /n ) is the number of successful transmissions from an individual in stage a i (first term) or from an individual in stage i i (second term) that result in exposed individuals. the term /(δ i + μ a i ) is the average length of the asymptotic stage while /(γ i + μ i i ) is the average length of the infectious stage, and δ i /(δ i + μ a i ) is the probability of transitioning from a i to i i . for parameter values in table and for equal proportion of ss and ns, n /n = . = n /n, the basic reproduction number for mers is r = . and for ebola it is r = . . if the number of hosts/pathogens is sufficiently small, an ode model is not appropriate. to that end, we utilize a continuous-time markov chain (ctmc) model, which is continuous in time and discrete in the state space, to study the variability at the initiation of an outbreak, in time to outbreak, and in the peak level of infection. for simplicity, we use the same notation for the state variables as in the ode model. in particular, time t ∈ [ , ∞) and the states are discrete random variables, e.g., the markov property implies that the future states of the stochastic process only depend on the current states. in particular, there is an exponential waiting time between events. to formulate a ctmc, it is necessary to define the infinitesimal transition probabilities corresponding to each change (event) in the state variables. the ctmc model consists of distinct events, six events for each of the groups, ns and ss. the changes and the corresponding infinitesimal transition rates are summarized in table . the theory of multitype (galton-watson) branching processes has a long history (e.g., [ , , ] and references therein). it has been used to approximate the dynamics of the ctmc model near the dfe and the stochastic threshold for a disease outbreak [ ] [ ] [ ] ] . in fact, the stochastic threshold (i.e., probability of a disease outbreak) is directly related to the basic reproduction number as defined in table state transitions and rates for the ctmc model with poisson rates the corresponding deterministic model ( . ) (see [ , ] ). more specifically, if the basic reproduction is less than unity, then disease extinction occurs with probability one. in this case, the branching process is called subcritical. however, if the basic reproduction number is greater than unity, the probability of disease extinction is less than one (probability of outbreak is greater than zero) and the process is referred to as supercritical. in what follows, we will apply a multitype branching process approximation of the ctmc model at the dfe to estimate disease extinction probability. first, let us define the offspring probability generating function (pgf) for the exposed, asymptomatic, and infectious individuals in ns and ss. let x = (x , . . . , x ) := (e , a , i , e , a , i ) be a vector of integer-valued random variables and δ ij denote the kronecker delta (i.e., δ ij = if i = j and zero otherwise). in general, the offspring pgf for type i given x j ( ) = δ ij is a function from [ , ] to [ , ], and it takes the form: here, p i (k , k , . . . , k ) is the probability that the individual of type i gives "birth" to k j individuals of type j for j = , , . . . , . in particular, the pgfs f i : ) are given by: according to the theory of multitype branching processes [ , ] , the fixed points of the offspring pgfs give an estimate of the disease extinction probability. let (q , q , q , q , q , q ) be the minimal fixed points of pgfs; that is, f i (q , . . . , q ) = q i for i = , . . . , . then, an estimate of the extinction probability given and hence the probability of an outbreak is however, due to the simplicity of f and f (no deaths during stage e i ), the pgfs can be simplified. that is, x = x and x = x . therefore, we only solve for q , q , q , and q . the expectation matrix m = (m ij ) can be shown to be directly related to the basic reproduction number [ ] with m ij = ∂f j ∂x i | x= . we include this calculation in appendix . it is known that the spectral radius of m, denoted as ρ(m), determines whether the disease extinction probability is equal to or less than the unity [ , , ] . specifically, if ρ(m) < , q = · · · = q = , then the extinction probability is one; if ρ(m) > , then there exists a unique fixed point (q , · · · , q ) ∈ ( , ) , and hence the extinction probability is strictly less than one. by the threshold theorem of reference [ ] , it follows that the spectral radius of the matrix m is strictly less than one if and only if the basic reproduction number is strictly less than one. analogous statements hold whenever the spectral radius of m is equal to one or is strictly greater than one. we perform a sensitivity analysis on the parameters ranges given in table for the ode models for mers and ebola using a uniform distribution for the values. latin hypercube sampling (lhs), first developed by mckay et al. [ ] , with the statistical sensitivity measure partial rank correlation coefficient (prcc), performs a sensitivity analysis that explores a defined parameter space of the model. the parameter space considered is defined by the parameter intervals depicted in table . rather than simply exploring one parameter at a time with other parameters held fixed at baseline values, the lhs/prcc sensitivity analysis method globally explores multidimensional parameter space. lhs is a stratified monte carlo sampling without replacement technique that allows an unbiased estimate of the average model output with limited samples. the prcc sensitivity analysis technique works well for parameters that have a nonlinear and monotonic relationship with the output measure. prcc shows how the output measure is influenced by changes in a specific parameter value when the linear effects of other parameter values are removed. the prcc values were calculated as spearman (rank) partial correlations using the partialcorr function in matlab . their significances, uncorrelated p-values, were also determined. the prcc values vary between − and , where negative values indicate that the parameter is inversely proportional to the output measure. following marino et al. [ ] , we performed a z-test on transformed prcc values to rank significant model parameters in terms of relative sensitivity. according to the z-test, parameters with larger magnitude prcc values had a stronger effect on the output measures. we start by verifying the monotonicity of the output measures. monotonicity was observed for all parameters except μ i with total ss deaths, which exhibited two monotonic ranges [ . , . ] and [ . , . ]. for non-monotonic trends, alternative methods based on decomposition of model output variances such as efast (extended fourier amplitude sensitivity test) can be used instead of prcc [ ] ; however, since all other parameters were monotonic, we use prcc and just consider the two monotonic ranges of μ i separately. prcc analysis of these two ranges produces similar results. for an analysis of the monotonicity, refer to appendix . once meeting the monotonicity requirements, we proceed to utilize lhs with prcc for both mers and ebola parameters. for each disease, we calculate the prcc for the following output measures: total ns cases, total ss cases, total ns deaths, and total ss deaths. the number of total cases refers to the total number of transmission events where susceptible individuals become exposed (latently infected) individuals. for the outputs of ns/ss cases, the prcc results were similar in both ebola and mers. according to the prcc values, the β and μ i are significant in the model for mers. meanwhile, in the ebola model, both transmission parameters are significant in the model (see fig. ). note that β is calculated from r , which we will vary later in simulations. for the ctmc model, we numerically simulate sample paths to compute the probability of an outbreak, number of deaths, time to outbreak, time to peak infection, and peak number of infectious individuals. for sample paths and probability of outbreak, we compare our results with the deterministic model. in the remainder of this analysis, we assume that the initial total population size is n( ) = . reference to infected individuals will imply the variables i and i , unless stated otherwise. for example, peak number of infectious individuals refers to the maximum value of the number of total cases refers to the total number of transmission events where susceptible individuals become exposed (latently infected) individuals. p -values that are greater than . are labeled as not significant (n.s.) i + i and the time to peak infection refers to the time t at which this maximum occurs. however, an outbreak means that the total number in classes e i , a i , and i i for both ns and ss has reached at least , i.e., (e i + a i + i i ) ≥ . in addition, we note that for the ctmc model, an outcome measure (e.g., peak values, time to peak, and number of deaths) is defined by a corresponding probability distribution and a sample path yields one outcome from the distribution. an example of the sample paths resulting from our ctmc model is shown in fig. , for both mers and ebola cases. these sample paths are generally well aligned with the population average response that is captured by our ode model (shown with a black line). however, the sample paths of the ctmc model illustrate the potential variability in timing of the peak level of infection and the peak number of infectious individuals. note that some sample paths are not shown because in those simulations the disease becomes extinct. also, note that the a class is not shown for ebola (fig. b) given that the asymptomatic stage is extremely short for this disease. next, in order to do a comprehensive comparison of the stochastic simulation and ode model results, we probe the relationship between two model parameters-the value of r (fig. ) as well as the fraction of the susceptible population that are in the ss class (fig. ) and a key model output: the probability of outbreak. probability of outbreak is defined by monitoring the number of people in the e, a, and i classes and an outbreak is declared when the cumulative size of these compartments reaches the threshold value of . although the value of appears relatively large, it is reasonable given that we are counting the cumulative number in all three classes for a relatively large population size of . for these simulations, we vary β given the significant effect of this parameter on the model outputs as confirmed by the lhs analysis. we note a negative correlation between the proportion of ss in the s class and the probability of outbreak (fig. ) and attribute this to the fact that the value of β is varied in order to maintain a constant value of r (mers, r = . and ebola, r = . ). in other words, as the fraction of ss susceptible individuals is increased, the value of β decreases and results in a reduction in the probability of outbreak ( − q ). results in fig. are shown only for q and q since these outputs are similar to q and q , respectively. we also note that q = q and q = q and therefore exclude those plots as well. as expected, the probability of an outbreak is dependent on the initial fraction of the population that is infected, with an increasing chance of an outbreak (fig. ) . furthermore, the probability of outbreak is significantly enhanced when the initially infected population is composed of ss rather than ns individuals. we also find a strong agreement between the probability of outbreak predicted by stochastic simulations of the ctmc model and the associated branching process approximations for all of these analyses (fig. a-f ). utilizing our stochastic model of mers and ebola dynamics within a population of individuals, we next sought to investigate whether the presence of ss individuals within the population could be reflected in key metrics that capture the severity of disease outbreak: the number of deaths, time to disease outbreak, probability of outbreak, time to peak number of infections, and the peak number of infectious individuals. we first assess the impact of ss individuals on the number of deaths that accumulate over a -day time frame following disease initiation. we observe a modest increase in the frequency of deaths as the size of the susceptible ss class of individuals is increased from to % of the total population for both mers and ebola disease simulations (not shown). we note a higher frequency of epidemics for all subsequent simulations, we initialize the population consisting of ss and ns susceptible individuals. most notably, there is a ten-fold increase in the frequency of deaths expected when the initial infected individual (for both mers and ebola) is an ss rather than an ns (fig. ) . the statistical significance of the difference between ns-and ss-initiated epidemics is confirmed with a kolmogorov-smirnov test (p < . ) [ ] . it is clear that the distributions are bimodal. this is due to the fact that there may be only a minor outbreak (with probability q or q ) with none or a few deaths or a major outbreak (with probability − q or − q ) with a significant number of deaths. we next explore the relationship between the number of deaths and the number of initially infected individuals. for each fraction of the population initially infected, there are points, one point from each of the sample paths, representing the total number of deaths over a -day time period. as expected, we find that as the number of initially infected ns individuals increases, the expected number of deaths increases as well (fig. ) . interestingly, we find a threshold response as the fraction of initially infected ss individuals increases. as the fraction of initially infected ss individuals increases beyond . for mers (fig. b) and . for ebola (fig. d) , we find that the simulation always gives rise to an outbreak, resulting in a maximal number of around deaths over a -day simulated period. we also note that there is a decrease in the variability in the number of deaths when the outbreak is initiated by an ss rather than an ns, which contributes to this threshold response. the seemingly binary response in the number of deaths resulting from a mers or ebola epidemic initiated by infected ss individuals who only contribute to . - . % of the starting population is a good indication that by tracking the number of deaths in an epidemic, the presence of an ss may be predicted. thus, while the observation that an outbreak has occurred does not necessarily suggest the existence of ss individuals in the population, the severity of the outbreak in terms of lives lost may be more suggestive of the presence of an ss, especially when the number of known initial infections is low. similarly, we find that the time to outbreak-where an outbreak is defined as or more people in all of the e, a, and i classes-is reduced when the initial infected individual in a simulated mers or ebola disease situation is an ss rather than an ns (fig. a, c) . we confirmed that this reduction is, indeed, statistically significant ( fig. a-b) . these results also illustrate that as the fraction of susceptible ss increases the time to outbreak increases as well, which we attribute to the fact that β values decrease (detailed in figs. and ) . in fig. , each distribution is based on , sample paths, whereas in fig. , for each fraction initially infected, the time points are based on sample paths. we also find a clear separation between the time to outbreak of an epidemic initiated by a fraction of ss versus ns infected individuals. mean differences were significantly distinct for each percentage in (fig. a-b) , p < . . in fact, if a mers or ebola outbreak is initiated by . % or more of the initial population size and these individuals are ss, then the time to outbreak is predicted to be no more than days where an outbreak is defined as . % of the population becoming infected (fig. c-f ). the fraction of susceptible ss is increased for comparison. all results were statistically significant when p < . from t-test (two-tailed). comparisons that are not statistically significant were denoted n.s. given that the time to outbreak shows a significant difference between epidemics initiated by ss versus ns individuals, we next asked whether ss-initiated epidemics will also reach peak infection in a shorter time. to investigate this, we calculated mean (± sd) of time to peak infection (in days) for mers and ebola, where the percent of ss varied in the susceptible population (see fig. a-b) . mean differences between the introduction of infected ns (black) compared to infected ss (white) were assessed separately as the percent of ss varied (e.g., %, %, and %) using t-tests where statistical significance was accepted when p < . . for mers, time to peak infection was slightly significantly lower for ss when % and % of the susceptible population was ss, but not significant when % of the population was ss (fig. a) . for ebola, time to peak infection was significantly lower for ss regardless of changes in the percent of ss in the susceptible population (fig. b) . hence, while the differences in mean time to peak infection between ss and ns-initiated epidemics are only modestly different, we find their difference to be statistically significant (fig. a-b) . thus, this confirmed that epidemics initiated by infected ss individuals reaches its peak value more quickly. we repeated the same analysis to assess mean differences in the peak number of infections. surprisingly, we did not find a significant difference between the peak number of infections for epidemics initiated from a single infected ns versus ss individual for ebola (fig. d) . however, significant differences were observed when % or % of the susceptible population was ss for mers. in this investigation, we capture the dynamics of mers and ebola epidemics by applying both deterministic and stochastic modeling strategies. to investigate the role of ss on the epidemic dynamics and to compare our results, we keep the r constant for both mers and ebola while varying β , the transmission rate of ss. parameter sensitivity analysis, using latin hypercube sampling and partial rank correlation coefficient, shows that β has a significant effect on all the output measures (fig. ) . from fig. , we can conclude that the stochastic model simulations agree with the branching process analytical results. as the value of r increases, we observe that the probability of an outbreak increases for both diseases. this result is expected since more individuals in the population are infected. the probability of an outbreak is greater for ebola than mers, which is due to the transmission parameters for ebola being larger than mers. furthermore, these results show that if the outbreak is initiated by an ss, then the probability of an outbreak is significantly higher. additionally, fewer ss individuals than ns individuals are sufficient to cause an outbreak irrespective of the disease (mers or ebola). as an outbreak initiated by ss has a greater probability of occurrence and peaks earlier than with ns, the accumulated number of deaths is more severe in an epidemic initiated with the same proportion of ss than ns (figs. and ). disease severity (number of deaths) for both mers and ebola occurs earlier with ss than ns. our findings agree with prior epidemiological studies on superspreading events [ , , ] . for example, the outbreak of the respiratory infection sars in beijing found that ss had higher mortality rates, higher attack rates, and greater number of contacts in comparison to ns [ ] . from a public health perspective, as ss events will be observed more frequently, intervention/prevention methods must have rapid response to reduce disease severity. for example, wong et al. [ ] suggested that several community-based efforts could have been made to reduce the number of mers and ebola cases in guinea and sierra leone, such as tracking contacts, earlier diagnosis, treatment strategies, and community education. effective responses to control superspreading events and reduce disease transmission in mers and ebola outbreaks included: "early discovery, diagnosis, intervention, and quarantine of confirmed cases." [ ] . other epidemics that are more likely to occur in hospital settings, e.g., sars, could be controlled through hospital administrative strategies, such as reducing contact between the infected patient and healthcare workers, visitors, or other patients whose immune system may be comprised due to other infections [ ] . thus, a rapid response is needed to reduce disease severity of ss events. evident in figs. and , when an outbreak is initiated by an ss rather than an ns, the time to outbreak is shorter and has less variability. therefore, if the number of disease cases rises rapidly, there may be ss in the community. in this scenario, healthcare managers should search for potential ss. similar results apply for time to peak infection, fig. . if peak infection occurs quickly, it is more likely that there is an ss in the population. interestingly, varying the percentage of ss in the population has little influence on the peak number of infections (fig. c, d) . this is likely due to the fact that the r values are held constant. we have formulated, analyzed, and numerically simulated deterministic and stochastic epidemic models that include heterogeneity in transmission for ns and ss. we applied our models to emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases, mers and ebola, where the models were parameterized with data from the literature but with a fixed initial population size of . there are a number of extensions and generalizations that we will consider in the future work. we assumed homogeneous mixing and only two types of classifications of individuals (ns/ss) for the entire population. generalizing this model to include heterogeneous mixing and spatial components are key features that can provide insight on how a superspreaders can be classified. in our model, we considered inter-host variability, which naturally leads to constructing a model with intra-host variability utilizing stochastic differential equations or other types of models. in addition, variability of the pathogen on epidemic dynamics can be explored. additionally, we will validate our models' findings against time series data, test our models' abilities to detect the presence of ss, and interpret the results for public health implementation. finding answers to these problems will lead to our ultimate goal of constructing novel ways to quantify, characterize, and identify an ss during the initiation of an outbreak. women through research-focused networks" (nsf-hrd ), society for mathematical biology, and microsoft research. we give special thanks to the wamb organizers: ami radunskaya, rebecca segal, and blerta shtylla. anarina l. murillo acknowledges that this work has been supported in part by the grant t dk from the national institute of diabetes and digestive and kidney diseases and grant t hl from the national heart, lung, and blood institute. omar saucedo acknowledges that this research has been supported in part by the mbi and the grant nsf-dms . nika shakiba is the recipient of the nserc vanier canada graduate scholarship. this work was partially supported by a grant from the simons foundation (# to xueying wang). in addition, we thank texas tech university for hosting our second wamb group meeting and the paul whitfield horn professorship of linda js allen for providing financial support. we thank the two anonymous reviewers for their helpful suggestions on the original manuscript. in the calculations below, we denote n i ( ) as n i and n( ) = n ( ) + n ( ) as n : and the next-generation matrix is for each pgf, we take partial derivatives with respect to x , . . . , x (jacobian matrix of the functions f , . . . , f ), then evaluate at x , . . . , x = and take the transpose of the matrix. the result is the expectation matrix, m, where eq. ( ) reduces to ( ) . in addition, we create the matrix w , eq. ( ), a diagonal matrix. and finally, we check that for the mers parameters, the graph of the output measure with μ i parameter had a concave curvature implying that another sensitivity analysis maybe implemented. however, the range of the output measure is small enough that we can ignore the monotonicity. the remaining graphs for mers (fig. ) and all the graphs for ebola (fig. ) are all monotonic which means that we can trust the sensitivity analysis and proceed to the prcc analysis (fig. , tables , and ). stochastic population and epidemic models extinction thresholds in deterministic and stochastic epidemic models relations between deterministic and stochastic thresholds for disease extinction in continuous-and discrete-time infectious disease models estimating the reproduction number of ebola virus (ebov) during the outbreak in west africa branching processes dynamically modeling sars and other newly emerging respiratory illnesses: past, present, and future mortality risk factors for middle east respiratory syndrome outbreak ebola virus disease) prevention ebola outbreak in west africa-case counts transmission dynamics and control of ebola virus disease (evd): a review synthesizing data and models for the spread of mers-cov, : key role of index cases and hospital transmission preliminary epidemiologic assessment of mers-cov outbreak in south korea in the garden of branching processes a pandemic risk assessment of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in saudi arabia epidemiology: dimensions of superspreading assessing the international spreading risk associated with the west african ebola outbreak efficacy and effectiveness of an rvsvvectored vaccine expressing ebola surface glycoprotein: interim results from the guinea ring vaccination cluster-randomised trial an event-based model of superspreading in epidemics the daily computed weighted averaging basic reproduction number for mers-cov in south korea estimating the basic reproductive ratio for ebola outbreak in liberia and sierra leone a deterministic model for gonorrhea in a nonhomogeneous population spatial and temporal dynamics of superspreading events in the - west africa ebola epidemic a dynamic compartmental model for the middle east respiratory syndrome outbreak in the republic of korea: a retrospective analysis on control interventions and superspreading events statistical inference in a stochastic epidemic seir model with control intervention: ebola as a case study spatial heterogeneity in epidemic models superspreading and the effect of individual variation on disease emergence a methodology for performing global uncertainty and sensitivity analysis in systems biology the kolmogorov-smirnov test for goodness of fit comparison of three methods for selecting values of input variables in the analysis of output from a computer code compartmental disease models with heterogeneous populations: a survey modeling the impact of interventions on an epidemic of ebola in super-spreaders in infectious diseases reproduction numbers and sub-threshold endemic equilibria for compartmental models of disease transmission time from infection to disease and infectiousness for ebola virus disease, a systematic review the outcome of a stochastic epidemic-a note on bailey's paper who, final trial results confirm ebola vaccine provides high protection against disease ebola virus disease fact sheet east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) fact sheet the role of super-spreaders in infectious disease heterogeneities in the transmission of infectious agents: implications for the design of control programs key: cord- - d sir authors: hemida, maged gomaa; ba abduallah, mohammed m. title: the sars-cov- outbreak from a one health perspective date: - - journal: one health doi: . /j.onehlt. . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: d sir the sars-cov- is a new human coronavirus candidate recently detected in china that is now reported in people on inhabited continents. the virus shares a high level of identity with some bat coronaviruses and is recognised as a potentially zoonotic virus. we are utilizing the one health concept to understand the emergence of the virus, as well as to point to some possible control strategies that might reduce the spread of the virus across the globe; thus, containment of such virus would be possible. the severe acute respiratory syndrome- was named the coronavirus infectious diseses- . however, it was called the novel coronavirus at the beginning of this outbreak. this virus was provisionally named -ncov at the very beginning of its emergence in china, after emerging in china in late [ ] . since that time, there has been an escalation in the number of confirmed cases, notably from china, but also in more than countries and territories around the globe. historically four coronaviruses candidates (hcov- e, hcov-oc , hcov-nl , and hcov-uku ), causing common cold or flu-like symptoms were known. patients infected by these viruses usually recover spontaneously in a short time [ ] . the sars-cov- is the seventh coronavirus known to infect humans, appearing in less than ten years since the emergence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in late and sars-cov in [ , ] . this virus belongs to the family coronaviridae; a large group of viruses that have the potential to infect and cause diseases to a large number of mammals, birds as well as humans. members of this family cause a wide variety of clinical signs in their affected hosts, including respiratory, enteric, nervous, and systemic health problems. the viral genomes of coronaviruses have many unique features that make them prone to frequent coding changes, thus generating new candidates in a short period [ ] . the reasons behind this rapid mutational frequency are the poor proofreading capability of the viral rna polymerase and the possibility of recombination between various members of this family [ ] . recent studies showing the (angiotensin-converting enzyme a, (ace- )), ace- is the primary receptors for the sars-cov- and other candidates of the b lineage of the beta coronaviruses [ ] . high expression levels of some potential viral receptors in many hosts from mammals, birds in addition to humans make them susceptible to j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f the virus infection. in recent studies, it is apparent that sars-cov- uses the mechanism that sars-cov used for cell entry. the mechanism of the virus entry to the cell resulting from the interaction between the virus receptors and the spike glycoprotein, after priming of that viral protein by the serine protease tmprss [ ] . further, inhibition of tmprss , blocked cell entry by sars-cov- , indicating similar or identical pathways for cell invasion and possible strategies for therapeutics [ ] . the who declared the virus as a global health emergency on jan , [ ] . as of am cet march , there are laboratory-confirmed cases reported to the who from countries and territories across the globe with a total fatality of [ ] . currently, the case fatality rate is relatively low (⁓ . %) compared to infections with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov, ( %) and mers-cov ( %) [ ] . the numbers of infected and dead persons are much higher than the latter viruses. however, these numbers will be subject to changes with the newly reported cases and the outcomes of the ongoing active human cases. during mid-february , a new criterion for the patient identification has been launched considering the chest computed tomography (ct) scans to identify patients suffering from respiratory distresses. [ ] the reasons behind the switch from the detection of the viral nucleic acids by real-time pcr to ct scanning at that time for patient identification are (i) to give a chance to all patients to get the proper care at the right time (ii) the variation in the incubation period of the viral infection among various people (iii) the possibility of super-spreader of the virus who shed the virus to the environment in large numbers and poses a great risk of infection to the close contact people. this phenomenon have been reported previously in ebola, virus, sars-cov, mers-cov, and recently in sars-cov- [ ] [ ] [ ] . using some mathematical tools models late feb, , the basic reproduction (r ) to the humanto-human transmission was around . . however, the same study found the r for the bat-to-j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f human was . [ ] . based on these findings, the r of sars-cov- was almost close to sars-cov but higher than mers-cov, with the exception of the mers-cov outbreak in south korea [ ] . the mers-cov and the sars-cov- are both considered airborne pathogens [ ] with a tendency to transmit through the aerosol of infected patients. the human-to-human nosocomial transmission was recently reported, which is contributing substantially to the spreading and sustainability of the virus. some family clusters were also recently reported inside china [ ] . the incubation period of the diseases ranges from - days post-infection [ , ] . the asymptomatic individuals may play essential roles in the spread of the virus within a specific community [ ] . however, there are ongoing debates about the possibility of infected persons to shed the virus early during the course of an infection with this virus even before the appearance of the clinical signs [ , ] . the emergence of the virus was believed to be linked with some human cases who suffered from severe pneumonia, which have a relation with a wet animal huanan seafood wholesale market in wuhan, china ( ). these observations, along with the sequence identity of the virus, have drawn attention to the likely zoonotic origin of the virus. the sars-cov- infection is potentially another important example of the one health concept, after sars-cov, mers-cov, and ebola virus, in which there is an excellent overlapping in human, animal, and environmental health [ ] . the full-length genome of the virus was recently made available to the scientific community [ ] . this sequence will have a significant impact on the development of novel diagnostic assays, antiviral drugs, and vaccines against the virus soon. interestingly, the virus genome and its spike glycoprotein showing ‫ ‬ . % and . identities to the rhinolophus affinis bat coronavirus, respectively (table ) , from wuhan, china (ratg , j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f journal pre-proof accession number mn . ) recently deposited in the genbank [ ] . bats are representing almost one-fourth of the mammalian population [ ] . they are widely distributed all over the world in all continents except antarctica [ ] . bats are classified under the order chiroptera that are found more than million years ago. this order includes more than species of bats [ ] . several studies suggested that bats are the common reservoir for the sars-cov were the sequences for viruses isolated from chinese horseshoe bats shared a high degree of identity with sars-cov [ ] . metagenomics paved the way for the discovery of a large number of viruses in different species, including bats. there are more than coronaviruses have been identified in various species of bats [ ] . the main bat reservoirs of the sars-cov was identified in [ ] . meanwhile, several species of bats including, taphozous perforatus, rhinopoma hardwickii, and pipistrellus kuhlii were believed to be the ancestors for the mers-cov [ ] . based on the previous emergence history of sars-cov, the presence of a large number of mammals and birds overcrowded in one place may give a chance for pathogens, particularly those with rna genomes such as coronaviruses and influenza viruses, to emerge. however, it remains uncertain whether a similar emergence for sars-cov- can be postulated. one potential reservoir of sars-cov was the palm civet cat (paguma larvata), a member of the viverridae, a group of mammals found in asia [ ] . sars-cov was able to infect and replicated efficiently in these animals [ ] . serosurveillance for the antibodies against sars-cov in workers from one wild animal market in guangzhou was conducted in [ ] . this study showed the presence of specific igg antibodies against sars-cov in these workers where the civet cats were available [ ] . this same study confirmed the hypothesis of the implication of civet cats in the emergence and sustainability of sars-cov at that time. the identification of this reservoir was one of the milestones in control and containment of sars-cov ( ), and j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f subsequent banning of the trade of civet cats in the wild animal market was a significant step toward the containing of sars-cov [ ] . this approach highlights the roles of one health in controlling such zoonotic pathogens. based on the evidence gained from studies of sars-cov, and from the genetic identity of sars-cov- , it could be postulated that the virus responsible for the recent outbreak is transmit ted from bats to humans either directly or indirectly through adaptation in an unidentified host [ , ] . the cone health concept could be the most logical approach in case of fighting and control some zoonotic pathogens, especially those who do not have available medication or vaccines during an epidemic or outbreak. there are many aspects by which the one health concept may contribute substantially to the control of the current sars-cov- outbreak. adoption of some of one health-based control strategies was of great success in controlling mers-cov, contributing at least in part to the decline in the case fatality rates from % in to % in in case of mers-cov [ , ] . similar approaches were also successful in containing some of the highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses [ ] . in the following sections, we are suggesting some one health-based control strategies for the containment of sars-cov- ( figure ). coronaviruses are enveloped viruses like influenza, hiv, rabies etc, their envelope composed of a lipid bilayer, which the virus acquires from the host cell membrane while releasing from the infected cells [ ] . using lipid solvents and detergents was proved to inactivate sars-cov through permeant damage of the lipid components of the viral envelope [ ] . this study showed j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f a drastic drop in the viral titer after one-minute treatment [ ] . this raises the mandate of hand as well as personal hygiene as one of the gold standard control measures for not only coronaviruses but also form most enveloped viruses. coronaviruses are small, approximately - nm in diameter. this is making them able to pass the pores of the surgical masks very easily. thus, wearing special masks with minute pore sizes like n could be one of the preventive measures against respiratory pathogens, including influenza and coronaviruses, in comparison to another type of masks [ , ] . however, the who already indicated certain rules for wearing the n masks, particularly for the health care workers and people in close contact with active cases [ ] . the genome of coronaviruses is composed of single-strand positive-sense rna molecules. the virus genome act as a mrna and is infectious. the ultraviolet light has harmful effects on the sars-cov genome when used at nm wavelength for minutes [ , ] . meanwhile, the effect of temperature on the virus infectivity/survival has great impact on the control of this class of respiratory viruses. sars-cov may live in the environment at average room temperature about c for hrs without losing its infectivity. however, the virus infectivity is greatly affected by exposure to ºc for at least min [ ] . these parameters have great roles in the virus control as we discuss below. as mentioned above, the corona viral genomes are prone to frequent changes due to many factors; a new study highlighted the presence of two variants (l and s) of the sars-cov- . this study confirmed that variant l (more severe) was dominant during the early outbreak in china, which was responsible for at least % of the cases at that time. however, the implementation of drastic control measures against the virus posed some selective pressure on this variant then the s variant becomes the predominant at this time [ ] . thus, frequent monitoring of the virus on the genomic level is highly encouraged. meanwhile, j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f the preparation of vaccine and antiviral drugs should be done from the most recent generation and seeds of the circulating strains and variants of the virus to ensure high efficacy rates. meanwhile, there is an urgent need for the development of novel diagnostic assays that enable the early detection of the virus, even in low copy numbers in the patient specimens. detection of cases during the early stage of the infection could be a crucial step in the early identification of the infected person; thus, proper treatment and control should be in place as early as possible. furthermore, the development of multiplex diagnostic assays that enable the detection of the most common respiratory pathogen in one reaction is highly recommended. it would be of high value to develop novel diagnostic tests that distinguish the seven human coronavir uses in one reaction per sample. this unique approach may help in screening a large number of people and animals and will have a significant impact on the fast track testing of travelers from at-risk regions. both sars-cov and mers-cov have zoonotic origins in which the civet cats and dromedary camels played important roles in the sustainability and transmission of these viruses in the community as well as spell over to the human [ , ] . to identify the animal reservoirs in the context of sars-cov and mers-cov, scientist screened a large number of animals and birds to identify the main reservoir for those two viruses [ , ] . sas-cov- was believed to be originated in people who came in close contact with the live wet market in wuhan, china, late [ ] . in the case of sars-cov- , recent studies used the informational spectrum tools to identify and predict the actual reservoir, the virus receptors as well as potential therapeutic and vaccine targets [ ] . the wuhan wet market was hosting a large number of wild animals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians which never exist in one location in nature [ ] . simply, there is a close j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f human-animal contact in the supply chain of these wild animal markets starting from hunting, transporting, selling, processing, including slaughtering, and cooking. this is in addition to the exposure of people to their blood, secretions, and execrations. this chain poses a great risk for the contact between human and these wild animals, which may put the handlers at risk of infection not only for coronaviruses but also for other pathogens that these animals and birds may harbor. in the light of the one health concept, control of this emerging virus requires the reduction of the viral shedding to the environment from the main reservoirs, for animal-person transmission and from humans for person-person transmission [ ] . based on the previous experience from the other emerging diseases, particularly sars-cov and influenza viruses, avoiding the mixing of various species of animals, birds, and mammals, is highly suggested [ , , ] . this strategy will minimize the possibility of recombination among not only these pathogens but also for other common pathogens in the near future. a large number of bats may also be available in this particular market, including the rhinolophus affinis. the viral genome of the bat coronavirus from this particular species was close to the sars-cov- (table ) . this result is suggesting these bats are the main ancestor of this virus. about % of the first reported human cases had a various levels of contact with this market [ ] . a recent study showed that second, if seroconversion is proved in any of these animals or birds, testing specimens and tissues from these animals or birds must be carried out to detect the virus in these animals. the live poultry markets were responsible for the transmission of many viral pathogens to humans, especially various types of avian influenza viruses [ , , ] . several studies reported that banning the storage of live poultry in live markets at least for a short period of time for overnight drastically reduced the ability to isolates the avian influenza viruses by % compared with the standard procedures [ ] . another study showed a drastic decrease in the number of reported human cases of avian influenza h n by almost % after the closure of live poultry markets in four major provinces in china [ ] . thus, banning the live wild animal trading could have substantial effects on the control strategies not only for coronaviruses but also for other pathogens such as avian influenza viruses. regular monitoring of the dynamic changes of coronavirus in different species of bats is highly recommended. the environment serves as the intermediate vessels between the animals and humans. the environmental factors that may contribute to the spread of the virus include air, water, soil, etc. coronaviruses are airborne viruses that produce nosocomial infections [ ] . they are mainly transmitted through droplet infection [ ] . when the virus released from the animals or humans, it passes through the air and may drop on some services or objects. some respiratory pathogens with pandemic potential such as h n , sars-cov, and mers-cov may remain viable in the environment for a longer time up to months on these objects until picked up with another person to contaminate the mucus membranes through touching the nose, mouse or eyes [ ] . there are several factors that control the virus's survival in the environment on these objects, such as the j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f journal pre-proof temperature, the relative humidity, the strain of the virus [ ] . some coronaviruses such as hcov- e and mers-cov were detected on some environmental surfaces during some outbreaks [ , ] . one of the critical control measures in the case of airborne infection is to develop novel assays that enable us to detect and estimate the virus concentration in the air. this approach will have great implications, especially in the health care settings. the process of decontamination of the virus-contaminated surfaces by the appropriate disinfectants or virucidal agents was successful in case of other respiratory viruses such as sars-cov and avian influenza [ ] . the hydrogen peroxide vapor showed great success in the decontamination of surfaces contaminated with sars-cov and avian influenza viruses [ ] . the who suggested using two the significant burden in controlling the respiratory viruses is how to manage the person-toperson transmission. this could be adopted through many strategies. first, personal and hand hygiene are the gold standard approach toward minimizing the possibility of infection for j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f individuals. this can be achieved by washing the hands with the antiseptics and or soaps and water for at least seconds as per the who guidelines [ ] . this approach will reduce the virus load in the contaminated hands from virus droplets, which might touch the nose or mouse of persons. second, practice extreme caution by applying a social distance of at least one meter between you and anyone who is coughing or sneezing [ ] . third, educate the public on how to avoid the frequent touching of the mucous membranes, especially those of nose, mouse, and eyes [ ] . fourth, respiratory protection and hygiene through wearing the most appropriate personal protective equipment, as suggested earlier, according to the who's standards [ ] . fifth, vomiting and diarrhea were reported in many sars-cov- patients [ ] . this is suggesting the possibility of the fecal oral route as a mode of transmission of the virus [ ] . this stresses out the importance of hand hygiene to avoid any possible transmission of the virus through the fecal oral route. sixth, one of the main pillars in the control of virus spreads is the identification of the infected personnel. it is one of the crucial steps toward reducing the virus spread in a community. the earlier the identification and detection of the positive cases, the better the control of these cases. thus, they will receive the better health care treatment and avoid virus spread particular ly during the very early stage of the infection. seventh, special attention should be paid to how to protect the health care workers dealing with active cases. they should provide by the standard originated from bats [ , ] . this highlights the mandate for continuous monitoring of the coronaviruses population in bats as an alarm to the emergence of new novel coronaviruses in the future. second, there is ongoing research to develop antiviral therapy that might help in the treatment of the active human cases of the sars-cov- . each approach mainly depends on a unique strategy to halt the virus replication or disrupt it at a certain point; thus, the virus cannot complete its replication cycle in the host. therefore, it reduces the possibility of virus shedding from the infected patients to its close contacts. a recent study used some serine protease tmprss inhibitors to prevent the virus from entry to the cell. these compounds are clinically approved and potentially will reduce the virus replication [ ] . some fda approved anthelminthic compounds such as niclosamide have potent antiviral effects not only for sars-cov- but also for other viruses, including sars-cov, mers-cov, zika virus, and hcv [ ] . a recent study showed the great values of the remdesivir (gs- ) for prophylactic as well as treatment for the mers-cov in the rhesus macaque model [ ] . this approach could be a promising trend for the prevention and treatment of sars-cov- ; however, further studies are required to confirm these findings. another method was to use the nucleotide analog inhibitors, such as the remdesivir, which targets the viral polymerase (rna dependant rna polymerase). this approach diminished the ability of the virus to copy its genome; thus, the replication cycle j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f may be interrupted. this compound gave promising results in the cell culture model, which requires further testing in laboratory animals before the clinical trials [ ] . although sars-cov- is rapidly transmitting across the globe, it may be contained if sincere containment measures are implemented. the drastic drop in the number of reported cases in china, along with a reduction in the reported deaths could be an indicator of an early containment of the virus. implementing the one health concept from all aspects involving the animal, environment, and humans could contribute substantially to the control of sars-cov- in the near future. the authors declare there is no conflict of interest. we wish to thank king abdul-aziz city for science and technology (kacst) for their generous funding through the mers-cov research grant program (number - ), which is a part of targeted research program (trp). aetiology: koch's postulates fulfilled for sars virus isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia another decade, another coronavirus molecular evolution and emergence of avian gammacoronaviruses functional assessment of cell entry and 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environmental surfaces of a university classroom that is cleaned daily extensive viable middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) coronavirus contamination in air and surrounding environment in mers isolation wards evaluating the virucidal efficacy of hydrogen peroxide vapour virucidal activity of world health organization-recommended formulations against enveloped viruses, including zika, ebola, and emerging coronaviruses covid- ) advice for the public clinical features of patients infected with novel coronavirus in wuhan broad spectrum antiviral agent niclosamide and its therapeutic potential prophylactic and therapeutic remdesivir (gs- ) treatment in the rhesus macaque model of mers-cov infection the antiviral compound remdesivir potently inhibits rna-dependent rna polymerase from middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus key: cord- - k zaqsy authors: wick, w. david title: stopping the superspreader epidemic: the lessons from sars (with, perhaps, applications to mers) date: - - journal: nan doi: nan sha: doc_id: cord_uid: k zaqsy i discuss the so-called superspreader epidemic, for which sars is the canonical examples (and, perhaps, mers will be another). i use simulation by an agent-based model as well as the mathematics of multi-type branching-processes to illustrate how the ss epidemic differs from the more familiar uniform epidemic (e.g., caused by influenza). the conclusions may surprise the reader: (a) the ss epidemic must be described by at least two numbers, such as the mean reproductive number (of"secondary"cases caused by a"primary case"), r , and the variance of same, call it v ; (b) even if r > , if v >>r the probability that an infection-chain caused by one primary case goes extinct without intervention may be close to one (e.g., . ); (c) the ss epidemic may have a long"kindling period"in which sporadic cases appear (transmitted from some unknown host) and generate a cluster of cases, but the chains peter out, perhaps generating a false sense of security that a pandemic will not occur; (d) interventions such as isolation (or contact-tracing and secondary case isolation) may prove efficacious even without driving r below one; (e) the efficacy of such interventions diminishes, but slowly, with increasing v at fixed r . from these considerations, i argue that the ss epidemic has dynamics sufficiently distinct from the uniform case that efficacious public-health interventions can be designed even in the absence of a vaccine or other form of treatment. abstract i discuss the so-called superspreader (ss) epidemic, for which sars is the canonical example (and, perhaps, mers will be another). i use simulation by an agent-based model as well as the mathematics of multi-type branchingprocesses to illustrate how the ss epidemic differs from the more-familiar uniform epidemic (e.g., caused by influenza). the conclusions may surprise the reader: (a) the ss epidemic must be described by at least two numbers, such as the mean reproductive number (of "secondary" infections caused by a "primary" case), r , and the variance of same, call it v ; (b) even with r > , if v r the probability that the infection-chain caused by one primary case goes extinct without intervention may be close to one (e.g., . ); (c) the ss epidemic may have a long "kindling period" in which sporadic cases appear (transmitted from some unknown host) and generate a cluster of cases, but the chains peter out, perhaps generating a false sense of security that a pandemic will not occur; (d) interventions such as isolating primary cases (or contact-tracing and secondary-case isolation) can be efficacious even without driving r below one; (e) the efficacy of such interventions diminishes, but slowly, with increasing v at fixed r . from these considerations, i argue that the ss epidemic has dynamics sufficiently distinct from the uniform case that efficacious public-health interventions can be designed even in the absence of a vaccine or other form of treatment. this is a mathematical-modeling paper about certain types of epidemics and corresponding public-health interventions, other than by vaccines or drugs. my desire is to communicate the main points to a wider audience then just my fellow math-modelers: in particular, infectious-disease doctors and public-health officials, who are charged with responding to, and, if possible, halting, a future epidemic of a deadly disease. so i have chosen to relegate the mathematical and computational details to appendices (which are meant to be accessible to anyone with some background in math modeling or computer science, with no prerequisites.) i also eschew the usual introduction/methods/results/discussion format and adopt the form of an essay, because i believe the flow of the argument will be easier for the general reader to follow. to begin, recall sars, the acronym for "severe acute respiratory syndrome," an atypical form of pneumonia caused by a coronavirus that generated a gobal pandemic in . the large-scale spread of sars began on february of that year, when a professor of medicine in guangdong province, china, who had been treating patients with pneumonia, traveled to hong kong and checked into the metropole hotel downtown. for reasons still unclear, the professor passed the virus on to about a dozen persons staying at the hotel. then the professor, feeling unwell, checked himself into the teaching hospital and told the staff that he had a dangerous infectious disease and should be isolated, which the staff accomplished. (the professor died of the disease in hospital.) when another patient from the hotel cluster arrived at the hospital, the staff made a medical mistake (administering an expectorant or performing aspiration), and subsequently every doctor, nurse, medical student, and orderly who entered the room- or more-developed sars. this was the first "superspreader" (ss) event of the epidemic. more such events followed: + infected on a plane to beijing, at a hospital in vietnam, and so forth. but the godzilla of all known ss events occurred at an apartment complex in hong kong called the amoy gardens, where a sick person visited for one night and generated + secondary cases. virologists eventually traced the source of sars to bats, with an intermediate host, the civet cat, which was sold in live-animal markets in guangdong province. the final toll (november to july , , the date of the last known case) was: countries, including canada and the united states, affected; cases; and deaths. (thus the case mortality for sars was around percent; compare to the two percent estimated for the flu.) the pandemic is thought to have been brought under control by introduction of better hospital procedures for rapidly isolating cases; most clusters were "nosocomial" (occurring in, and specific to, a medical setting) with few secondary clusters, beyond those mentioned above, occurring in the community. as i write, a new disease caused by a different coronovirus, called the middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) virus, has appeared and generated cases in saudi arabia, jordan, qatar, and other countries of the arabian penninsula (at this time, all cases outside the region have occurred in persons who had recently visited the middle east). a steady drumbeat of sporadic cases ( since september , as of july ), some generating small ss events (mostly nosocomial), have been reported to the world health agency (and can be followed on the listservice of the international society for infectious diseases called promed-mail). the current estimate of mers case mortality is a frightening percent (but "case mortality" has a denominator problem: the "cases" are hospitalized patients, and we do not as yet know how many milder cases are occurring in the community). sars, mers, and (in one theory) hiv all represent a different kind of epidemic than usually treated in textbooks (particularly those that emphasize modeling). i will refer to a "superspreader epidemic," sse for shorthand. much of the conventional wisdom about epidemics does not apply to the sse case. next, i informally describe models for an sse, leaving details about software implementation and mathematical issues to appendices. the approbathrooms had floor drains that were supposed to be isolated by u-traps, but these only function if filled with water; but no one had told the residents to regularly dump a gallon of water on their bathroom floors. studies of transmission of hiv between an infected and an uninfected partner in a long-term relationship found very low transmission rates; e.g., one transmission in , unprotected sex acts. this gave rise to the theory that hiv is an ss epidemic; the candidates for the superpreaders are: (a) persons in the primary retroviral-infection period that lasts a few weeks, who have a thousand times the level of virus in blood and semen found in chronically-infected patients; and (b) cases like "patient zero," the canadian airline attendant with an impressive rolodex of sexual partners in many cities, described in 'randy shilts's book, and the band played on. priate kind of model is called a "stochastic multi-type branching-process." the adjective "stochastic" refers to random events, as in a dice game; in computer terms, when simulating the model the program makes calls on the random number generator, abbreviated rng (supplied with your operating system), when making updates. the "branching-process" was introduced by mathematicians in the s to describe, among other things, epidemics. (other applications include demographic population growth and nuclear chain-reactions.) in a branching-process, some entity produces a (random) number of "offspring" at some rate, not depending on the number of other entities existing, for some (also possibly random) reproductive period; the offspring, which may be of various types, can generate descendants in a similar manner. (the particular sort of branching-processes i use may differ from the kind described in math texts, however; see the appendices for the details.) mathematical biologists also introduced a deterministic model of epidemics dubbed "sir," for susceptible-infected-recovered, appropriate to describe a measles or influenza epidemic. here i am interested in interventions that bring the disease to a halt before it establishes an epidemic, so the susceptible population can be regarded as fixed. (by the time a moderate fraction of the population of a major city or country had sars or mers, the pandemic would long since have been declared by who and, given the modern phenomenon of "jet spread," airport closures and international panic would soon follow.) in addition, as the reader will understand from the results described below, a deterministic model of an sse is totally inappropriate. this is true for much of biology, despite the widespread use of deterministic equations, called by the ancient acronym "odes" whose significance nobody recalls, by mathematical biologists; see my book, [ ] . now we come to the famous "r ," also called the basic, or mean, reproduc- full disclosure: in march of , the author and two colleagues sent a paper to science proposing a stochastic branching-process model of the sars epidemic, concluding that the epidemic could be controlled by rapid isolation of infected patients if r was not too large. science rejected the paper, with the sole reviewer's comment being: "the model looks right, the conclusion looks right, but it doesn't penetrate!" in fact, the outcome of the epidemic was as we predicted. later that spring, science published papers from two modeling groups; one used odes, [ ] , which is absurd, and another, [ ] , a model like the authors', with similar conclusions. the latter group had access to case incidence data from hong kong, which our group lacked (we derived our model from published accounts, mostly in newspapers and on who and cdc websites). later, the present author fit a stochastic model to the hong kong data, see [ ] , chapter , in order to derive disease transmission parameters and demonstrate a new fitting technique. tive number of the virus, which was historically the original "tipping-point." it is defined as the average number of secondary cases caused (infected directly by) a primary case, in the absence of any treatment or intervention. as we will see, that number of secondary infections should be thought of as a random variable, so it has a variance as well as a mean; to uphold tradition, i denote it by v . now we must carefully distinguish two epidemic scenarios, which i will call the "uniform" (or poisson) and the superspreader (ss) epidemics. in the former, the number of secondary cases of a primary case (assumed for this discussion to have a fixed infectious period) is a poisson random variable, which is the name given in probability theory for the number of events in a random but constant-rate accrual process, like the number of hits inside the ring by a darts-player of little skill. the poisson random variable is characterized by v = r and a (super-exponential) fall off beyond the mean; e.g., if r = , the probability of the primary case producing secondary infections is infinitesimal. models in which such accruals have larger variances are said to possess "extra-poisson variation" (epv). what could be the meaning of this epv? the more-infectious case-i will also refer to this person as a superspreader-might have a special biological ability to spread the infection (perhaps through vomiting, diarrhea, or just a deep cough), or might be situated in some place that facilitates transmission (e.g., in a crowded icu, but not in isolation; on a plane; or visiting the amoy gardens). the simplest example, that i use throughout this paper for illustrations, is an epidemic model with two types of infected persons, each making a poissondistributed number of secondary cases. the person of type one has an average number of secondary cases of r l (the subscript meaning lower-value), and the type-two person, r h (high-level); these occur with probabilities p l and p h , so the population average is: for instance, suppose r l = . and r h = . , with p l = . and p h = . ; then r = . , while (easy computation) v = . . mathematicians proved in the s that a branching-process with r > can grow, while one with r ≤ eventually dies out. but it is often overlooked that a branching-process with r > can nevertheless go extinct. the outcome of a branching-process with r > (mathematicians use the phrase, "supercritical") is dichotomous: either heading for infinity or destined to die out, with certain probabilities. for instance, the process with the r's above plus assumptions about incubation periods, infectious periods, etc., resulting in various models; (see the appendices) will disappear eventually with probability p e in the range . - . . for the uniform case, r l = r h = . , p e is about . . as a rule, p e increases with increasing v for fixed r . this is easy to understand: the most probable "index" (epidemiology jargon for initial) case is a low-infectivity patient, and, although one or more secondary cases might follow while the patient remains infectious (even if r l < ), the infection-chain is likely to die out unless preserved by the appearance of a superspreader. see table for some illustrative examples. the simulation technique i used is described in appendix one, and the parameters are listed there in table a . i also included results in the table from an exactly-solvable model, meaning explicit formulas exist for extinction probabilities (see appendix two), called the markov case. i included it to satisfy mathematicians and to check the software, by comparing probabilities from repeated simulations to exact answers; but it has a feature that renders it dubious for use in biology. the markov case is the model in which all waiting times-times to end of the incubation period; to end of the infectious period; and to generate the next secondary case-have exponential distributions (see appendix two for the explanation of why the famous "markov property" requires exponential distributions for all waiting times). but only for the last mentioned is this a realistic choice: the exponential law was derived from physics, where it represents radioactive decay; but people are not atoms. for applications i assumed, pending more data, normal distributions for the incubation and infectious periods (conditional on non-negativity, of course). for these models, simulation must be used to compute probabilities (for reasons spelled out in appendix two). so the last column in the table represents the biologically more-realistic case. the reason that the entries in this column are the smallest in the rows is that the markov case has more epv; see appendix two. next consider mers, for which (as i write) another sporadic case apparently shows up on average every three days. (a "case" means laboratoryconfirmed in hospital, which may represent the very sick and potential superspreaders; there are probably more cases appearing in the community.) let "sp-int" stand for the average interval between appearances of sporadic infections. sp-int is hard to estimate, because it is difficult to distinguish sporadic from secondary cases; e.g., if in a family a father and two children become infected and the father becomes ill first, should the children be counted as secondary cases, or were they exposed to the same external source of virus and so additional sporadic cases? thus sp-int might be considerably larger than three days. the law for first-time-to-a-bernoulli-event gives: e.g., if p e = . and sp-int is days, the mean initiation time is days (but it could be much longer). because of the dichotomy and the tendency of most infection-chains to go extinct, the sse with large epv seeded by sporadic cases can be very surprising. for instance, figure shows an epidemic with r's as in the example above; for several months the epidemic seems indolent, then around days, it takes off. figure shows another epidemic with parameters from the last row (most extreme case) of the table; nothing exciting happens for a year, which might cause premature optimism among public-health officials; then comes disaster. (rerunning with the same parameters but different "seeds" for the rng, the timing of the pandemic in the figures is highly variable.) note that no spontaneous modifications, genetic or otherwise, are assumed in the virus for these simulations; disease parameters are fixed. the patterns are entirely due to epv and chance. now to interventions. neither vaccines nor therapeutic drugs currently exist for human coronaviruses; considering that the sars virus has disappeared while mers remains contained, and the enormous cost of developing, testing, and licensing a new vaccine or drug, this unfortunate situation is likely to persist. therefore, let us explore other interventions that could prevent an sse pandemic by these viruses. the interventions are restricted to isolation of cases, preventing some secondary infections. the intervention might be primary: rapidly isolating an infected patient in hospital in a negativepressure room and requiring all attendant personel to wear gowns and p masks, hopefully decreasing the patient's infectious period; or secondary: tracing contacts of the primary case and getting as many as possible to go into isolation at home, thus diminishing secondary infections. the secondary intervention has one advantage over the primary: it can be instigated even if laboratory tests are delayed beyond the lifetime, or infectious period, of the patient, which may be a consideration early in the epidemic. both interventions have the same effect: decreasing the effective "r" of the patient. an interesting special case, which i will refer to as the "ss intervention" (ssi), limits the intervention to high-infectivity cases. possible scenarios where the ssi is effective might include: ss patients are sicker and usually hospitalized, while low-infectivity cases remain in the community; and where ss patients can be detected by some physiological or virological measurement. in most discussions of interventions in infectious-disease epidemiology, it is assumed that an efficacious intervention is one that drives r below one. i argue that, for the sse, the proper quantity to look at is not r but the extinction probability of the infection-chain, which i have denoted by p e . thus the goal of the intervention must be to increase p e ; indeed, i define intervention-efficacy (ie) by: where p e,i stands for the extinction probability in the presence of the intervention. thus ie = . if the intervention drives p e,i all the way to one, and zero if p e,i = p e . of course, if the intervention should push r below one, then ie will be one, but ie could be, e.g., . even with an r still greater than one after the intervention is active (as we will see below). ie depends on both r and v , as we will see. if the reader is dubious about this redefinition of efficacy, consider (a) the disease introduced into cities. if, e.g., p e = . while p e,i = . (efficacy, percent; these numbers are not implausible, see table ), the effect of the intervention is to spare cities on average from a local epidemic. more convincing, perhaps, is to think about (b): the time before the epidemic takes off in a given region, for the sporadically-appearing disease. in the scenario in table fourth row, the epidemic takes off in a few months, but with the intervention increasing p e to the value in the last row, it takes roughly a half-year-perhaps enough time for epidemiologists or veterinarians to find and eliminate the source of the virus. i therefore explored efficacy for such interventions through simulating an sse epidemic with ssi's of various efficiencies (at lowering r h ). see figures and . efficacy is partially mediated by decreasing the effective (withintervention) r , which in any case remains above one in the figures. note that, for a high-v epidemic, even an intervention with efficiency in the - percent range can be quite valuable. i next asked whether it is easier or harder to stop an epidemic with a large v (equivalently here, large r h ) than an epidemic with a smaller value, at fixed intervention. the question is hard to answer through introspection or analysis. on the one hand, a larger r h should mean that the ssi intervention is more relevant; on the other hand, the explosive nature of case growth suggests the intervention would have to be larger. one thought suggests that efficacy should be an increasing function of r h , the other that it should be decreasing. see figures and : in fact, efficacy in the models does diminish with increasing r h at fixed intervention efficiency, but falls off remarkably slowly. as of august , mers has not generated a pandemic after months of sporadic cases. the obvious explanation is that r is less than one-but that could be an illusion; recall figure ! in july , a group of epidemiologists published in lancet, [ ] an estimate, based on cases (there were more as of july but the authors culled some due to ambiguities), of r as about . , which i used for the lower figure (r l ) in the simulations. however, they made an "occam's razor" simplifying assumption which may have biased their analysis. despite being critical of the authors' methodology, i agree with their conclusion that r of mers is currently less than one. (the best fit in my model-class to the cluster-data reported in [ ] had r = . ; r l = . ; r h = . ; normal periods; and sp-int = days. i.e., an sse but not a pandemic. see appendix three.) whatever the truth may be, in two ) saudi arabia has a population of million, so this represents less than an eight percent increase; however, these pilgrims will be congregating in a few sites where there may be increased opportunity for viral transmission from infected cases, possibly locally raising r and, more likely, v . also at present the source of the sporadic cases is under investigation, with reports of a related virus in a bat (not found in the middle east, however), and antibodies to coronaviruses in camels (but not in saudi arabia, and without recovery of a virus; because of cross-reactivity the latter report may be noise). the situation is too uncertain to make definite predictions about a mers epidemic at this time. here is a summary of my conclusions about the ss epidemic and interventions, based on the modeling exercise. first, it is better not to be complacent about an often-fatal disease occurring at low frequency and generating small clusters of secondary cases. despite appearances, it may represent the "kindling" phase of a future pandemic-which may develop even in the absence of genetic modification in the pathogen increasing transmission rates to or among humans (as occurred a decade ago in sars; but an event, given the current state of genetics, which nobody can predict). second, the sse has very different dynamics from more uniform epidemics caused by, e.g., influenza or measles; remarkably, this permits the design of interventions which are not available in the latter cases. for instance, because the superspreader is rare and possibly detectable, a specifically targeted intervention may at least delay the onset of a pandemic long enough to allow epidemiologists to locate and eliminate the source of sporadic infections. even detection after the end of a superspreader's infectious period can be efficacious (through contact-tracing). finally, for my fellow math-modelers: the story related here is an instance of the important role played by heterogeneity, and stochasticity, in biology. (for other examples, see my books [ ] and [ ] .) a desire for simplicity in modeling is not an excuse for overlooking these possibilities. the model is of "agent-based" type, which means that the characteristics of each case are stored separately in computer memory. the descriptors of each case are: infectious status (in incubation period, so not infectious; or infectious); infectious type; and some integers assigned at creation for identification purposes (including the index of the primary, if a secondary case; and an indentifier for cluster). in addition, for each case some floating-point numbers are stored: when a case is created in the incubation phase, a predicted (clock) time for entering the infectious phase; once in the latter, the time of creation of a secondary case (updated when that event occurs); and the time of death or end of infectious period. because of the agent-based modeling, these times can be generated with any desired distributions. for the time-of-next-secondary-case, an exponential random variable is appropriate (consistent with the assumption that the infections caused in a fixed period have a poisson distribution). but an exponential random variable is a poor choice for the other waiting times (time-to-infectivity and to death or end-ofinfectious period), because the exponential law has no memory. conventional mathematical models assume that all waiting times are exponentials, because the markov property then holds, permitting mathematicians to write down and solve equations for quantities like extinction probabilities; see the math appendix for discussion. however, the convenience of mathematicians should not be a determining element in science. i assumed that the waiting times other than for secondary infections had normal distributions (conditional on being non-negative). the simulation starts by filling in the characteristics and times for the index case (and, for the sporadic scenario, a conjectured time for the appearance of the next sporadic case). then the smallest waiting time is found; the corresponding changes are made, including creation of a new case and its characteristics and waiting times if the event is a sporadic-or secondaryinfection. the clock time is moved forward to this event time. at subsequent iterations the program runs through all the stored waiting times looking for the next one; then performs those changes, etc. in other words, the process is simulated in the most straightforward manner, with no mathematical approximations whatsoever except for the belief that the rng provides truly random digits (about which john von neumann made his famous joke: "anyone who believes a computer can generate a random variable is living in sin"), which is unlikely to cause trouble here. when computing extinction probabilities, the process was run until either extinction occurred, incident (incubation or infectious) cases existed on a single day (after which i assumed extinction was unlikely), or the clock time reached four years. , samples were used in simulations. table reports the comparisons of the solvable (markov) case with simulations of same; rerunning some cases with , repetitions, even the third decimal came out right. table a reports the parameters used. when more data about, e.g., mers, becomes available, it will be interesting to fit the model in order to estimate parameters; a convenient method was introduced in my book [ ] , chapter . the program was written in the c programming language, runs on anything, and is available from the author by request. (but if the reader is interested in modeling the sse, it is always better to write your own program then rely on somebody else's.) i am an ex-mathematical physicist. so why the resort to programming the laptop? my motivation is simple: i intend to use the model to make predictions about mers and other ss epidemics, once transmission parameters become available. in my philosophy, the proper goal of any scientist is to make predictions for future experiments or observations, because that is ultimately the only way to be sure that you are not modeling moonshine. so marc kac's fabled advice for mathematical physicists ("mutilate, mutilate until you can solve the equations") cannot be accepted. i may need to employ all sorts of peculiar distributions taken from empirical data. however, it is useful to solve even an unrealistic scenario because it provides a formula to compare to the output of the software for that case, helpful to allay the suspicion that the results in this paper are due to bugs or numerical issues. the markov case is the model in which all waiting times-times to end of the incubation period; to end of the infectious period; and to generate the next secondary case-have exponential distributions. as pointed out in the text, only for the last mentioned is this a realistic choice. but it is required by the markov property ("the future and the past are independent, given the present") because only the exponential is memoryless: provided τ is an exponential random variable: p [ τ > t ] = exp(−λ t). with the exponential for incubation and infectious periods, the number of secondary cases of a primary case is actually geometric rather than poisson, with a larger variance (so this case has epv even even without multiple types). it is, of course, the markov property that makes it easy to derive equations for probabilities associated to stochastic processes. here is a simple (non-rigorous?) derivation of the extinction probabilities for the markov version of the ss epidemic without sporadic cases. let ex stand for the event: extinction of the infection-chain; p k for probabilities generated by the process begun by a type-k case; and r k for the corresponding extinction probability, so: r k = p [ extinction probability given one initial case, type k ] then by conditioning on the first secondary case, if there is one: where γ k is the rate of generating secondary cases by a primary case of type k and ρ is the reciprocal of the time-to-end of the infectious period. thus we obtain a quadratic system, easily reduced to a single quadratic for the two-level case of the text (below). however, the reader may doubt whether this is rigorous. there is another (long-winded but fully rigorous) approach for the markov case, which is to note that it is identical to a markov birth-and-death compartmental jump process. here we have to distinguish incubation and infectious stages for each type; call the respective compartments (populations) x k and y k . the rates of jumps for this process are: next given numbers < r k < and < s k < introduce the momentgenerating function (mgf): where e denotes expectation. differentiating using kolmogorov's forward equation (just a consequence of jumps occurring at given rates): now make the substitutions: r k ∂/∂r k −→ x k and s k ∂/∂s k −→ y k to obtain the pde: solve this system by the method of characteristics; that is, define functions of time r k (t) and s k (t) to satisfy the ode system: now note that φ is a function of r = {r k }, s = {s k } and t and from the above φ(r(t), s(t); ) = φ(r( ), s( ); t). also from its definition, if we take as initial conditions x k = and y k = so setting the right-hand sides of the odes, ( ), equal to zero to find the fixed point gives the required extinction probabilities. the resulting equations are the same as ( ). for the two-level case, these equations are, using r k = γ k /ρ: which after a little algebra yields the quadratic: this is solved for ψ (taking the negative sign in the quadratic formula and rationalizing the numerator) by: note that if the extinction probabilities r and r are less than one, ψ is negative and vice versa; hence that is the case if and only if r > . given ψ, r and r can then be found from ( ); p e = r , r , or p r + p r , depending on how you choose the initial condition. (the third is the realistic case.) we used these results to reproduce tables and figures from the text, comparing to output obtained by implementing exponentials for all waiting times and repeating the simulations. why can't we use the informal argument for the general case (without requiring everything to be exponential)? because there were several hidden assumptions in deriving ( ). for one, in ( ) we used the exponential integral: which in a non-exponential case would have to be done numerically. worse, in ( ) there was a concealed use of the markov property; i erased conditioning as follows: p [ ex | first secondary case is of type j, at time τ ] = p [ ex | first secondary case is of type j ] , reasoning that the time of creation of the first secondary infection was not informative about the time left in the infectious period, which invokes the memorylessness of the exponential law, or just the markov property. in a non-markov case, that time would be informative, so one would have to evaluate that conditional probability as stated somehow, and ( ) becomes a system of integral equations which would have to be solved on the computer by discretizing the time, solving matrix equations, then letting the discretization interval shrink, controlling for numerical error, etc. relative to simulating the process on a fast computer, it doesn't seem worth the effort. appendix : the lancet transmission paper, [ ] the lancet authors, breban et al., based their analysis on certain caseclusters (epidemiologically-linked cases), which they summarized in a table (the scenarios concern how the authors interpreted the clusters in terms of sporadic vs. secondary cases): table b . distribution of cluster sizes size scenario scenario converting from numbers of clusters to frequencies: in their mathematical appendix, the lancet authors begin by citing a paper in plos by others [ ] who showed how to use branching-processes and bayesian methodology to estimate r from cluster data, allowing for some extra variance in reproductive number, namely by assuming a certain distribution (called the "negative binomial") that interpolates between poisson and geometric. in my terminology, those two cases represent the uniform epidemic with either fixed or exponential infectious period-so much smaller epv than allowed in my two-level model (which in fact has three free parameters, see last paragraph). the lancet authors apply bayesian analysis to the plos authors' distribution but reject it as unable to resolve both parameters (r and a dispersion parameter affecting v ) because the latter "could be very large, even ." it is here that they abused poor occam and retreated to an analysis using poisson and estimating a single parameter, r . of course, with this assumption the big cluster in the last row must include tertiary, etc., cases, because a cluster of secondary cases of one primary case, with an r of . , is virtually impossible. here are simulated cluster frequencies under some models described in the text ( , simulations, each run to cases, per model; a "cluster" consists of the tree generated by a sporadic primary case): not surprisingly, the uniform (poisson) model with r = . has difficulty fitting the big cluster of cases in the last line of tables b/c; indeed, it appears as if models b-d can be rejected, say by a fisherian p-value test. this suggests that what happened in the lancet authors' bayesian fitting procedure is that their single-type, poisson likelihood settled for fitting the small clusters and ignored the the big one. which could render their logic circular (r is less than one because, in a model with no higher-infectious types and ignoring one data point . . . r comes out less than one). however, does that mean the authors' conclusion is wrong? to answer that question, i utilized the nknn method (advertised in my book [ ] ) to search for best-fitting models in my model-class. this venerable method selects among various theories, given samples from each, that best explains a given data-set; it is commonly used in pattern-recognition. (it reduces to maximum likelihood in the limit of infinitely-large samples from each theory; i.e., if you have an infinitely-fast computer to perform the simulations.) here the samples were , simulated epidemics, and corresponding clusterfrequencies, from models chosen at random with . < r l < , < r h < , and r l < r < min(r h , . ), with , repetitions. the data-set was column one of table c . the search turned up excellent fits for the frequency data (smallest sum-of-squares, . ): on the basis of this result, i must agree that r < for mers at present. note however that the good fit of table e to table c is attained because an ss model reproduces the big cluster in the last row of the latter. the lancet authors' choice to limit their model-class to a poisson distribution for secondary cases ruled out this possibility-a superspreader, multiple-levels, epidemic model, but with r less than one-a priori. on the other hand, "fitting" a three-parameter model to data consisting of seven frequencies cannot be recommended either. now a bit of preaching about modeling traps. when you have a model with free parameters and a data-set, there are two ways to delude yourself. methods like bayesian analysis, possible if you have an explicit likelihood, or my nknn method, which works for anything provided you can simulate fast enough, will generate a "best-fitting model." if some parameter (like the plos authors' dispersion parameter) fluctuates so much that it can't be pinned down, you can choose to omit it-i.e., mutilate the model in order to be able to "estimate the parameters." or you can keep the troublesome parameter and let the software choose a "best model." either way, the model selected may be false; but you won't discover that until more data arrives. in my book, [ ] , i labeled these two pitfalls the "simple-is-best trap" and the "etch-a-sketch trap" and argued that the modeler is required to steer between these two hazards, like odysseus sailing between skylla and charybdis. fall in the first, and your parameter estimates will be wrong or biologically unintelligible; fall in the other, and your model can "explain" anything (which karl popper decried as not science). ultimately, the best approach is to make a prediction-even when it fails, you will have learned something. (unfortunately, on the basis of the data thus far available, making a prediction about mers is impossible.) interhuman transmissibility of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: estimation of pandemic risk inference of r and transmission heterogeneity from the size distribution of stuttering chains transmission dynamics and control of severe acute respiratory syndrome. science transmission dynamics of the etiological agent of sars in hong kong: impact of public health interventions fitting non-linear, stochastic models to data in war in the body: the evolutionary arms race between hiv and the human immune system and the implications for vaccines key: cord- - b ic authors: harypursat, vijay; chen, yao-kai title: six weeks into the coronavirus disease outbreak: it is time to consider strategies to impede the emergence of new zoonotic infections date: - - journal: chin med j (engl) doi: . /cm . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: b ic nan coronaviruses have in the past been known to be the etiologic agents of mild upper respiratory infections in humans, similar to the ubiquitous and relatively benign "common cold"-type upper respiratory illnesses induced by the human rhinoviruses in adults and children. subsequent to the severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) outbreak in china , and the middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) outbreak in the middle east in , global concerns regarding the pathogenicity and epidemic/pandemic potential of novel human coronaviruses began to emerge, with some experts predicting that novel coronaviruses could likely again cross the species barrier and present humans with future pandemic-potential infections. [ ] these concerns have proven prescient with the emergence, late in , of the coronavirus disease (covid- ) or novel coronavirus pneumonia. a significantly large variety of coronavirus species cause a diverse range of diseases in domesticated and wild mammals and birds, and these animals may also be carriers of and reservoirs for coronaviruses. [ ] six coronavirus species had, before the january th, , been known to cause disease in humans. four species are endemic in human populations, and cause mild common cold symptoms in immunocompetent humans. the two remaining species, sars-cov and mers-cov, are zoonotic in origin, and their infection of humans may have fatal outcomes. -ncov is the seventh coronavirus species that is now known to infect humans, is also zoonotic in origin, and is the causative organism for the current viral pneumonia epidemic in china. both sars-cov and mers-cov are believed to have originated from bats, with common masked civets and dromedary camels respectively being intermediary hosts. [ ] sars-like coronaviruses have been isolated from chinese horseshoe bats, and may attach to and utilize the angiotensin-converting enzyme receptor in human lower respiratory tract cells to gain entry into these cells, thus facilitating transmission to, and initiating infection in, humans. [ ] the genomic sequence of -ncov is strikingly similar to that of sars-like coronaviruses found in bats, and phylogenetic data from recent genomic studies on bat-associated coronaviruses and -ncov suggest that bats are the natural reservoir for coronaviruses in general, and -ncov in particular. [ ] it has been postulated that the reservoir for -ncov is the chinese horseshoe bat, which is known to host sars-like coronaviruses. it is now hypothesized that one of the reservoir coronavirus species in bats crossed the species barrier to an intermediate mammal host (presumed to be a masked civet) sold at the wet market at the epicenter of the current epidemic, with subsequent mutation and transmission to humans, initiating the present epidemic of covid- . it has been noted that the two previously known human coronaviruses causing epidemic disease and spread, sars-cov and mers-cov, had a relatively low rate of spread from an individual infected patient (an index referred to as its basic reproductive number-r°). the r°of sars was estimated to be around , meaning that on average, each infected patient is presumed to spread the virus to three other individuals. [ ] it is currently estimated that the r°for -ncov is between . and . . [ , ] however, approximately % of individuals infected with sars-cov and mers-cov were associated with a phenomenon referred to as "super spreading," associated with an r°> . [ ] wide transmission and spread of sars-cov and mers-cov occurred to a large extent by means of super-spreading events. [ ] human super spreaders for -ncov have not been identified thus far in limited epidemiological studies conducted in the past weeks of the outbreak. [ ] however, clinicians and researchers should be acutely aware of the likelihood for the potential existence of such transmitters of -ncov infection in the general population, and of the means to identify and isolate such individuals expeditiously to prevent a reduction of the current epidemic doubling time of approximately days, and to limit viral transmission and spread. [ ] a compelling mathematical modeling study done by researchers at the hong kong university indicates, despite limitations to their study, that these figures may not be a fair representation of the actual scale of the -ncov outbreak in china. they estimated that the basic reproductive number for -ncov was . ( % confidence interval . - . ) and the epidemic doubling time was . days ( % confidence interval . - . days). [ ] ominously, a further mathematical model, proposed by tang et al, [ ] suggests that the basic reproductive number for -ncov might be as high as . . the putative zoonotic origin of -ncov, and the zoonotic origins of the sars and mers epidemics, brings into sharp focus the existence of unregulated wet markets in china, trading in live wild game, game meat, and game products. zoonotic origins for emerging viral infections are not new, with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, ebola, influenza viruses, sars, mers, and a multitude of other viral illnesses all crossing the species barrier and causing devastating illness in humans, at enormous economic and human cost. [ ] the presence and availability of markets that trade in wild animals for human consumption, and for purchase as pets, greatly increases the potential for viral infections originating from these reservoir animals to jump to human populations. the complete ban on market trading and sale of wild game meat in china on january th, will help prevent zoonotic transmission of -ncov in the current epidemic and, to a certain degree, help prevent emergence of new zoonotic infections. further social and cultural changes regarding wild game trading and consumption is required in china and worldwide, to prevent scenarios where regular emergence of zoonotic infections becomes commonplace, with their inevitably attendant economic and human costs. it is estimated that the sars epidemic cost the global economy approximately $ billion in alone. the mers outbreak in the republic of korea resulted in a $ . billion loss for the south korean tourism industry alone. the outbreak of ebola in guinea, liberia, and sierra leone cost their already lean economies approximately $ million. the human and economic costs of the -ncov outbreak to the global economy will, without doubt, be scrupulously studied after the present outbreak ends, and the global economic costs will be immense, and the human cost, agonizing. each preventable zoonotic outbreak costs the country of origin and the world vast amounts of money and resources, and an inestimable cost in human lives, and if emerging zoonotic outbreaks can be prevented by severely limiting human exposure to wild animals and their trade, then effective measures to ensure that this occurs should be implemented by regulatory government authorities globally as soon as it is practicable. it is clearly apparent that the work done thus far in the quest to contain the current -ncov outbreak is massive, focused, and resolute. it is also abundantly evident that a large quantum of work remains to be done in order for the current public health effort to be successful in containing the present outbreak. managing this requires international cooperation using traditional and proven public health strategies that ultimately succeeded in the sars epidemic. it is, however, inevitable that new zoonotic infections will emerge in the future. it is, therefore, an urgent priority for local and international health and wildlife regulatory authorities to structure and implement robust control mechanisms that effectively reduce human exposure to wild game meat and their products. in contrast to africa, the consumption of wild game meat in asia is not generally motivated by poverty, hunger, or starvation. the common motivations for the human consumption of wild game meat in asia are for their purported medicinal value, and the supposed health-enhancing effects of certain varieties of wild game meat, or their products. specific rare and exotic asian and other international wild game and their products, are also consumed and offered to guests and influential persons in an effort to project status, prestige, and wealth, depending on the rarity of the animal involved. there is also the existence of wildlife trafficking between asia and other regions of the world, which has created an international supply and demand chain, with savvy wildlife entrepreneurs marketing wild game meat and products as "traditional specialties," in their effort to boost sales. the existence of local and international wildlife trade for meat and animal products needs urgent and decisive change. it is fervently hoped that the steadfast efforts by china, in partnership with the international community, will reap positive results with respect to -ncov control in the future weeks and months. additionally, urgent international attention to and curtailment of the hitherto unregulated and commonplace trade in wild game, meat and products is essential if a repeat of the human and economic loss, and public fear and social disruption wreaked by the current -ncov outbreak is to be avoided in the future. this work was supported by a grant from the chongqing special research project for prevention and control of novel coronavirus pneumonia (no. cstc jscx-fyzx ). efficient replication of the novel human betacoronavirus emc on primary human epithelium highlights its zoonotic potential the battle against sars and mers coronaviruses: reservoirs and animal models clinical features of patients infected with novel coronavirus in wuhan, china isolation and characterization of a bat sars-like coronavirus that uses the ace receptor genomic characterisation and epidemiology of novel coronavirus: implications for virus origins and receptor binding early transmission dynamics in wuhan, china, of novel coronavirusinfected pneumonia nowcasting and forecasting the potential domestic and international spread of the -ncov outbreak originating in wuhan, china: a modelling study the role of super-spreaders in infectious disease estimation of the transmission risk of the -ncov and its implication for public health interventions economic impact of the mers outbreak on the republic of korea's tourism-related industries six weeks into the coronavirus disease outbreak: it is time to consider strategies to impede the emergence of new zoonotic infections none. key: cord- - ftedh a authors: gunaratne, gihan s.; yang, yang; li, fang; walseth, timothy f.; marchant, jonathan s. title: naadp-dependent ca + signaling regulates middle east respiratory syndrome-coronavirus pseudovirus translocation through the endolysosomal system date: - - journal: cell calcium doi: . /j.ceca. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ftedh a abstract middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infections are associated with a significant mortality rate, and existing drugs show poor efficacy. identifying novel targets/pathways required for mers infectivity is therefore important for developing novel therapeutics. as an enveloped virus, translocation through the endolysosomal system provides one pathway for cellular entry of mers-cov. in this context, ca +-permeable channels within the endolysosomal system regulate both the luminal environment and trafficking events, meriting investigation of their role in regulating processing and trafficking of mers-cov. knockdown of endogenous two-pore channels (tpcs), targets for the ca + mobilizing second messenger naadp, impaired infectivity in a mers-cov spike pseudovirus particle translocation assay. this effect was selective as knockdown of the lysosomal cation channel mucolipin- (trpml ) was without effect. pharmacological inhibition of naadp-evoked ca + release using several bisbenzylisoquinoline alkaloids also blocked mers pseudovirus translocation. knockdown of tpc (biased endosomally) or tpc (biased lysosomally) decreased the activity of furin, a protease which facilitates mers fusion with cellular membranes. pharmacological or genetic inhibition of tpc activity also inhibited endosomal motility impairing pseudovirus progression through the endolysosomal system. overall, these data support a selective, spatially autonomous role for tpcs within acidic organelles to support mers-cov translocation. coronaviruses (cov) are enveloped, single strand (+)rna viruses that cause respiratory and enteric infections across a broad range of animal species. several coronaviruses have recently emerged as zoonotic infections that cause life-threatening human disease, exemplified by the severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars-cov) epidemic in / as well as more recent clusters of infections caused by the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov). mers-cov is a lineage c beta-coronavirus first isolated in the summer of from a hospitalized patient in saudi arabia [ ] , and to date there have been > mers cases worldwide. mers-cov infection causes symptoms of high fever and acute, progressive pneumonia in humans, and infection can be associated with a significant mortality rate (∼ - %) in individuals with comorbidities [ , ] . as no vaccine exists and trials of drugs and immune response modulators have demonstrated poor efficacy in vivo, there is considerable interest in identifying and optimizing novel therapies to resolve mers-cov infections [ , ] . therapeutic strategies encompass those targeting viral components as well as host-based processes that support mers-cov infectivity and replication [ , ] . consequently, resolution of the cell biology of mers-cov infection to illuminate the cellular infrastructure that controls viral entry, organelle passage and transferal into the cytoplasm for replication is of particular interest for evaluating new host targets with promise for development, or repurposing, of mers-cov therapeutics. research into the cell biology of mers has shown that mers-cov particle entry is facilitated by interaction between the viral spike (s) protein and a specific host surface receptor, dipeptidyl peptidase (dpp , also known as cd , [ ] ). proteolytic priming of the spike protein promotes fusion of the viral envelope with host cell membranes, thus allowing successful translocation of the infectious viral genome into the host cell. recent reports have demonstrated that such proteolytic priming and membrane fusion may occur either at the cell surface via the serine protease tmprss [ ] , or intracellularly in endocytic compartments via proprotein convertases such as furin ( ) . following clathrin-mediated endocytosis, the virus traffics through the endolysosomal system where it is proteolytically activated by host proteases to mediate vesicular fusion and liberation into the cytoplasm [ , ] . this subcellular translocation pathway affords opportunity for pharmacological intervention as generalized manipulations of endolysosomal function, through inhibition of endocytosis, cytoskeletal dynamics and bulk alkalization of acidic organelles, have been shown to impair mers-cov infectivity [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . such observations provide justification for pharmacological profiling of targets within acidic organelles to identify novel, more selective opportunities to impair mers-cov translocation through the endolysosomal system. ion channels of the two-pore channel (tpc , tpc ) and mucolipin family (e.g. trpml ) reside within the endolysosomal system where they regulate endolysosomal microenvironment and trafficking functions [ , ] . as mers-cov translocation and release into the cytoplasm requires the interplay with the endolysosomal milieu [ , ] , the ability of these ca + -permeable channels to acutely regulate luminal ionic composition and ph promotes their consideration as potential therapeutic targets. manipulation of endolysosomal ion channel function has been shown to impact endolysosomal morphology and homeostatic trafficking in a variety of cell types [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . pharmacological manipulation of these channels may therefore permit a defter approach for impairing mers-cov translocation than more generalized perturbations of endolysosomal function. of special relevance is the recent discovery that the natural product tetrandrine acts as a potent blocker of both tpc activity and ebola infectivity, reducing viral titers in the serum of infected mice [ ] . the efficacy of tetrandrine related to interference with a late step in ebola virus translocation, possibly by preventing viral-endosome membrane fusion from within tpc -positive structures [ ] , or by interfering with a tpc -driven late endosome/lysosome maturation process [ ] . such data provide impetus for considering tpcs as druggable targets for combating a potentially broad range of infectious pathogens that must traverse, or reside within, the acidic ca + store milieu. here, we use both pharmacological and molecular approaches to address this concept in the context of mers-cov infectivity, as the contribution played by endolysosomal channels in facilitating mers-cov translocation is currently unknown. chemicals were sourced as follows: hernandezine, metocurine, thaligine (isofangchinoline), cycleanine (specs chemistry database), ym (invivogen), gly-phe-b-naphthylamide (gpn), trans-ned- , (santa cruz biotechnology), arn (echelon biosciences), d-nmapdd and fty (cayman chemicals), fumonisin β (enzo life sciences), n,n'-[ , -ethanediylbis(oxy- , -phenylene)]bis[n-[ -[(acetyloxy)methoxy]- -oxoethyl]]-, bis[(acetyloxy)methyl] ester (bapta-am, biotium). all other ligands were purchased from sigma aldrich. naadp was synthesized from nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate as previously described [ ] . pegfp-n was from clontech. anti-gfp (rabbit polyclonal), anti-rhodopsin c (mouse monoclonal), anti-ha (rabbit polyclonal) and anti-gapdh (rabbit polyclonal) antibodies were from santa cruz. plasmids encoding tpc -gfp, tpc [l p]-gfp, tpc -gfp, tpc pm and rab a-gfp were from sandip patel (ucl) and have been described previously [ , , ] . pgp-cmv-nes-gcamp m was from douglas kim (addgene plasmid # ), tmprss was from tom gallaher (loyola) and egfp-rab a [q l] from qing zhong (addgene plasmid # and # , respectively). silencer select sirnas targeted against tpcn , tpcn , and mcoln and non-targeting negative control sirna were purchased from invitrogen. sirna sequences were: tpcn sirna# -gcgucuucuu caucgugua, tpcn sirna# -ggcuacuauuaucucaaua; tpcn sirna# -cgguauuacucgaacguau, tpcn sirna# -acagaa gugugguuaaaga; mcoln sirna# -ccuucgccgucgucucaaa, mcoln sirna# -gaucacguuugacaacaaa; smpd sirna# -ucacagcacuugugaggaatt, smpd sirna# -cuaccuacaucgg ccuuaatt; asah sirna# -ccuugauagauguuaccaatt, asah sirna # -gcaguuccaugguacaccatt; cers sirna# -ggcta ttacttcttcaatttt, cers sirna# -gcattgcctctgatgtcaatt. hek (human embryonic kidney) were sourced from atcc. huh (human liver) cells and u- os (human bone osteosarcoma) were gifts from charles m. rice (rockefeller) and eugen brailoiu (temple) respectively. cell lines were maintained in dmem (invitrogen) supplemented with % fetal bovine serum (fbs, invitrogen), units/ml penicillin and streptomycin, μg/ml l-glutamine (invitrogen) and cultured at % co and °c. transfection of plasmid dna was performed in -well dishes (nunc) using lipofectamine ® (invitrogen). cells were transfected using ng of each dna construct, using a : dna:lipofectamine ® ratio. complexes were prepared in opti-mem (invitrogen) and added to cells in dmem without fbs or antibiotics. complexes were removed after h and media was exchanged with dmem containing fbs. transfection of sirna was performed in well dishes using interferin (polyplus) according to the vendor's protocol. cells were passaged three times to maintain subconfluency over the course of days during which time sirna:interferin complexes were replenished to ensure protein knockdown. knockdown was validated by rt-pcr for positive and negative controls. mers pseudovirus manipulations were carried out as described previously [ , ] . mers-cov-spike-pseudotyped retroviruses expressing a luciferase reporter gene were prepared by co-transfecting hek t cells with a plasmid carrying env-defective, luciferase-expressing hiv- genome (pnl - .luc.re) and a plasmid encoding mers-cov spike (s) protein. the s protein has previously been shown to be necessary and sufficient to facilitate mers-cov cell entry. m.erspseudovirus particles were harvested from supernatant h after transfection. huh cells, which express hsdpp endogenously [ ] , were used to resolve the effects of drugs on mers-pseudovirus translocation. huh cells were seeded into -well plates (midwest scientific) at a concentration of × cells/well. the following day, cells were pre-incubated with individual drugs ( μm final concentration) for h prior to mers-pseudovirus addition. cells were incubated ( % co / °c) for an additional h in the presence of drug and pseudovirus. after h, the culture media was replaced with complete dmem and cells were incubated for a further h. cells were then washed times with dpbs (invitrogen) and assayed for luciferase activity. cells were lysed in μl lysis buffer (promega) per well, and μl of lysate was transferred to solid-white -well plates (corning) and mixed with μl of luciferase substrate (promega). luminescence (relative luminescence units, rlus) were measured using a glomax-multi detection system (promega). luminescence values are reported relative to levels measured in cells treated with virus alone, background corrected by luminescence values in cells unexposed to virus, except where indicated. for cell viability assays, huh cells were lysed h post drug treatment, using cell lysis buffer (promega). lysates were transferred to solid white -well plates to be screened in an atp-based viability assay (celltiter-glo . , promega) according to the vendor's protocol. finally, for molecular manipulations, hek cells ( . × cells/ well) were used owing to higher transfectability. extra samples were harvested, for immunoblotting or rna extraction, from the same samples used to study pseudovirus infectivity. for colocalization analyses, huh cells or hek cells (co-transfeced with hsdpp -ha) were transfected with plasmids encoding gfptagged proteins of interest. one day after transfection, cells were incubated with mers-pseudovirus ( h, °c) to allow adsorption of the pseudovirus particles to hsdpp receptors at the cell surface. after a brief incubation ( min, % co / °c), cells were then fixed in methanol. samples were blocked with % bsa and incubated with primary antibody ( : dilution) overnight at °c. cells were incubated with an alexa fluor-conjugated secondary antibody (invitrogen) for h at room temperature ( μg/ml). cells were imaged on an olympus ix inverted microscope using a plan-apochromat x/ . oil-immersion objective, using a spinning disk confocal unit (yogogawa csu-x ). images were captured using a clara interline ccd camera (andor). u os cells were transfected with plasmid encoding gcamp m two days prior to microinjection experiments. one day post-transfection, × cells were seeded onto collagen coated mattek dishes. for microinjection experiments, dishes were mounted on an olympus ix inverted microscope equipped with a piezo nanopositioning stage (prior scientific). cells were perfused with ca + -free hank's balanced salt solution (thermo scientific) at a rate of . ml/min. isolated u os cells expressing gcamp m identified by fluorescence were selected for injections. cell morphology was assessed by acquiring z-stack images and reconstructing three-dimensional models of each cell to be injected. regions that were not relatively close to the nucleus or cell periphery were targeted for injection sites. femptotip (eppendorf) injection pipettes were backfilled with intracellular buffer ( mm kcl, mm nacl, mm hepes, ph . ) containing either vehicle or naadp ( nm), and positioned using an injectman- (eppendorf) micromanipulation system. cells were injected at a z-position approximately % of the cell thickness at the site of injection using a femtojet i (eppendorf). injection parameters were hpa injection pressure, hpa compensation pressure, . s injection duration, °injection angle, and um/s injection speed. cells to be injected were imaged (λ ex = nm, λ em = ± nm bandpass) using a plan-apochromat x/ . objective, and fluorescence changes were monitored using a yokogawa spinning disk confocal (csu-x-m n), and an andor ixon ultra emccd camera. image acquisition and data collection was done using metamorph version . . cells were lysed at °c on a nutating mixer in ice-cold lysis buffer consisting of pbs (invitrogen), % triton x- (fluka), x complete protease inhibitors (roche). protein concentration was determined by bradford assay (pierce), and μg of protein was loaded onto 'any-kd' mini-protean tgx gels (biorad) for sds-page. after electrophoresis, protein was transferred to nitrocellulose membranes using a transblot turbo (biorad) semi-dry transfer machine. membranes were blocked for h at room temperature in % milk in pbs supplemented with . % tween- , prior to addition of primary antibody ( : dilution for anti-gfp and anti-ha antibodies, : dilution for anti-gapdh antibody) and overnight incubation at °c. the following day, membranes were incubated with irdye secondary antibodies ( : dilution, li-cor) for h at room temperature. signals were detected using a li-cor odyssey imaging system. rna was isolated from hek cells after sirna treatment using trizol (invitrogen) according to the vendor's protocol. rna aliquots were frozen at − °c prior to rt-pcr analysis. rt-pcr evaluation of knockdown of mrna of interest was assessed using the following primers: step rt-pcr system with platinum taq (invitrogen) was used to convert mrna to cdna and amplify samples in a single reaction. semi quantitative rt-pcr reactions ( cycles) were multiplexed to amplify gapdh and mrna of interest simultaneously. pcr products were separated on a % agarose gel. gels were imaged using a myecl (thermo fisher) and quantified by densitometry (imagej). intracellular furin activity was detected using a fluorogenic substrate, boc-arg-val-arg-arg- -amino- -methylcoumarin (boc-rvrr-amc, enzo life science). for pharmacological assays, huh cells were cultured in the presence of vehicle or drug for h, or were left untreated. for knockdown assays, hek cells were treated with the indicated sirnas as described above. cells were washed in pbs, and lysed in cold pbs containing % triton x- and phosphatase inhibitors (thermo scientific). protein concentration was determined by bradford assay and diluted to μg/μl, μl was dispensed into individual wells in a clear-bottom, black walled -well plate (cellstar). furin substrate ( μm final concentration) was added to each well. to test for direct inhibition of furin activity, fangchinoline was added immediately before addition of furin substrate. fluorescence was monitored using a tecan m plate reader at °c, λ ex = - nm, λ em = - nm. for baseline endosomal motility measurements, huh cells were cultured in the presence of ug/ml fitc-dextran (sigma) in complete media for min to allow endocytic uptake, before rinsing with pbs and imaging. motility of endosomes expressing wild-type or dominantnegative tpc was done by transfecting huh cells with the indicated gfp-tagged constructs and imaging gfp fluorescence. assessment of pharmacological inhibition of endosomal motility was performed by treating huh cells with the indicated compounds for h at c prior to loading with fitc-dextran as described above. cells were imaged on an olympus ix microscope equipped with a piezo nanopositioning stage (prior scientific) using a planapochromat x/ . oil-immersion objective, using a spinning disk confocal unit (yokogawa, csu-x ) and an ixon emccd camera (andor). endosomal structures were tracked by acquiring a series of z-stacks over a time course of min. maximum intensity projections of z-stacks at each time point were generated, and the track particles addon was used in metamorph to assess movement of endosomes and produce trajectory plots. mers pseudovirus entry and subcellular trafficking was monitored using a luciferase assay [ , ] in which the pseudovirus genome was engineered to encode a luciferase that generates a luminescence signal after release into the cytoplasm, thereby reporting the efficiency of subcellular translocation events (receptor binding, internalization, endolysosomal trafficking, cytoplasmic release; fig. a ). to validate this assay in our hands, preliminary experiments were performed following infection in huh cells, using drugs previously shown to inhibit specific steps required for mers infectivity. ouabain, a cardiac glycoside inhibitor of early coronavirus internalization events [ ] inhibited mers-cov pseudovirus translocation when applied prior to pseudovirus addition (fig. b) . similarly, chlorpromazine -an inhibitor of clathrin-mediated endocytosis [ ] -resulted in lower luminescence values. inhibition was also observed with several drugs that elevate endolysosomal ph, including chloroquine, the lysomotropic weak base nh cl and bafilomycin a , an inhibitor of the vacuolar-type h + -atpase, [ , , , , ] . the cell permeable ca + -chelator bapta-am also inhibited mers-cov pseudovirus translocation (fig. b) . bafilomycin was a particularly effective inhibitor of mers-cov pseudovirus trafficking, reducing luminescence signal to background levels ( fig. b , [ ] ). this inhibitory effect was ablated when bafilomycin application was delayed h after viral addition (fig. c) . the inhibitory action of bapta-am was similarly timesensitive ( supplementary fig. ) , both results demonstrating that mers-cov pseudovirus translocation is rapid and regulated contemporaneously by the endolysosomal microenvironment. endolysosomal ion channels, including the two-pore channel family (tpc and tpc ) and the mucolipin family (trpml) of trp channels (fig. a) , regulate organellar microenvironment and trafficking dynamics [ , , ] . to examine their impact on mers-cov pseudovirus translocation, we applied both molecular and pharmacological tools to modulate individual channel activity. for rnai analyses, constructs were expressed in hek cells to capitalize upon the high transfectability of this cell line. experiments assaying mers infectivity in hek cells also necessitated co-expression of the mers-cov entry receptor dipeptidyl peptidase (hsdpp [ ] ,) owing to low endogenous hsdpp expression: luminescence levels were low in the presence of pseudovirus and endogenous dpp alone and expression of hsdpp resulted in ∼ -fold enhancement of luminescence signal ( fig. a , [ ] ). co-expression of a gfp control plasmid did not alter infectivity levels ( fig. a) . as negative and positive controls, transfection of a dominant negative rab construct (rab a[s n]) which impairs endocytic activity depressed mers-cov pseudovirus infectivity, whereas a constitutively active rab variant (rab a[q l]) potentiated mers-cov pseudovirus infectivity ( fig. a) . loss of function analyses were performed using multiple sirnas targeting individual endolysosomal ca + channels. discrete sirnas targeting tpc , tpc and trpml were transfected into cells and infectivity assays performed day after the final transfection. whereas two discrete control sirnas, or dual sirnas targeting trpml had little effect in this assay, knockdown of endogenous tpc or tpc markedly inhibited mers translocation ( fig. a) . co-transfection of tpc and tpc sirna did not enhance this inhibitory effect ( fig. a) . the penetrance of knockdown attained with these sirnas was evaluated by rt.pcr in the same set of transfections used for the pseudovirus infection assay. representative gels are shown (fig. b) together with associated densitometry from all additional experiments evidencing knockdown of individual channels (fig. b) . overexpression of tpc isoforms, a manipulation known to perturb endolysosomal trafficking, also impaired mers-cov pseudovirus translocation ( fig. a) . overexpression of trpml was without effect (fig. a) . this inhibitory effect was dependent on appropriate subcellular targeting of the active channel as overexpression of a functional tpc channel rerouted from acidic ca + stores to the cell surface (tpc pm, [ ] ) by deletion of the nh -terminal lysosomal targeting motif did not inhibit mers-cov pseudovirus infectivity (fig. a) . moreover, the inhibitory action of these manipulations was not caused by alterations in dpp expression, as similar dpp expression levels were observed across all conditions ( supplementary fig. ) . fig. . mers-pseudovirus assay validation. a, top, schematic representation of mers-pseudovirus infection pathway, highlighting individual processes during mers translocation (binding, internalization, trafficking, release) that are targets for pharmacotherapy. mers particle association with dpp (the host entry receptor) is followed by dpp -dependent internalization and trafficking through acidic ca + stores and release of luciferase-encoding rna into the cytoplasm of infected cells after fusion with internal membranes. note, the pseudovirus translocation assay used for these experiments is replication defective and reports only virus translocation. bottom, trafficking events through the endolysosomal system are regulated by the activity of ion channels resident within these acidic ca + stores, including members of the trpml (activated by pi( , )p ) and tpc family (activated by naadp and pi( , )p ). b, effect of drug incubation (spanning h prior to pseudovirus addition and for a h co-incubation after) on mers infectivity measured in terms of luminescence intensity measured days post-infection. drug concentrations were: ouabain ( nm), chlorpromazine ( μm), chloroquine ( μm), nh cl ( mm), bapta-am ( μm), bafilomycin ( nm). pseudovirus infectivity was unaffected by the presence of dmso ( . %) as drug vehicle. c, delayed exposure to bafilomycin ( †, h exposure, h after pseudovirus addition) attenuated the inhibitory effect of bafilomycin ( nm) on mers infectivity. data from each experiment are normalized to untreated control samples, and values represent mean ± sem from three or more independent experiments. p-values, ** p < . , * p < . , calculated relative to dmso sample. colocalization between tpc isoforms and the mers-cov spike protein was then examined by immunofluorescence staining against the c -epitope tagged spike protein. these experiments were performed using huh cells owing to the fact that this cell line expresses higher endogenous levels of hsdpp (∼ -fold, compared with hek cells [ ] ). this obviates the need for hsdpp transfection and allows examination mers-cov pseudovirus trafficking in a native cell line. while no signal was evident in huh cells unexposed to pseudovirus, mers-cov spike protein could be resolved in vesicular structures in cells previously incubated with pseudovirus ( h, °c) and fixed min after a °c incubation (fig. ) . co-transfection with rab -gfp or rab -gfp evidenced mers cov spike protein co-localization within a subset of both rab -gfp and rab -gfp positive vesicles (supplementary fig. ) . expression of tpc constructs (tpc -gfp, tpc -gfp) evidenced colocalization between the mers cov spike protein with both tpc (biased toward lysosomes [ , ] ) and tpc (biased toward endosomes [ , ] ) in all samples examined (fig. ) . colocalization between mers-cov spike protein and gfp-trpml was also observed (fig. ) . collectively these data are consistent with mers pseudovirus translocation through tpc positive endolysosomal organelles (fig. ) , with the properties and/or dynamics of these structures that are permissive for mers-cov pseudovirus translocation being regulated by endogenous tpc activity (fig. ). can tpc modulators attenuate mers trafficking through the endolysosomal system? tpc activity is regulated by the endolysosomal phospholipid pi( , )p , as well as the potent ca + releasing second messenger naadp (fig. a) . lipid modulators, naadp antagonists and a range of voltage-operated ion channel blockers have all been shown to regulate tpc activity [ , , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . to examine the effects of tpc regulators on mers-cov pseudovirus translocation, a fixed concentration ( μm) primary drug screen was performed in huh cells, with the goal of identifying plasma membrane-permeable compounds with inhibitory activity on mers-cov pseudovirus translocation. the effects of naadp antagonists/pore blockers (fig. ) and lipid modulators (supplementary fig. ) are described in turn below. tpcs show affinity for a broad range of voltage-operated channel ligands, possibly reflecting their ancient evolutionary pedigree as antecedents of four domain voltage-gated ion channels [ ] . consistent with these observations, several na + channel blockers (procaine, benzocaine) and voltage-operated ca + antagonists (verapamil, nicardipine and nimodipine) attenuated mers-cov pseudovirus translocation (fig. a) . of particular relevance were the effects of bisbenzylisoquinoline alkaloids, compounds consisting of dual benzylisoquinoline moieties linked together by ether bridge(s) (fig. b, supplementary fig. . mers-cov spike protein colocalizes with endolysosomal ion channel positive structures. huh cells were transfected with tpc -gfp (top, green), tpc -gfp (middle, green) and gfp-trpml (bottom, green) and subsequently infected with mers-pseudovirus (red). cells were fixed, immunostained for mers-cov spike protein (spike-af ) and visualized by confocal microscopy. white boxes in overlay panel (right) show enlarged regions to assess colocalization between the red and green channel. scalebars, μm (left column) and μm (inset, right). fig. ) . these compounds are of interest in light of the recent discovery that tetrandrine, a bisbenzylisoquinoline alkaloid natural product, blocked tpc activity and potently inhibited ebola virus infectivity in vitro and in vivo [ ] . therefore, we screened several bisbenzylisoquinoline alkaloids from two different groupings (fig. b) tubocurarinelike ligands where the isoquinoline pairs were non-adjacent within the bisbenzylisoquinoline ring structure (abab, 'head-to-tail'), and tetrandrine-like ligands, where the isoquinoline groups are directly conjoined (aabb, 'head-to-head and tail-to-tail'). these two groups are discriminated by shading intensity in fig. a&b and structures of individual compounds are provided in supplementary data (supplementary fig. ) . several structure-activity insights were clear from the screening dataset. first, the tubocurarine-like bisbenzylisoquinolines (tubocurarine, cycleanine, metocurine) were considerably less effective compared to the tetrandrine-like ligands (tetrandrine, thaligine and fangchinoline) which strongly impaired mers-cov pseudovirus translocation (fig. a&b) . second, the presence of individual methoxy moieties around the compound ring structure markedly influenced the penetrance of individual ligands, with examples of ring substitutions that preserved (fangchinoline, thaligine) or decreased (berbamine, herandezine) drug effectiveness relative to the anti-ebola prototype tetrandrine. finally, fangchinoline, and the stereoisomer thaligine ('isofangchinoline') were the most effective compounds at inhibiting mers translocation in these assays. compounds from the initial screen were further evaluated in full concentration-response relationships for inhibition of mers-cov pseudovirus infectivity (fig. c) . the relative sensitivities to screened compounds fangchinoline (ic = . ± . μm) > tetrandrine (ic = . ± . μm) > berbamine (ic = . ± . μm) were consistent with the primary screen (fixed concentration, μm). cellular viability was measured in parallel and used to calculate a 'selectivity index' for these selected compounds. calculation of the selectivity index (cytotoxic concentration 'cc ' for cellular toxicity / ic for mers inhibition) underscored the improved performance of fangchinoline over tetrandrine (fig. c, inset) . these data support an efficacy of specific bisbenzylisoquinoline alkaloids as agents for targeting fig. . pharmacological blockade of mers pseudovirus infectivity. a, single-concentration drug screening ( μm) to identify ion channel modulators that inhibit mers pseudovirus translocation. huh cells were treated with indicated drugs for h, starting h prior to incubation with mers pseudovirus (i.e. a h co-incubation). drugs represent known modulators of intracellular trpml (ml-sa ) and tpc channels (ned- , voltage-operated channel blockers), as well as a series of structurally related bisbenzylisoquinolines encompassing the known tpc blocker tetrandrine. screened bisbenzylisoquinolines comprised two groupings: tubocurarine-like compounds (light dashed) and tetrandrine-like compounds (heavy dashed). p-values, ** p < . , * p < . . b, structures representing the two groups of bisbenzylisoquinolines highlighted in 'a'. d confomers were downloaded from pubchem and displayed in pubchem d viewer v . . c, complete concentration response relationships for inhibition of mers translocation by fangchinoline, tetrandrine, berbamine or ned- . inset, selectivity index (cc for cellular toxicity/ ic for pseudovirus translocation) for indicated compounds. d, inhibition of ca + signals in u os cells microinjected with naadp ( nm pipette concentration) after drug treatment ( . % dmso, μm ned- , μm tetrandrine, μm fangchinoline, min preincubation). traces represent average of independent injections, error bars represent s.e.m. to assess the ability of the same compounds to inhibit naadp-evoked ca + release, confocal ca + imaging experiments were performed in human u os cells microinjected with naadp. preincubation of cells with tetrandrine or fangchinoline ( μm) inhibited ca + signals triggered by naadp microinjection ( ± % and ± % inhibition for tetrandrine and fangchinoline, respectively), evidencing fangchinoline as an effective inhibitor of both naadp-evoked ca + release (fig. d) and mers-cov pseudovirus translocation (fig. a&c) . no antiviral activity was observed following inhibition of ip -or cadpr-evoked ca + release (fig. in [ ] ). the inhibition of naadp-evoked ca + release and mers-cov pseudovirus translocation by these compounds was not due to lysosomotropism, as we found no significant decrease in lysosomal ca + content or disruption of lysosomal ph upon addition of these drug (supplemental fig. ) . finally, the effects of two other cell permeable endolysosomal ion channel modulators were examined: the naadp antagonist ned- [ ] , and the trpml agonist ml-sa [ ] . ned- showed poor inhibitory activity in the mers translocation assays (fig. a) , which was surprising as it is widely employed as a naadp blocker. however, in our hands, trans-ned- (up to ∼ μm) also failed to potently inhibit naadp-evoked ca + release in either mammalian cells (fig. d ) or sea urchin homogenate (fig. in [ ] ), suggesting some caution in interpretation of results obtained with commercially sourced ned- . the activity of the cell permeable trpml agonist ml-sa , which did not modulate mers-cov pseudovirus infectivity (fig. a) , was confirmed as application to mammalian cell lines elicited clear ca + transients (data not shown). tpc channels are also regulated by bioactive lipids, including pi ( , )p [ ] and sphingosine for tpc [ ] . addition of the pikfyve inhibitor ym to reduce pi( , )p levels, a phosphoinositide which activates tpc channels, decreased mers-cov pseudovirus translocation ( supplementary fig. a&b) . sphingosine is generated through the action of acid ceramidase (ac, asah ) on ceramide, a product of acid sphingomyelinase (asm, smpd ) activity (supplementary fig. ). acid sphingomyelinase is required for ebola infection [ ] , although the roles of asm and ac have not been studied in mers-cov pseudovirus infectivity. in huh cells exposed to pseudovirus, addition of the antidepressant drugs desipramine or amitriptyline, both of which act as functional inhibitors of asm [ , ] , inhibited mers-cov pseudovirus translocation (supplementary fig. b ). concentration-response curves demonstrated potent inhibition (ic = nm for desipramine, ic = . μm for amitriptyline) with little deleterious effects on cellular viability over the concentration range studied ( supplementary fig. c ). pharmacological inhibition of ac, to reduce sphingosine levels, also reduced luminescence levels ( supplementary fig. b ). in contrast, incubation with fumonisin b , an inhibitor of ceramide synthase enzymes localized in the endoplasmic reticulum, which utilize sphingosine to synthesize ceramide, did not significantly decrease luminescence values. discrete sirnas targeting smpd or asah inhibited mers translocation ( supplementary fig. d) , and successful knockdown of these enzymes was validated ( supplementary fig. e) . therefore, inhibition of enzymes upstream, but not downstream, of the tpc activator sphingosine impaired mers-cov pseudovirus infectivity. in summary, these data demonstrate dysregulation of known lipid tpc regulators also impeded mers pseudovirus translocation. tpc activity changes both the cytosolic and luminal microenvironment within the acidic ca + stores. local, cytoplasmic ion fluxes potentially regulate vesicular dynamics and fusion events [ , ] to impact mers-cov pseudovirus progression through the endolysosomal system. tpc triggered changes in luminal ca + and ph ( , ) may also regulate mers-cov pseudovirus translocation by regulating proprotein convertase activity needed for proteolytic activation of the spike protein and thereby mers-cov fusion and release into the cytoplasm ( , ) . therefore, we examined the effects of fangchinoline on both these cell biological aspects of mers-cov pseudovirus translocation. first, we assessed the effects of drug incubation on mers-cov pseudovirus progression through tpc-positive structures. treatment of huh cells with fangchinoline ( μm) increased mers particle colocalization with both tpc -gfp and tpc -gfp labelled structures (fig. a) . quantification of colocalization using pearson's correlation coefficient [ ] from single cell regions of interest in fixed samples showed that fangchinoline treatment increased levels of pixel-to-pixel covariance across mers and tpc-positive structures (fig. a, inset) . analysis of mers-cov spike protein colocalization with tpcs using a different algorithm (manders' coefficient) also demonstrated a similar increase in colocalization after fangchinoline treatment (fig. b) . these results are suggestive of a drug-evoked blockade of endolysosomal mers-cov pseudovirus translocation events. in live cell imaging experiments, it was also evident that fangchinoline treatment impacted the mobility of fluorescent dextran labelled endosomal structures. single particle tracking analysis revealed that incubation of cells in fangchinoline, or tetrandrine, decreased the mobility of dextran-labelled endosomal structures (fig. c ). impaired movement of tpc labelled structures was also seen in cells overexpressing the pore-dead mutant tpc [l p]-gfp, but not tpc -gfp, suggesting that drugevoked inhibition of tpc activity underpinned this effect on endosomal motility (fig. d) . next, we assessed the effects of drug incubation, or tpc knockdown, on the activity of furin, a ca + -dependent serine endoprotease. for these experiments, the kinetics of furin-evoked cleavage of a fluorogenic substrate (boc-rvrr-amc) was measured in cell lysates under different experimental conditions. in huh cells, pretreatment of cells with fangchinoline ( μm, h) markedly reduced the rate of substrate cleavage ( . ± . % of control, fig. a&b ). in contrast, inhibition was not observed during acute drug treatment, demonstrating fangchinoline did not act as a direct furin inhibitor (fig. a&b) . similar assays were repeated in hek cells treated with the validated sirnas against tpc or tpc (fig. c) . knockdown of either tpc isoform impaired furin activity, decreasing the initial rate of substrate cleavage by . ± . % (tpc ) or . ± . % (tpc , fig. d ). these data show that pharmacological or molecular inhibition of tpc function impaired furin activity. consequently, we tested whether furin overexpression could rescue drug inhibition of mers-cov pseudovirus translocation. overexpression of furin markedly attenuated drugevoked inhibition of mers-cov pseudovirus infectivity in huh cells (fig. e) . the inhibition observed with tetrandrine and fangchinoline in control experiments (> % inhibition) was considerably attenuated by transfection with exogenous furin (< % inhibition, fig. e ). overexpression of the serine protease tmprss to bias mers-cov pseudovirus translocation to direct entry via the plasma membrane also rendered both bisbenzylisoquinoline alkaloids ineffective at blocking mers-cov pseudovirus infectivity (fig. f) . the lack of inhibitory action of tetrandrine or fangchinoline after direct cell entry at the plasma membrane rule out the possibility that these compounds act processes downstream of membrane fusion, including transcription or translation. these data confirm that tetrandrine and fangchinoline act by blocking the trafficking and processing of internalized mers-cov pseudovirus particles within the endolysosomal system. mers-cov infections are clinically challenging and are associated with high mortality rates (∼ - %, [ , ] ) due to disease severity and lack of effective pharmacotherapy. here, we demonstrate that endolysosomal tpcs may represent a druggable host target for mers-cov antiviral therapy based on data showing that inhibition of endogenous tpc activity via either molecular or pharmacological methods impaired g.s. gunaratne et al. cell calcium ( ) [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] the cellular translocation of a mers-cov pseudovirus. such findings merit consideration of the role of tpcs as host-factors in supporting mers-cov infectivity, and the potential druggability of these ion channels to source novel antivirals. these issues are discussed below. tpcs are evolutionarily ancient ion channels, resident within the endolysosomal system, where they fulfill homeostatic trafficking functions supporting internalized substrate distribution [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the mechanistic basis of how these channels regulate endolysosomal trafficking events has been the subject of varied speculation, but it seems clear that perturbing tpc localization, or their activity away from the physiological set-point, disrupts endolysosomal morphology and substrate trafficking. their importance in subcellular transport extends beyond endogenous substrates, as impactfully highlighted in the context of ebola infectivity [ ] . a role for tpcs in supporting viral translocation is further evidenced here in the context of mers, another single stranded rna virus. investigation of the role of tpcs in other viral infections and in other paradigms of infectious disease, where pathogens exploit or reside within endolysosomal derived organelles is merited. how do tpcs support mers passage from cell surface to cytoplasm? fig. shows that tpc activity is necessary to support trafficking events and passage of pseudovirus particles through tpc-positive compartments in the endolysosomal trafficking pathway. effects on particle progression and processing are likely interdependent: tpcs also regulate furin activity (fig. ) . tpc activity is known to alter both endolysosomal ca + content and ph [ , ] and both factors regulate the activity of proprotein convertases (such as furin) required for proteolytic activation of the spike protein, mers-cov fusion activity and cytoplasmic translocation [ , ] . dysregulation of the luminal microenvironment (ph, ca + ) owing to changes in tpc activity may then impair mers-cov fusion depending on protease levels, or diversity of protease expression, within a given cell type. the inhibitory and non-additive effects of tpc (biased toward endosomes) and tpc (biased toward lysosomes) knockdown ( fig. a) suggest that mers translocation occurs throughout proximal and distal compartments within the acidic ca + stores. prior investigations of mers infectivity suggest fusion and cytoplasmic translocation occurs from early endosomes [ ] , while more recent studies demonstrate inhibition of cathepsin l, a lysosomal cysteine protease, blocks mers infectivity [ ] , both studies consistent with the demonstrated role for both tpc and tpc (fig. ) . a further conclusion that can be drawn from the current data is that the role of tpcs appears selective: manipulation of trpml function, another 'acidic ca + store' ion channel, failed to impair mers-cov pseudovirus infectivity. these data suggest sub-specialization in endolysosomal channel function and/or trafficking pathways, as tpc inhibition may selectively impair only a subset of transported substrates rather than effect a global disruption of endolysosomal functiona feature that may prove critical in advancing the viability of tpcs as selective drug targets. selectivity in drug action against tpcs was also evident through a correlation between the extent of inhibition of naadp-evoked ca + signals and impairment of mers translocation (fig. ) , a relationship which is evidenced further in the companion paper [ ] . further drugs that inhibited mers pseudovirus translocation do not inhibit other intracellular ca + mobilization pathways ( fig. in [ ] ), even though the role of tpcs in amplifying ca + signals through other intracellular ca + channels beyond the endolysosomal system is well appreciated. in short, the data support a selective, spatially autonomous role for tpcs within acidic organelles in supporting mers infectivity. are tpcs druggable targets for antiviral development? this is a topical issue given renewed interest in repurposing ca + channel ligands to impair viral infectivity [ , , ] , although most attention to date has been directed toward cell surface targets such as voltage-operated ca + channels (voccs). however many vocc blockers also inhibit naadp-evoked ca + release activity in the high micromolar range [ ] , likely due to the pedigree of the tpc structural blueprint as an antecedent for cell surface voltage-gated channel architecture [ ] . tpc blockade may therefore constitute a component of previously described antiviral vocc antagonist action. the promiscuous pharmacology of tpcs may nevertheless prove a challenge for discovering selective, high affinity tpc ligands. however, the emerging capacity to (i) interrogate cell biological assays that depend on tpc function (such as explored here), (ii) miniaturize naadp-evoked ca + release screening platforms (see companion paper, [ ] ) and (iii) integrate structurebased approaches based upon the recent resolution of tpc crystal structures [ ] [ ] [ ] , will collectively spur opportunities to identify novel leads and optimizing ligand affinity and selectivity for these channels. in this context, clear structure-activity correlations emerge from our study of the bisbenzylisoquinoline alkaloids. these compounds are a well-studied natural product group with hundreds of unique compounds described, some displaying activity against other pathogenic eukaryotes [ , ] . bisbenzylisoquinoline alkaloids are classified based on the number, type and orientation of ring linkages [ ] [ ] [ ] . while the compounds studied here provide only limited insight into the structural diversity of this series, representing compounds with two diphenyl ether linkages differing in their orientation ('head-to-tail' versus 'headto-head' and 'tail-to-tail'), nevertheless clear insight into structure-activity relationships impacting mers translocation/intracellular ca + release properties was discernable (fig. ) providing impetus for further structural exploration of the bisbenzylisoquinoline scaffold. this should encompass compounds with differing number of ring linkages (effect of ring flexibility), the position and nature of the ring substitutions, as well as the stereochemistry around the dual asymmetric carbons. we note the potency of tetrandrine against mers was lower than previously reported for tetrandrine against ebola (tens of nm in vitro, [ ] ). the improved performance of fangchinoline over tetrandrine in this particular assay supports future optimization of structure activity relationships in this compound series against specific pathogens (fig. d) . also noteworthy in our experiments was the efficacy and good selectivity indices seen with the fda-approved serotonin reuptake inhibitors, amitriptyline and desipramine ( supplementary fig. ). further investigation of the interrelationship between the antiviral activity of ssris ( supplementary fig. , [ ] ), endolysosomal bioactive lipid content (these compounds act as functional inhibitors of acid sphingomyelinase [ , ] ) and effects on tpc activity is also warranted. in conclusion, these findings support a unique role for tpcs and naadp-sensitive ca + release in mers infectivity, providing further support for exploration and development of tpc ligands as novel antiviral therapeutics. none. fig. . pharmacological and molecular inhibition of tpcs reduces furin activity. a, huh cells were treated with vehicle or fangchinoline ( μm), lysates were harvested from cells, and furin activity was assessed using fluorogenic substrate, boc-rvrr-amc. drug was added either h prior to harvesting (pretreated) or immediately before addition of substrate (acute). representative traces are shown, linear range used to calculate furin substrate cleavage (rfu/min) is shown using dashed lines. b, quantification of cumulative data set of furin activity in pharmacologically treated huh lysates. p-values, ** p < . relative to dmso control c, hek cells were treated with the indicated sirnas, lysates were collected and assayed for furin activity. representative traces are shown, with linear range of substrate cleavage denoted using dashed lines. d, quantification of cumulative data set of furin activity using sirna treated hek cells, p-values: ** p < . , relative to non-targeting sirna treated samples. e, effect of furin or tmprss overexpression on pharmacological blockade of mers-pseudovirus infectivity, pvalues: ** p < . relative to empty vector transfected dmso treated controls, ## p < . relative to empty vector transfected samples treated with tetrandrine or fangchinoline. f, effect of tetrandrine or fangchinoline treatment on huh cells overexpressing tmprss . isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: another zoonotic betacoronavirus causing sarslike disease coronaviruses -drug discovery and therapeutic options dipeptidyl 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structure, inhibition and regulation of two-pore channel tpc from arabidopsis thaliana structural insights into the voltage and phospholipid activation of the mammalian tpc channel in vitro antiplasmodial, antiamoebic, and cytotoxic activities of a series of bisbenzylisoquinolgulation of the lysosomal two-pore channel- bine alkaloids antimycobacterial activity of bisbenzylisoquinoline alkaloids from tiliacora triandra against multidrug-resistant isolates of mycobacterium tuberculosis the bisbenzylisoquinoline alkaloids bisbenzylisoquinoline alkaloikds -a review supplementary material related to this article can be found, in the online version, at doi:https://doi.org/ . /j.ceca. . . . key: cord- - qfeoayb authors: lin, leesa; mccloud, rachel f.; bigman, cabral a.; viswanath, kasisomayajula title: tuning in and catching on? examining the relationship between pandemic communication and awareness and knowledge of mers in the usa date: - - journal: j public health (oxf) doi: . /pubmed/fdw sha: doc_id: cord_uid: qfeoayb background: large-scale influenza outbreaks over the last decade, such as sars and h n , have brought to global attention the importance of emergency risk communication and prompted the international community to develop communication responses. since pandemic outbreaks are relatively infrequent, there is a dearth of evidence addressing the following questions: (i) have the resources invested in strategic and routine communication for past pandemic outbreaks yielded public health preparedness benefits? (ii) have past efforts sensitized people to pay attention to new pandemic threats? the middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) that was followed closely by major media outlets in the usa provides an opportunity to examine the relationship between exposure to public communication about epidemics and public awareness and knowledge about new risks. methods: in december, , we surveyed a nationally representative sample of american adults and examined the associations between people's awareness to prior pandemics and their awareness of and knowledge about mers. results: awareness of prior pandemics was significantly associated with awareness and knowledge of mers. the most common sources from which people first heard about mers were also identified. conclusions: communication inequalities were observed between racial/ethnic and socioeconomic positions, suggesting a need for more effective pandemic communication. public health practitioners face unique challenges when developing and implementing risk communication in times of emergencies, as there is limited information on the nature of the threat (including limited data regarding mortality and morbidity, transmission modes, and prevention measures), limited response time, the potential for severe health and economic consequences, media hype and public concern. all of these factors coalesce and intertwine with the diverse social and individual characteristics of the audience when developing emergency risk communication strategy. - the need for effective communication plans that enable coherent, credible and timely communication and community engagement during public health emergencies is increasingly being seen as integral to emergency response and planning. , one area where emergency response and planning is key is with large-scale disease outbreaks. over the last decade, there has been a succession of large-scale outbreaks of influenza, including the sars, avian flu (h n ), new bird flu (h n ) and h n pandemics. these outbreaks raised fears among both scientists and laypeople that an emerging influenza outbreak could repeat the devastation of the spanish flu of . governments and public health agencies recognize the importance of emergency risk communication and have invested significant resources in the development and implementation of public health and communication responses to these outbreaks. the stakes of conducting emergency risk communication are even higher during the early stages of an outbreak, as a treatment and/or vaccine is unlikely to be available for at least several weeks or months after the start of a pandemic. emergency risk communication, such as raising awareness of the disease and promoting health prevention behaviors like hand washing, social distancing and cautioning vigilance among others, plays a vital role in controlling disease transmission. , , one key importance is to study the association between social and individual factors and communication inequalities-differences among people from different socioeconomic positions (seps), racial, ethnic and geographical backgrounds, to understand how individuals access, interpret and act on messages they have received , , - and to identify the best ways to quickly and effectively reach diverse populations with important preventive information. for example, low sep individuals have been found to have lower levels of awareness and knowledge regarding pandemics, leading to poorer behavioral responses when dealing with an outbreak. , - however, as pandemic outbreaks are relatively infrequent, there has been a lack of evidence assessing whether the efforts and resources invested in the strategic risk communication during past pandemic outbreaks yielded public health benefits that improved preparedness. gaining an understanding of whether or not the messages emphasized during the response to previous pandemics helped the public, particularly members of low sep populations, become more aware and better prepared is invaluable. therefore, the question that remains to be answered is: does an awareness of past epidemic risk communication help people become more health aware of an emerging epidemic, or, on the contrary, have the past few pandemic communication experiences created a 'boy cries wolf ' effect, making people less attentive to information provided concerning pandemic outbreaks? , in late , the middle east respiratory syndrome (mers), a viral illness caused by a coronavirus, was first reported in saudi arabia. although this particular virus had a very low probability of impacting the usa, major media outlets followed it closely, providing the american general public with an opportunity to become familiar with the outbreak. in this study, we assessed people's awareness of previous pandemic outbreaks and how that awareness affected their awareness and knowledge of mers. we identified other predictors of mers awareness and knowledge and investigated the information sources from which people who had heard of mers first learned about it. we also identified a subgroup of people who had have not heard of most or all risk communication messages regarding five pandemics (i.e. sars, avian flu (h n ), new bird flu (h n ), h n , and mers) which have erupted in the past decade. the analyses in this paper will help inform and calibrate strategic risk communication during a future pandemic. the data for this study, collected from to december , were drawn from a nationally representative sample of us adults aged and older. the survey instrument was adapted from previously tested communication surveys we developed based on focus groups, cognitive testing results and the national cancer institute health information national trends survey. - respondents participated in knowledge networks' knowledgepanel w and were recruited using a dual sampling frame, which is a combination of random digit dial and address-based sampling, thus allowing for sampling of individuals with no telephone landlines. once recruited into the study, participants completed an internetbased survey in their home including questions about demographics, pandemic awareness and mers-specific topics. households were provided with internet access and necessary hardware if needed. post-stratification weights were used to adjust for non-coverage and non-responder bias. the survey included an online field experiment that is not the focus of this analysis, including the experimental conditions as a covariate did not materially alter the pattern of findings and therefore they are not reported in this analysis. independent variables † awareness of previous pandemic outbreaks was assessed by asking the participants: 'have you heard of [ ] sars, [ ] h n or swine flu, [ ] bird flu or avian flu (h n ), [ ] new bird flu or influenza a(h n ) and [ ] mers (also called mers-cov, middle east respiratory syndrome, novel coronavirus, or ncov), in the past years?' two awareness variables were created based on respondents' answers: † awareness of pandemic outbreaks prior to mers: respondents were categorized into three groups based on their response to diseases ( ) to ( ): low (heard of outbreaks), medium (heard of three outbreaks) and high (heard of all four outbreaks). † low pandemic awareness: including mers and the four prior pandemics listed above, those who have heard of only one or none of any of them were labeled to be having low pandemic awareness. † age and gender. † race/ethnicity: non-hispanic white, non-hispanic black and hispanic † sep was measured by their household income ($ , $ - , $ - , $ ) and education (bachelor's degree or higher, some college, high school, less than high school). for the purpose of this study, to measure respondents' knowledge about mers and to ensure its accuracy and equal accessibility to all, we referred to centers for disease control and to account for randomly guessed responses, correct answers are discounted if the respondents also selected incorrect answers. a score of was given if the following correct statements were checked: [someone can get mers from] 'being in close contact with someone who has mers (within arm's length of someone)' and 'no, there is not a vaccine against mers' and none of the following wrong options were checked: [someone can get mers from] 'eating chicken', 'coming in contact with chicken', 'eating pigs', 'coming in contact with pigs' or 'none of the above.' a score of was given if either one of the two correct statements and none of the wrong ones were checked. a score of was given to any other combination of responses. † source of initial mers information: participants were asked to report the source where they first learned about mers. a descriptive analysis was conducted to explore the characteristics of the surveyed sample (table ). in table , logistic and ordered logistic regressions, respectively, were conducted to evaluate the associations between awareness of previous pandemic outbreaks in the past years, socio-demographic factors and (i) awareness of mers (model ) and (ii) knowledge levels about mers (model ). using cross-tabulations and x , we identified the associations between respondents' socio-demographic characteristics and the sources from which they first received the information about mers. lastly, we ran logistic regression to determine the predictors of having very little awareness of previous major pandemic outbreaks (including mers) in the past decade. the associations between low awareness of previous pandemic outbreaks and socio-demographic factors were examined, and the results are presented in table . stata w version was used for all analyses. there were respondents who participated in the study, reflecting a response rate of . %. these respondents had a high awareness of the four pandemic outbreaks that affected international communities prior to mers. the prior pandemics were sars, h n , avian flu (h n ) and the new bird flu (h n ). more than half of the sample ( %) had heard of all four of them and about ninety percent ( %) were aware of at least two outbreaks. specifically, the recent h n pandemics are the best known outbreaks among the sample population, % (n ¼ ) of them have heard of h n , followed by avian flu (h n ) ( %, n ¼ ), sars ( %, n ¼ ) and the new bird flu (h n ) ( %, n ¼ ). only one-third of the respondents had heard of mers ( %, n ¼ ); among those who have heard of mers, more than half ( %) received a knowledge score of , one quarter had a knowledge score of , and the rest ( %), those who had no or incorrect knowledge about how mers spreads, received a score of . more information on sample characteristics is presented in table . to inform future pandemics risk communication strategies for future pandemics, we further investigated the following: (i) among those who had heard of mers, what were the sources they used to first learn about it? (ii) among those who have low awareness of pandemics, who are they and what are their background characteristics? our data showed that national news network ( %) and local news television stations ( %), family and friends ( %) and internet-based search engine such as google or bing ( %) are the most commonly used information sources from which the respondents first learned about mers. social media such as facebook, twitter, googleþ, etc. had only minimal contributions as sources of pandemic information (, %). forty percent of those who had heard of mers said that they could not recall where they first learned about the virus. people with low awareness of pandemics in the past decade among the surveyed population, % (n ¼ ) had never heard of any of the pandemic outbreaks which had occurred in the past decade, including mers and the four pandemics prior to it, as discussed above, and % (n ¼ ) had only heard of one outbreak, of which most respondents reported hearing of h n . the logistic regression analysis, seen in what is already known on this topic? the need for effective communication plans that enable coherent, credible and timely communication and community engagement during public health emergencies is increasingly being seen as integral to emergency response and planning. , taking population diversity into consideration when developing risk communication plans has been shown to improve responding agencies' risk communication capabilities and, ultimately, the effectiveness of the response, especially in communities with limited local capacity. , this lesson was reinforced by the experience of recent international pandemic outbreaks of diseases and viruses such as the sars, avian flu and h n when the constructs of strategic risk communication such as public awareness, media exposure and knowledge about specific threats were further identified and assessed. , , , , - studies confirmed that awareness of media reporting about current threats, general news exposure, people's attitudes and beliefs and people's knowledge about a specific threat are positively associated with a person's knowledge about a specific threat and their adoption of recommended prevention behaviors. , , , - main finding of this study in this study, awareness of prior pandemics was significantly associated with both awareness of a new threat, mers, and higher knowledge levels regarding it; racial disparities were found in awareness and knowledge levels of mers. there was no evidence that having heard about pandemics that occurred prior to mers had a 'boy cries wolf ' effect, in which people tuned out information about mers. however, we found that individuals who were younger, had lower income or had less than a bachelor's degree were more likely to report having no awareness of previous pandemics compared with their counterparts. national and local tv networks were the most commonly used information sources from which people first heard about mers. this finding is consistent with previous studies, in which national news networks and/or local news television stations were found to be the most effective channels through which to convey public health messages, while the impact of social media was found to be surprisingly small. what this study adds? increasing awareness alone may not be enough to prompt preventive action, particularly among diverse groups. pandemic communication need to contain clear, comprehensible information about the pandemic offered through trusted, commonly accessed media channels, such as national and local tv networks. customizing messages about risk to one's intended audience and communicating these messages to them via appropriate information channels are instrumental to running an effective communication campaign. - it is notable that minority participants had both lower awareness of and less correct knowledge about mers and that individuals with lower education and lower income were less likely to have an awareness of any pandemic, indicating the presence of communication inequalities in pandemic awareness among these subgroups. more research is needed on the awareness and knowledge of future pandemics in a diverse low sep sample to best understand the impact of communication inequalities and how to address them through targeted campaigns. the current findings indicate a need to pay attention to segments that may not be actively seeking out information and to deliver it via channels that they use. given the fact that few people reported that they had first learned about mers through social media, our data suggested that national media such as tv are still important and social media, at least in times of pandemics, appear to be less effective. emergency risk communication has to be strategic, evidence-based and must take into account potential communication inequality. the data for this study are cross-sectional in nature and thus limit us from drawing a causal relationship between the independent and dependent variables. nevertheless, this study finds a link between having heard of prior pandemics and knowledge and awareness of a subsequent pandemic (i.e. mers) that should be further investigated. future studies using experimental, longitudinal or case -control designs could help provide evidence for causal relationships. although the data rely on self-reporting, our survey items were adopted from widely tested national surveys and validated by cognitive testing. the response rate for the survey was . %. poststratification weights were used to adjust for non-coverage and non-responder bias. in the case of the / h n flu pandemics, mexicans and other latinos living in the usa were more likely to be stigmatized by non-hispanic americans as carriers of the virus, partly because of news reports on the outbreak's alleged origin in mexican pig farms. hispanic americans also reported higher levels of risk perceptions of the flu. therefore, in light of the origin of mers, it could be useful for emergency risk communication scientists to further investigate the possible association between knowledge and awareness levels of the mers virus and subsets of populations in the usa with potential personal or family ties to the outbreak regions (e.g. middle eastern migrants). this study found that awareness of past pandemics was associated with higher awareness of and correct knowledge about the / mers outbreak. despite these associations, the overall level of awareness of this new threat was low and communication inequalities were observed between racial/ ethnic and low sep groups. results suggest that awareness of past pandemics might indicate that an individual is more likely to have heard about a new threat, and that more research is needed to discover barriers to awareness that may be present in lower sep samples. emergency risk communication has to be strategic, evidence based and must take into account potential communication inequality. this project was funded by the 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population along the mississippi gulf coast? trust influences response to public health messages during a bioterrorist event public risk perceptions and preventive behaviors during the h n influenza pandemic key: cord- -oudj q authors: al-tayib, omar a. title: an overview of the most significant zoonotic viral pathogens transmitted from animal to human in saudi arabia date: - - journal: pathogens doi: . /pathogens sha: doc_id: cord_uid: oudj q currently, there has been an increasing socioeconomic impact of zoonotic pathogens transmitted from animals to humans worldwide. recently, in the arabian peninsula, including in saudi arabia, epidemiological data indicated an actual increase in the number of emerging and/or reemerging cases of several viral zoonotic diseases. data presented in this review are very relevant because saudi arabia is considered the largest country in the peninsula. we believe that zoonotic pathogens in saudi arabia remain an important public health problem; however, more than million muslim pilgrims from around islamic countries arrive yearly at makkah for the hajj season and/or for the umrah. therefore, for health reasons, several countries recommend vaccinations for various zoonotic diseases among preventive protocols that should be complied with before traveling to saudi arabia. however, there is a shortage of epidemiological data focusing on the emerging and reemerging of zoonotic pathogens transmitted from animal to humans in different densely populated cities and/or localities in saudi arabia. therefore, further efforts might be needed to control the increasing impacts of zoonotic viral disease. also, there is a need for a high collaboration to enhance the detection and determination of the prevalence, diagnosis, control, and prevention as well as intervention and reduction in outbreaks of these diseases in saudi arabia, particularly those from other countries. persons in the health field including physicians and veterinarians, pet owners, pet store owners, exporters, border guards, and people involved in businesses related to animal products have adopted various preventive strategies. some of these measures might pave the way to highly successful prevention and control results on the different transmission routes of these viral zoonotic diseases from or to saudi arabia. moreover, the prevention of these viral pathogens depends on socioeconomic impacts, available data, improved diagnosis, and highly effective therapeutics or prophylaxis. rudolf virchow , one of the foremost th century german leaders in medicine and pathology [ ] , noted a relationship between human diseases and animals and then introduced the term "zoonosis" (plural: zoonoses) in [ ] . later, the world health organization (who) in specified that "zoonoses are those diseases and infections which are naturally transmitted between vertebrate animals and man" [ ] . venkatesan and co-authors reported that the term zoonosis is derived from the greek word "zoon" = animal and "noso" = disease [ ] . zoonotic pathogens causing different kinds of diseases are of major public health issues worldwide [ ] . these zoonotic diseases include frequent mixing of different animal species in the markets in densely populated areas, and the human intrusions into the natural habitats of animals, have facilitated the emergence of novel viruses. the most important zoonotic viral diseases of which eight were diagnosed (in dead or diseased animals or through antibody detection) on the arabian peninsula over the last years include rabies, middle east respiratory syndrome (mers-cov), influenza virus (ifv), alkhurma hemorrhagic fever, crimean-congo hemorrhagic fever (cchf), rift valley fever (rvf), west nile fever (wnv), and dengue fever virus. among these eight zoonotic viral diseases, two (alkhurma and mers-cov) were first reported in a patient in and , respectively in saudi arabia [ , ] . these two were transmitted later to several other countries, not only in the middle east but also to africa, asia, and europe. rabies is an almost invariably fatal zoonotic disease, which belongs to the genus lyssavirus of the rna family rhabdoviridae. rabies virus is considered an endemic viral infectious disease in animals in saudi arabia. recent scientific data on rabies cases reported in camels at al-qassim region (one of the thirteen administrative regions of saudi arabia) showed that there is an increasing number of this fatal virus disease [ ] . however, the most significant animal bites which have been recorded in saudi arabia were caused by different species of animals including dogs, cats, rodents, and foxes [ ] . later, al-dubaib reported rabies in dromedaries in saudi arabia in and suggested an incidence of about . % for rabies that was reported among camel herdsmen looking after more than animals [ ] . interestingly, another survey was conducted between and in the al-qassim region of central saudi arabia among camels and showed that about . % of clinical rabies incidence is caused by dogs (may be cause it highly used as a perfect guard for camels), followed by foxes; furthermore, the diagnosis of viral rabies in that region was confirmed among dogs, foxes, camels, and cats [ ] . lately, the relevant government authorities (the moh and ministry of agriculture in saudi arabia) in an updated report between and showed that there were a total of , animal bites to humans in saudi arabia [ ] . furthermore, most cases of animal bites were caused by dogs ( . %) and cats ( . %), followed by mice and rats, camels, foxes, monkeys, and wolves [ ] . moreover, dogs, particularly feral dogs and foxes, are considered the most important host for rabies virus; however, bats are also considered as reservoirs of this disease. humans can become rabid by direct contact with animal mucosal surfaces via bites. according to the moh and ministry of agriculture data in saudi arabia, pets are responsible for most animal bites in humans [ ] , and it is well-known that insufficient vaccination coverage of pets are among the most common hallmarks of the endemic status of rabies worldwide [ ] . more recently, many saudi and expatriate families are keeping pets; however, there are limited number of specialized veterinary clinics (~ ) within the kingdom of saudi arabia that have fully licensed veterinary laboratories with state of the art technologies and veterinary staff. globally, almost % of all human deaths caused by rabies occur in africa and asia [ ] . however, saudi arabia, as one of the asian countries, has scarce publications and epidemic data on rabies status [ , ] . moreover, memish et al., between and in saudi arabia, reported the histologic detection of the virus by identifying negri bodies in the brain samples of animal rabies cases. the study showed that among the suspected rabies cases, (~ . % of all cases) were found to be positive; thus confirming rabies cases among dogs, foxes, sheep, camels, goats, wolves, and cows [ ] . furthermore, more recent data confirmed the transmission of rabies virus in saudi arabia by feral dogs [ ] . in spite of these facts, there are very few studies available, and no case of human rabies has been reported in recent decades from saudi arabia [ ] . however, in march , a scientific work was reported as the first confirmed case of human rabies in saudi arabia from makkah city, which has now been published [ ] . indeed, several previous global epidemiological data confirmed that rabies accounted for , to , human deaths per year [ ] , and more than % of these cases occur in children < years of age [ ] . in september , a -year-old saudi man, presented with different clinical features-such as nausea, vomiting, and epigastric pain, with significant features suggestive of gastritis-at makkah hospital. his past medical history was significant for hypertension and diabetes type . during the clinical diagnostic procedure of this case, he developed respiratory distress and tachycardia, for which he was transferred to the intensive care unit [ ] . because, his case worsened with chest pain and ventricular tachycardia he was referred to the king abdullah medical city in makkah for further management. the written diagnostic report indicated that he had acute anteroseptal myocardial infarction, had coronary angiogram which suggested that two-vessels were diseased with left main involvement, and surgical intervention was planned. after the decision for surgery, he was found to have leukocytosis and severe retching while attempting to drink water (hydrophobic behavior), which necessitated further review by the infectious disease consultants based on the patient's clinical symptoms. the consultant team discovered the history of an unprovoked scratch on the patient's face by a dog in morocco a month prior to the admission at the hospital. also, the patient stated that he only received tetanus vaccine. all diagnostic tests including neurologic examination were unremarkable and his saliva polymerase chain reaction (pcr) test confirmed rabies virus. he was administered verorab rabies vaccine and human hyperimmune rabies immunoglobulin ( iu/kg) intramuscularly (im) [ ] . in addition, he had troponin i ( . ng/ml), creatine kinase isoenzyme mb (ckmb) was found ( . ng/ml), and serum glucose ( mg/dl). on the fifth day of hospital, he had recurrent episodes of ventricular tachycardia, progressively worsening of hemodynamic parameters, and he succumbed to his infection on that day. there is no vaccine against rabies recommended for travelers from/to saudi arabia, and no rabies treatment is offered to pet dogs. however, vaccination is given to dogs before they are infected; otherwise they are euthanized if infected. according to a previous study, most patient injuries from animal bites in saudi arabia showed some variations due to the monthly incidence and/or, according to the animal species [ ] . bites by dogs and cats were reported frequently throughout the year, with a decrease in april and between august and october. however, bites by foxes increase between august and september while camel bites were more frequent between december and march of the subsequent year. the same previous study suggest that these seasonal variations of injuries might be due to the saudi population habits, with people going to the desert for leisure activities during good weather periods. laboratory diagnosis of rabies viral disease occur with the use of the rabies virus direct fluorescent antibody test (dfat) on brain samples and hippocampal tissue [ ] . while rabies is considered nearly % fatal, it is also % preventable, and thus vaccination to pets is the key element to prevent the risk of rabies zoonotic infection [ ] . reports of the epidemiology of rabies virus worldwide, and particularly in saudi arabia, suggest that it is on the increase, thus the implication of this virus' potential to spread across borders from high to low prevalence countries was highlighted [ ] . the mers-cov infection is considered to be a new respiratory disease with a dire global concern [ ] . mers-cov infections are caused by a newly emerging coronavirus (cov), belonging to the designated lineage c of betacoronavirus of the rna family coronaviridae. with respect to viral origin and transmission, bats are thought to be the reservoir host of betacoronaviruses, and the african neoromicia bats in particular are the natural reservoir of mers-cov [ , ] . since its emergence in in saudi arabia, when an elderly patient ( years old) with respiratory illness died after admission to a hospital in jeddah [ ] , the disease was subsequently reported to have been transmitted to several countries worldwide, and has affected more than patients with over % fatality [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] . moreover, a -year-old saudi man was admitted to a private hospital in jeddah, saudi arabia in june with a history of fever, severe acute respiratory syndrome with cough, expectoration, and shortness of breath. he did not smoke; and for the disease, which was suggested to be due to an animal transmission of coronaviruses, he was treated with oseltamivir, levofloxacin, and piperacillin-tazobactam. on day , he died [ ] . after this, a -year-old saudi male with hypertension and diabetes with no history of smoking, reported for surgery. at the time of admission, he was asymptomatic. he was initially screened using nasopharyngeal swab, endotracheal aspirate, and serum sample for mers-cov per protocol with the mers rrt-pcr assay. the results confirmed mers-cov infection. he died three days after admission. it was discovered that the patient owned a dromedary camel barn in saudi arabia, and had a history of close contact with camels, as well as a habit of raw milk consumption of an unknown duration [ ] . two studies have suggested a relationship between the infection and contact with dromedary camels [ , ] . in addition to this, serological diagnostic methods have been used to confirm mers-cov infections in dromedary camels for at least - decades and has thus confirmed camels as an intermediate host for this virus [ , ] . thus, in , a novel coronavirus (mers-cov) was isolated from two fatal human cases in saudi arabia and qatar; and since then, more than clinical cases of mers-cov have been identified, and the great majority of the cases were from saudi arabia [ ] . this previous report author raised a thoughtful comment related to the emerging viral diseases "why we need to worry about bats, camels, and airplanes" [ ] . moreover, another study suggested that mers-cov infection is usually transmitted from human's direct contact with dromedary camels, especially when people drink the milk or use camel's urine for medicinal purposes [ ] . more recently, a metagenomics sequencing analysis of nasopharyngeal swab samples from mers-cov-positive live dromedary camels marketed in abu dhabi, united arab emirates, showed at least two recently identified camel coronaviruses, which were detected in . % of the camels in that study [ ] . however, limited human-to-human infections have been reported. the prevalence of mers-cov infections worldwide still remains unclear. in addition to this, the who reported about cases of these infections since june , with about deaths in different countries, worldwide. recently, a study was conducted from june to july , during which samples were collected from mers-cov infected individuals, from the national guard hospital in riyadh (the saudi arabian capital city), the moh in saudi arabia, and other gulf corporation council countries, to determine the prevalence of mers-cov [ ] . the epidemiologic data that were collected, showed that the highest number of cases (about of patients) were reported from saudi arabia (~ %). among the mers-cov cases from saudi arabia, riyadh was the worst-hit area with infected cases ( . %), followed by the western region of makkah where cases ( . %) were reported [ ] . furthermore, this study also showed that the incidence of mers-cov infections was highest among elderly people aged ≥ years [ , ] ; with speculation that there might be certain conditions or factors involved. it is considered that mers-cov infection might have a peculiar gender predisposition [ ] . recent data examined the mortality in patients with mers-cov and the gender relationships, looking at the survival of cases among females and males. it was suggested that males have a higher risk of death [ , ] ; however, this was contradicted by the findings from two other studies which suggested that males have a low risk of death [ ] ; while another survey which examined the influence of gender on -day and -day survival, found a low risk of death especially in the older age group [ ] . on the other hand, badawi et al., suggested that mers-cov infections could be mild and may only result in death among patients suffering from any kind of immune system disorder and/or any chronic disease [ ] . more recently, data regarding the mortality in patients with mers-cov have been published. according to saudi arabia's moh daily statements, dated from february through march , laboratory-confirmed new cases of mers-cov and deaths occurred [ ] . recently, on february , patients infected while hospitalized at riyadh included two men ( and years old) in stable condition, who were not healthcare workers. according to a february update, a new case involved a -year-old man from the city of buraydah who later died. meanwhile, on march , another mers-cov infection in a riyadh hospital patient, a -year-old man who was listed in critical condition and who likewise had contact with camels, as the other two patients, was reported. thus, the moh stated that the spillover from camels is thought to be the main source of mers-cov in saudi arabia, since all these patients were exposed to the animals before reporting ill [ ] . furthermore, an -year-old patient from riyadh, and other two patients who had camel contacts from hail city in the north central part of saudi arabia were listed in critical condition. the illness in these patients was reported on march . according to a march statement, another patient, a -year-old man from najran located in southern saudi arabia, was reported. the man was listed in a stable condition. of these new cases, only one death, involving the -year-old man from riyadh, according to the march moh statement, was reported [ ] . still, much work is needed to detect the mers-cov infection risk in saudi arabia, because data showed increasing number of cases exist among the eight countries including saudi arabia. thus, the emergence of mers-cov in the region and its continuing transmission from - , currently poses one of the biggest threats to global health security [ ] . most cases (over %) reported to date have been from countries in the region (e.g., egypt) notably from saudi arabia, with cases including deaths [ ] . influenza viruses are considered to be important infectious viral diseases, which is caused by three virus types (a, b, and c) [ ] . due to their zoonotic spread, influenza type a infects both humans and animals, and causes moderate to severe illness, with more likelihood of fatalities in young children and the elderly [ , ] . other types of influenza, including type b and c, infect only humans [ ] . furthermore, influenza a viruses, members of the rna family orthomyxoviridae, are further classified into human, swine, and avian influenza viruses. however, during the influenza pandemic, swine influenza virus infected one-third of the world's population (an estimated million people) and caused approximately million deaths [ ] . since , several infections with this virus have been recorded from various areas worldwide, including saudi arabia [ ] . at the end of april , an outbreak of a new type of influenza, a/h n , started in mexico and the usa [ ] . the who declared the pandemic influenza a (h n ) as a "public health emergency of international concern" following the first few initial cases in mexico, and subsequently in the usa [ , ] . in saudi arabia, the epidemiological data for influenza virus were collected using a predesigned questionnaire with the first confirmed pandemics influenza a (h n ) cases identified by the infectious diseases department from the moh, and the database during the period covered from june to july [ ] . however, according to the saudi moh data, the number of laboratory-confirmed cases of the virus in saudi arabia as at december was , , with deaths [ ] . the virus later spread worldwide, causing a pandemic, and the most recorded cases then, as reported by the who in the middle east, were in saudi arabia with , cases, followed by kuwait [ ] , egypt, and oman; with less number of infected patients [ , ] . nevertheless, between and , a serosurveillance outcome of swine influenza virus from egypt provided evidence of laboratory diagnosis and very early confirmation of the virus in human patients [ ] . in saudi arabia, the influenza surveillance system has been established since . moreover, among people with certain chronic medical diseases or conditions, a trivalent influenza vaccine (tiv), which contains inactivated antigens for two different subtypes of influenza viruses (types a and b), became available in saudi arabia [ ] . indeed, h n is now in the post-pandemic period and has become a seasonal influenza virus that continues to circulate with localized outbreaks of varying magnitude in saudi arabia [ ] . a previous data was collected using a predesigned questionnaire for the first cases of pandemic influenza a (h n ) from different hospitals in saudi arabia. the age of patients enlisted in the data ranged from to years. the age groups with the highest percentage of cases were between: and years ( %), and and years ( %). there were males and females, and % patients had some contacts with infected persons within saudi arabia while about % had history of travels into saudi arabia and/or the philippines [ ] . these facts are similar to the previous relationship noted between the occurrence of zoonotic viral diseases and the gender of patients and/or their ages, as reported for another viral (e.g., mers-cov) infection; provided certain conditions are met [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . interestingly, among elderly patients, influenza cases were higher in females than males. this relationship with viral infection occurring particularly with respiratory viral diseases, might pave the way and play a big role of more significant importance in the detection of these diseases, taking into account the influence of climate change and the different environmental factors [ , , ] . nevertheless, between september and october , about samples were taken from several patients presenting with respiratory symptoms to king abdulaziz university hospital, jeddah, saudi arabia. however, during this study conducted to detect the susceptibility to the influenza viruses circulating in the western part of saudi arabia, out of all the tested samples, ( . %) respiratory samples were positive for influenza h n virus, ( . %) was positive for influenza h n virus, and ( . %) were positive for influenza b virus [ ] . furthermore, h n , now in the post-pandemic period, has become a seasonal influenza virus that continues to circulate with localized outbreaks of varying magnitude [ ] . interestingly, the presentation of influenza virus infections in humans usually vary from mild, self-limiting respiratory-like illness, to severe cases that may result in death [ , ] . nevertheless, a recent study has shown that subclinical infection in human exists, as revealed by the serological surveillance [ , ] . therefore, the epidemiological surveillance of influenza in saudi arabia is highly important especially with the fact that influenza cases have also been highly reported can spread globally [ ] . thus, geographic influences on influenza virus infection in saudi arabia must be of concern [ ] . this is relevant because a remarkably high number of egyptian muslims visit saudi arabia yearly to participate in the umrah and/or the hajj pilgrimage; in addition, the impact of the poultry industry in egypt is also worth considering, with an estimated billion birds and several millions of engaged laborers with/without surveillance [ ] . it is well-known that the influenza drugs, antiviral agents, and the current seasonal influenza vaccines are effective in reducing the incidence and severity of the disease, sickness, and/or complications. however, the important strategy for influenza management includes the provision of prophylaxis and treatment [ ] . however, it is possible for widespread drug resistance against antiviral agents or vaccines to emerge in patients who extensively abused the drugs, in addition to those who have never received such treatment, globally [ ] [ ] [ ] . furthermore, influenza viruses pose a challenge to vaccine developers and manufacturers due to the fact that these viruses are continually changing in nature, including hemagglutinin and neuraminidase [ , ] . moreover, while resistance to neuraminidase inhibitors (e.g., oseltamivir and zanamivir) have been reported to sporadically occur, the resistance to oseltamivir has been widely reported since , with a worldwide spread [ ] . this highlights why there is an urgent need for the public health system to monitor continuously via globally active influenza surveillance programs. furthermore, there is need to monitor the circulating influenza viruses strains, as well as the occurrence of any resistance, using appropriate diagnostic methods. this is considered highly essential in saudi arabia. interestingly, survey data has shown an increasing report of the viral infection from egypt, since hajj egyptians has ranked in the top list of countries with the highest number of mecca pilgrims in the last years [ ] . influenza is highly susceptible to antiviral drugs such as oseltamivir, according to a more recent epidemiological study [ ] . although millions of muslims, globally, travel annually to saudi arabia to perform hajj and/or umrah in the holy places including both makkah and al-madinah for very limited period (~ days), this gathering could play a major role in the introduction of new influenza viruses, not only to saudi arabia but also to the rest of the world [ , ] . unfortunately, there is no such influenza surveillance program in saudi arabia, thus this pose a serious public health concern. recently, in a study of pilgrims screened on arrival at the hajj season in saudi arabia, ( . %) had influenza a virus ( out of the had h n virus) [ ] . additionally, the epidemiological data showed that the pilgrims had the potential not only to introduce these viruses to saudi arabia, but also to export the influenza virus back to their home countries [ , ] . this can occur in saudi arabia, despite the availability of a tiv containing inactivated antigens for influenza virus types a and b, which can protect against the influenza virus infection [ ] . importation of resistant and highly pathogenic viruses including influenza viruses can occur worldwide. despite this, there is lack of studies and data on drug susceptibility, and a very limited number of studies and reports on viral isolates, except for one study conducted in jeddah, according to the best of our knowledge [ ] . most importantly, this highlights the importance of circulating influenza viruses in saudi arabia, hence there is need to ensure effective use of antivirals for prophylaxis and treatment of influenza. furthermore, the rate of vaccination against influenza is very low among pilgrims and healthcare workers [ , ] . moreover, studies are needed to provide a clear picture on the impact of drug resistance on saudi arabia's endemic pathogens, including the influenza viruses. in a recent communique, the ministry of environment, water, and agriculture for saudi arabia reported two cases of h n avian influenza in the kharj governorate [ ] . the latest update by the ministry revealed that the number of samples collected from saudi regions since the start of the influenza outbreak had reached , . positive results from samples and laboratory tests indicate positive cases, and the saudi authorities have taken action by culling as many as , birds within a -h period [ ] . in contrast, several epidemic zoonotic cases of influenza h n have been reported in domestic cats in several countries in asia, europe, the usa, and italy [ ] . moreover, the epidemic of influenza in dogs might be related to a serious public health issue and could be shown to have resulted from zoonotic diseases from pets, similar to the avian influenza h n outbreak reported in pet dogs in south korea in [ ] . nevertheless, a recent study has shown that the role of pets, particularly cats and dogs in the epidemic of influenza as a source of human infection seems limited. however, cats were shown to be fully susceptible to experimental infection, and infected cats were able to infect naive cats [ ] . in , pandemic h n infection in a domestic cat in the usa from iowa was diagnosed by a novel pcr assay; thus, human-to-cat transmission was presumed [ ] . despite this prior evidence, the role of pets including cats and dogs seem even more limited in the dispersal of avian influenza to humans. rather, humans may be the source of pet infection, as suggested for influenza h n and/or h n virus infections [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] . most importantly, epidemic zoonotic cases of influenza among pets has highlighted the importance of circulating influenza viruses globally; especially, to ensure the effective use of antivirals for the prophylaxis and treatment of influenza, in particular, with the increase in the number of pets stores in saudi arabia, especially in riyadh [ , ] . surprisingly, previous data focused on the occurrence of zoonotic infection of different influenza virus types, and particularly, the transmission of avian influenza virus h n to domestic dogs [ ] . several studies have examined and confirmed the occurrence of zoonotic infection of the influenza a virus h n pandemic, especially in domestic cats [ , ] . nevertheless, epidemiological studies on different zoonotic infections among the pets in saudi arabia including cats, dogs, and/or baboons are very rare. however, a previous case report confirmed a relationship between some zoonotic diseases causing respiratory symptoms, such as influenza, among pets [ ] . this study suggests that severe lung infection with dry cough and severe anemia should lead to the suspicion of a secondary infection with zoonotic balantidiasis, which infected a hamadryas baboon from saudi arabia in a research center for pets in riyadh [ ] . furthermore, two other epidemiological zoonotic study on balantidium coli protozoan zoonotic infection in camel was reported from riyadh [ ] . in addition, another previous data confirmed the occurrence of toxocara canis zoonotic infection based on respiratory symptoms reported at the pet clinics in saudi arabia (and also in riyadh where the symptoms occurred in dogs) [ ] . still, more such studies are needed to highlight the important issues and/or provide clearer pictures of the zoonotic pathogens among pets in saudi arabia; however, pet ownership has been growing rapidly as well as the number of pet stores among the saudi population. alkhurma hemorrhagic fever virus (ahfv) in humans was discovered in [ ] . the first case reported in a butcher from the city of alkhurma, a district south of jeddah in saudi arabia, died of hemorrhagic fever after slaughtering a sheep. the viral infection has a reported fatality rate of up to % [ ] . interestingly, one of the previous reports regarding this disease showed a misunderstanding of the real name of this infection, called alkhurma, not alkhumra [ , ] . because subsequent cases were diagnosed in patients from the small town known as alkhurma in jeddah from where the virus got its scientific name; the name was accepted by the international committee on taxonomy of viruses [ ] . thus, based on evidence, the first case was confirmed to be the butcher, following the slaughtered sheep [ ] . therefore, a study was conducted among affected patients to address this disease as a public health issue. blood samples were collected from household contacts of patients with laboratory-confirmed virus for follow-up testing by enzyme-linked immunosorbent serologic assay (elisa) for ahfv-specific immunoglobulin (ig) g. samples from persons seeking medical care were tested by elisa for ahfv-specific igm and igg using ahfv antigen. viral-specific sequence was performed by reverse transcription pcr (tibmolbiol, lightmix kit; roche applied science, basel, switzerland). a total of cases were identified through persons seeking medical care, whose illnesses met the case definition for ahfv, and another cases were identified through follow-up testing of household contacts [ ] . subsequently, the virus was isolated from six other butchers of different ages (between and years) from the city of jeddah, with two deaths. the diagnosis was established from their blood sample tests. the serological tests later confirmed four other patients with the disease [ ] . from to , the study on the virus initial identification in the city of alkhurma again identified other suspected cases; with laboratory confirmation of the disease in (~ %) of them. among the , ( %) had hemorrhagic manifestations and ( %) died [ ] . the virus was later identified in three other locations: from the western province of saudi arabia (ornithodoros savignyi and hyalomma dromedarii were found by reverse transcription in ticks) and from samples collected from camels in najran [ , ] . ahfv virus was considered as one of the zoonotic diseases; however, the mode of transmission is not yet clear. recently, it was suggested that the disease reservoir hosts may include both camels and sheep. the virus might also be transmitted as a result of skin wounds contaminated with the blood or body fluids of an infected sheep; through the bite of an infected tick, and through drinking of unpasteurized or contaminated milk from camels [ , ] . in humans, this zoonotic disease may present with clinical features ranging from subclinical or asymptomatic features to severe complications. it is related to kyasanur forest disease virus, which is localized in karnataka, india [ , ] . however, epidemiologic findings suggest another wider geographic location for the disease in western (including jeddah and makkah) and southern (najran) parts of saudi arabia, and the virus infections mostly occur in humans [ , , ] . a study was conducted by alzahrani et al. in the southern part of saudi arabia particularly in the city of najran (with populations of~ , ), an agricultural city in saudi arabia, where domestic animals are reared at the backyard of owners. after the initial virus identification, from january through april , persons with positive serologic test results were identified. infections were suspected if a patient had an acute febrile illness for at least two days; when all other causes of fever have been ruled out [ ] . additionally, data analysis indicated that patients infected with the virus were either in contact with their domestic animals, involved in slaughtering of the animals, handling of meat products, drinking of unpasteurized milk, and/or were bitten by ticks or mosquitoes. symptoms consistent with ahfv infection-including fever, bleeding, rash, urine, color change of the feces, gum bleeding, or neurologic signs-then develop [ ] . fortunately, infected patients responded to supportive care (including intravenous fluid administration and antimicrobial drugs when indicated), with no fatal cases. in summary, ahfv is a zoonotic disease with clinical features ranging from subclinical or asymptomatic features to severe complications. another study highlighted different characteristics of the exposure to the blood or tissue of infected animals in the transmission of ahfv to humans. of the patients confirmed with infections, % were butchers, shepherds, and abattoir workers, or were involved in the livestock industry [ ] . more recently, a study on infection using c bl/ j mice cells showed that the clinical symptoms of the disease were similar to the presentations in humans [ ] . however, alkhurma disease resulted in meningoencephalitis and death in wistar rats, when high titers to the infection occurred [ ] . in addition, exposures to mosquito bites are regarded as potential sources of transmissions of the infection; however, very few available data support this [ ] . although, available data shows that alkhurma virus has been isolated following mosquito bites [ ] . however, another study suggested that mosquitoes may play a role only as a vector in the transmission of the disease [ ]. cchf is a zoonotic viral disease from the bunyaviridae family, and the principal vector for the disease is ticks of the genus hyalomma. it is most commonly endemic in africa, middle east, asia, and eastern europe [ , ] . it is an acute, highly-contagious, and life-threatening vector-borne disease responsible for severe hemorrhagic fever during outbreaks, and a fatality rate of up to % [ , ] . the infectious disease was recognized first in the crimean peninsula in , and it was named crimean hemorrhagic fever virus because the virus was isolated for the first time from a febrile child in from stanleyville (now kisangani), democratic republic of congo [ ] . currently, the virus infects both humans and animals following tick bites [ ] . however, a human can be infected by the animal through contact with the blood or tissues of the infected animal, in particular, exposures at the abattoirs are common. therefore, workers in contact with animals (e.g., veterinarians, farmers' and workers in slaughterhouses) form a high percentage of those affected [ ] . also, different species of infected animals-such as camels, cattle, sheep, goats, and ostriches-might be infected with no clinical signs [ ] . in addition, human-to-human transmission is also documented, mostly through a form of nosocomial or in-house infection [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] . lately, antibodies to the virus have been detected in different animal species, as reported in , in egyptians animals' sera [ ] . the preliminary seroepidemiological survey detected antibodies to the virus in . % of camels' sera and . % of sheep sera, but no antibody was detected against the virus in the sera of other animals such as donkeys, horses and mules, pigs, cows, and buffaloes [ ] . the epidemiology and distribution of cchf in saudi arabia are unclear, but there are reports of cchf as a result of the trading and importing of infected livestock from neighboring countries to saudi arabia [ ] . in , the cchf virus (cchfv) caused an outbreak involving seven individuals in makkah, although the virus had not been reported previously in saudi arabia. therefore, a study on the epidemiology of this virus was carried out in makkah, jeddah, and taif from - . about out of different species of ticks that were capable of transmitting the disease were collected from camels, cattle, sheep, and goats, but camels had the highest rate of tick infestation ( %), and h. dromedarii was the commonest tick ( %). an investigation in makkah between and , which included a serological survey of abattoir workers in contact with sheep blood or tissue, identified human cases of confirmed or suspected cchf with fatalities [ ] . the report from the investigation stated that the virus might have been introduced to saudi arabia through the jeddah seaport via infected ticks on imported sheep; since then, it has been endemic in the western province of saudi [ , ] . in addition, another previous study confirmed that the highest seropositivity rate of the virus in saudi arabia localities was associated with animals imported from sudan [ ] . furthermore, the who reported countries with cchf including saudi arabia; however, all the remaining countries are either close to saudi arabia or are islamic countries with high numbers of muslims who travel annually to saudi arabia for hajj pilgrimage. the same who epidemiological data suggest that in these countries including saudi arabia, in recent years, there has been report of steadily increasing number of sporadic human cases, incidence, and outbreaks of the virus [ ] . furthermore, another study by who investigating cchfv in the eastern mediterranean region (emr) stated that cchf is a clear and growing health threat in the who emr. cases are being reported in new areas, showing a geographical extension of the disease that is probably linked to the livestock trade and the spread of infected ticks by migratory birds. according to ecological models, the increase in temperature and decreased rainfall in the who emr could have resulted in the sharp increase in distribution of suitable habitats for hyalomma ticks and the subsequent drive of cchfv infection northwards [ ] . jazan province, the red sea port city on saudi arabia's southern border with yemen, serves as the east-west portal from sub-saharan africa at djibouti and the south-north route across the yemeni frontier. it is a heavily traveled corridor for humans and animals entering saudi arabia, particularly during the annual hajj pilgrimage. in november , a total of ( %) enrolled soldiers reported symptomatic illness during deployment, ( %) of whom were hospitalized. reported signs and symptoms included fever (n = ), rash (n = ), and musculoskeletal complaints (n = ). a surveillance study was conducted to detect the causes of the several outbreaks through that area, which was reported as endemic over a wide geographic range. from the surveillance, serologic testing for cchfv, ahfv, denv, and rvf was completed for saudi military units from several saudi arabian provinces. these units were previously stationed in other parts of the country, and were deployed to jazan province; the initial screening for igg of each of these viruses was conducted by igm testing for all igg-reactive samples. among the samples from all military forces, the study identified reactive serum samples with a combined seroprevalence of . cases/ soldiers tested. a confirmed serologic status of soldiers who were evaluated for igg and igm elisa reactivity against cchfv, rvf, ahfv, and denv infections were positive for , , , and sample, respectively [ ] . rvf is a common arbovirus zoonotic disease caused by the rvf virus. the virus belongs to the genus phlebovirus and family bunyaviridae. it is most common in domestic animals, and causes mild to life-threatening infections in humans. the name of the disease was derived from the great rift valley of kenya, when the disease was described for the first time in [ ] . epidemiological tests have since been described after a highly fatal epizootic occurred there in [ ] . rvf is a viral zoonosis with evidence of widespread occurrence in humans and animals in africa and the arabian peninsula. the epidemiology of this virus in saudi arabia might be closely related to the ecological factors that are prevalent, as shown from another area, along the great rift valley, which traverses ethiopia and kenya to northern tanzania with the drainage ecosystems [ ] . saudi arabia has many of the world's mosquito vectors of parasitic and arboviral diseases. however, few studies have addressed their geographic distribution and larval habitat characteristics [ ] . there are complex interactions between these factors that significantly impact mosquitoes ecological fitness and vectorial capacity for disease transmission, with important implications for vector management and control at the local and regional levels [ , ] . therefore, studying these factors for different mosquito fauna will help in monitoring potential modifications of larval habitats due to rains, global climate change, or man-made activities. previous studies on the ecology, distribution, and abundance of mosquito species in kingdom of saudi arabia are generally few and sporadic; and most of these studies were conducted in the western and southern regions. these studies were conducted in the asir province in - and - [ , ] [ , ] . these studies reported the presence of many species from many genera, the most important of which are anopheles, aedes, and culex. among these studies, only a few provided the description of habitats of the larvae of these vectors. even fewer studies provided evidence on the active role of some species on disease transmission; the existing ones were mainly for anopheles vectors of malaria [ , , ] , as well as aedes and culex vectors of arboviruses such as sindbis and dengue fever [ , , ] . rvf is not considered a major type in the arboviruses family, which mostly are adapted to a narrow range of vectors; however, among this family, the rvf infection has a very wide range of vector including mosquitoes such as aedes and culex, flies, and often, ticks [ ] . interestingly, for different rvf species, rvf vectors have special roles about how they sustain the transmission of the disease ecologically to humans [ ] . in some cases, the impact of rainfall, soil type, water, the persistence of breeding, and often wind, have significant effect on vector distribution [ ] . epizootics studies indicate that rvf disease follows unusually severe rainy seasons, a situation that may likely favor the breeding of a very large insect population, needed as a vector prerequisite. globally, rvf epidemiology was first reported in africa with the rvf epizootics in kenya when laboratory test reports confirmed virus isolation [ ] [ ] [ ] . in , the disease, for the first time, affected humans and livestock outside africa, with the larger rvf disease incidence following outbreaks, reported in saudi arabia [ ] and yemen. lately, rvf infections have been associated with minimal genetic diversity, epidemiologically; which has lately been considered to be a newly introduced single lineage of rvf viral disease [ ] . epidemiological reports from both saudi arabia and yemen showed that the outbreak, which occurred in , resulted in about human infections, and deaths [ ] . furthermore, the fatality rate reported in southern saudi arabia then, reached %, and was considered the most severe epidemic in that area ever since [ ] . moreover, the disease outbreak was thought to have been transmitted in countries such as saudi arabia by infected imported ruminants from east africa via the port of djibouti and probably from kenya and/or sudan [ ] . however, the fact remains that the rvf epidemic has been around for more than years, with infections occurring at prolonged intervals in eastern and southern africa [ , ] . consistent with this, another report showed that the same virus strain was implicated in the - rvf outbreaks in kenya and the outbreaks in saudi arabia and yemen [ ] . the outbreaks in kenya later resulted in about , human infected with about patients deaths [ , ] . surprisingly, in , jup et al. found the mosquito species that was identified as a potential vector, which led to the assumption that the zoonotic viral disease in saudi arabia was transmitted by culex tritaeniorhynchus [ ] . other species of mosquitoes were implicated in the transmission of this viral disease in other countries closer to saudi arabia [ ] [ ] [ ] . furthermore, another study reported the unexplained rvf virus infection among people from saudi arabia, with isolation and genetic virus characterization associated with illness in livestock, along the southwestern border of saudi arabia in september [ ] . the study reported that vertical transmission of the virus in the epidemic mosquito vector occurred in saudi arabia. in addition, the study stated that the most abundant culicine mosquitoes collected were aedes vexans arabiensis, culex pipiens complex, and culex tritaeniorhynchus, which were considered to be the most important epidemic and epizootic vectors of rvf virus in saudi arabia [ , ] . however, the same study, focusing on a very important issue which occurred during the rainy seasons; suggested that aedes vexans arabiensis has the potential to be an important epidemic and epizootic vector because of the tremendous numbers of individual mosquitoes produced after a flood [ ] . characteristically, once the virus is introduced into permissive ecologies, it becomes zoonotic; thus, they are able to enhance vulnerability of the area to periodic outbreaks, with the potential to spread further into non-endemic environments with favorable conditions [ , ] . saudi arabia is considered a region where rvf virus has circulated actively. noticeable data regarding zoonotic infection from animal to human from the arabian peninsula including saudi arabia has recently showed that it may be due to the consumption of unpasteurized camel milk [ , , ] . wernery reported camelus dromedarius as the animal host and/or reservoir of rvf zoonotic infection, which was diagnosed in the arabian peninsula [ ] . due to the scientific data regarding rvf disease, it is quite clear that globalization of trade and altered weather patterns are a concern for the future spread of more infections, since the causative agent of this viral disease is capable of utilizing a wide range of vectors for its transmission. thus, this poses a significant challenge to outbreak prediction, with inherently complex methods of infection control; therefore, mitigation and management of the virus will require concerted efforts [ , , ] . dengue hemorrhagic fever (dhf) viral disease is a serious global mosquito-borne infection. the clinical manifestation ranges from mild febrile illness to severe sickness which may include dengue shock syndrome [ ] . the dhf virus belongs to the genus flavivirus in the flaviviridae family, which can usually be spread by mosquitoes of the genus aedes aegypti, but less often through the genus aedes albopictus [ , ] . also, this virus is a single-stranded positive-sense rna virus that exists as four different serotypes (den- , den- , den- , and den- ) [ ] . in saudi arabia, the disease is limited to the western and southwestern regions, such as jeddah and makkah where aedes aegypti exists. however, all dhf cases in saudi arabia presented as a mild disease [ , ] . in fact, the first experience of dhf virus isolation from saudi arabia was recorded during an outbreak of the virus in [ ] , where the confirmed cases reported in jeddah were caused by denv- [ ] [ ] [ ] . however, during this first outbreak, in both summer and rainy season, at the end of the year, both denv- and denv- were isolated. in , during the rainy season in jeddah, there was an emergence of the denv- virus [ ] . in subsequent years, from - ; the emergence of dhf occurred with the three identified serotypes (denv- , denv- , and denv- ) isolated in jeddah [ ] . khan [ , ] . however, egger suggested that the reemergence of the disease in saudi arabia might be explained by the growing levels of urbanization, international trade, and travels [ ] . in keeping with the findings of most previous studies, the epidemiological occurrence of dhf infection using the saudi's national data indicated that the majority ( %) of patients with dengue virus infection were saudi nationals [ ] . on the contrary, from the epidemiological report based on saudi's national data in previous publications, an estimated % of patients with dhf presented in jeddah [ ] . kholedi [ ] . in yet another recent study, the virus was reported as % in saudi patients [ ] . all of these saudi studies were conducted in jeddah. from makkah city, the reported epidemiological study identified . % of dhf infection cases among saudi nationals [ ] . similarly, a later study puts the estimate at more than % of saudi nationals [ ] . these previously published studies suggest that differences in proportions may exist between saudi nationals infected with dhf virus in jeddah and makkah city. contrary to previous data from jeddah, in makkah, it was clear that the majority of patients presenting with clinically significant dhf were saudi nationals. therefore, these results emphasized the fact that saudi nationals are at greater risk of dhf infection. the awareness of these results is considered a cornerstone to enhancing the ability of healthcare professionals' identification of the disease; and this might play an important role in the development of effective eradication strategies for the disease in saudi arabia localities. furthermore, the first cases of the virus, confirmed in al-madinah in , showed that the isolated virus serotypes were denv- and denv- [ ] . in , the moh in saudi arabia reported a total of cases of the dhf infection, with an estimated case fatality rate of about . per thousand in saudi arabia [ ] . in august , several countries in asia, including malaysia, singapore, and pakistan reported about , , , and dengue cases including deaths, respectively. in the same period ( ), saudi arabia reported confirmed dengue cases in makkah, of which occurred in august , suspected cases, and cases pending laboratory confirmations. from these epidemic data indicating the reemergence of dhf infection in saudi arabia; jeddah, makkah, and al-madinah were shown to be the more susceptible areas, for this infectious disease, and this could be due to the fact that these cities are the sites of both the annual hajj pilgrimage and/or the minor umrah pilgrimage, which draw millions of muslims to saudi arabia [ , ] . currently, there are few epidemiological studies on dhf virus infection in saudi arabia. a study by al-azraqi et al. was conducted in hospitals and primary healthcare centers in two cities in the southern province of saudi arabia, particularly in jizan, and aseer. the study, which was limited to the seroprevalence among clinically suspected hospital-based patients, detected about . % positive cases of dengue virus igg among randomly selected patients attending the outpatient clinics for any reason. the associated risk factors were male gender, younger age ( - years) , lack of electricity, and having water basins in the house [ ] . the authors suggested that the virus may occur in sporadic cases in jizan, due to the nature of the city. jizan is relatively flat and located at sea level [ ] ; thus the likelihood of the formation of small stagnant water following the rainfall in the city is high [ ] . interestingly, a retrospective cross-sectional study, which compared the clinical findings and/or the diagnostic laboratory results in uncomplicated patients, and patients who developed dhf, was conducted at dr. soliman fakeeh hospital in jeddah, between january and june . about patients with a discharge diagnosis of dhf or dengue shock syndrome were identified [ ] . of these, ( %) were adult patients within the age range - years, and % were children with age ranging from months to years. however, among all these patients, % of the adults and % of the pediatric cases were males. the clinical data from the hospital showed that in the adult patients, about % made a full recovery without complications while two patients died [ ] . more recently in january , the moh began an intensive campaign to eradicate the dhf virus from saudi arabian cities, to enhance public health awareness, and facilitate a change in hygiene behavior of citizens and residents. this resulted in a . % reduction in the number of dhf infection among inpatient cases in jeddah when compared to the same period in the previous year. however, the overall drop in dhf cases reached % in , compared to the previous year [ ] . furthermore, recently, it is well-known that in saudi arabia, the dhf infection has been limited to the western and southwestern regions such as jeddah and makkah where aedes aegypti exists. however, all dhf cases in jeddah, saudi arabia, were mostly mild cases [ , , ] and the prospect of dengue virus control lies with vector control, health education, and possibly vaccine use. west nile fever is one of the emerging zoonotic infections, which is caused by an arthropod-borne virus belonging to the genus flavivirus, of the rna family flaviviridae. the virus' main reservoir, which is responsible for the transmission of the disease, is the genus culex mosquitoes [ , ] . the west nile virus (wnv) derived the name from the site where the first case was isolated in , from the blood of a woman with mild febrile illness living in the west nile district of uganda [ ] . the first outbreak, in - , was reported in israel [ ] . this constituted a turning point in the epidemiology of the virus, because it was thought to have originated from israel following the introduction from africa, and later introduced to the usa in [ , ] . subsequently, the infection was documented across the globe [ ] , with the exception of antarctica [ ] , in various species of vertebrates, including humans, mammals, non-human primates, birds, rodents, reptiles, and amphibians [ ] . however, birds are considered as one of the main reservoirs of the virus [ ] . saudi arabia is geographically close to several of the countries where wnv had circulated actively or had been reported; thus, there is a high risk of the disease being introduced into saudi arabia. wnv is known to cause neurological disease in both humans and horses. however, the clinical manifestations of the disease in horses include ataxia, paralysis of the limbs, recumbency, hyperexcitability, and hyperesthesia. in al-ahsa, saudi arabia, a study was performed on horses to test the incidence of the virus using the clinical examination and serologic elisa test. however, from this previous study, while clinical examination for neurologic signs detected no significant findings, wnv antibodies were positively identified at serology among . % of the tested population [ ] . in , lanciotti et al. found this virus to be responsible for an outbreak of encephalitis in two fatal human cases from northeastern usa in late summer; and suggest a closely relation between this outbreak in the usa to a wnv infection which was isolated from a dead goose in israel in [ ] . the first cases of wnv in horses was identified in egypt and france in the s [ ] ; ever since, wnv has had significant public health impact worldwide due to its resurgence and dynamic epidemiologic features in humans and animals. between and , a study in iran identified wnv antibodies in horses, and the results confirmed the highest activity of the virus reported in the western and southern provinces with seroprevalences of up to % in some areas of iran [ ] . although human cases and/or animal infections with wnv including horses have also been reported in jordan and lebanon (direct and close neighbors of saudi arabia) between and [ ] [ ] [ ] ; however, the reported wnv in patients or horses in these areas might have circulated in natural transmission cycles with close relationship to the wnv isolated from human and horses in jordan, lebanon, and iran in , , and , respectively. humans and horses (incidental hosts), are unable to develop sufficient viremia to infect mosquitoes, hence, they are not included in the wnv lifecycle [ ] . more recently, in , using standard procedures, the central veterinary research laboratory in dubai, the united arab emirates, described the first wnv isolation in a dromedary calf; and this supports the conclusion that wnv is present in the country [ ] . the wnv zoonotic infection was probably transmitted through the human-animal interface; that is through the well-known contact with infected arabian camels in saudi arabia. interestingly, dromedary are exported from the united arab emirates to saudi arabia and vice versa; due to the closely related wnvs genes and their circulation through the natural transmission cycles worldwide, a complete genome sequencing for more wnvs strains, as well as comparative genomic and phylogenetic studies in saudi arabia, are needed to ascertain whether the dromedary infection with wnv exists in the country or not. however, the same facts have been suggested recently ( ), when it was suggested that wnv infection was introduced into turkey at the time of the outbreaks in saudi arabia and yemen. it was further suggested that the virus may have been introduced via unlawful entrance of viremic domestic or wild animals through the borders or through vectors that carry the virus into turkey [ ] . camels play an important role in public health issues regarding zoonosis and they have been involved in most of the zoonotic infections which occurred in saudi arabia in the last three decades. they are reported as sources of infections-including rabies, mers-cov, alkhurma virus, cchfv, and rvf virus [ , , , , , , ] -via direct physical contacts with camels and/or indirectly by having camels within or near the household in saudi arabia. however, some zoonotic infections among camels are sometimes asymptomatic; thus, they play a vital role in the mechanism of transmission of various diseases [ ] . furthermore, wernery et al. reported that wnv can be transmitted by mosquito bites in different species including to humans, horses, camelids, and many other mammalian species as well as reptiles and birds [ , , ] . to the best of our knowledge, there is still no extensive surveillance data regarding this disease among wildlife animals in saudi arabia. strikingly, several of the human zoonotic cases that involve camels-which included different viral, bacterial, and parasitic infections on the arabian peninsula-have recently been highlighted as being caused by the consumption of unpasteurized camel milk [ ] . currently, in this review, some aspects of the most common viral diseases of zoonotic importance in saudi arabia were summarized; these are presented in table . however, data regarding emerging and reemerging zoonotic viral diseases are reported as they occur from time to time from the same, new, and/or different localities from saudi arabia. while other viral zoonotic infections occur in other countries, which are considered to be close to saudi arabia, some infections spread to some localities within saudi arabia because of the geographical proximity as shown in figure . interestingly, some of these zoonotic viral pathogens were first exotic to saudi arabia (e.g., mers-cov and ahfv) and should be of more concern when reported in prevalence studies, and whenever they are detected by saudi authorities. epidemiological data should be focused more on both the trade routes and wildlife migration across the region, since these are potential risks for saudi arabia (e.g., from yemen, egypt, gulf areas, and sudan). fortunately, there are many ways and/or approaches to improve the control of such different zoonotic pathogens in animals and humans in saudi arabia. however, the control measures of these viral zoonotic pathogens will not only benefit saudi arabia or arabian peninsula but will also be of high benefit to other countries, especially those with low prevalence, by stopping or controlling the spread of the epidemic worldwide. prevention, control, and management of several zoonotic diseases usually require several important measures including the following. having vaccination protocols for all suspected animal species by the use of up to date vaccines and compliance with the standards needed for all animals. taking into account the highly needed and important investigation for these zoonotic viral diseases vectors, including vector breeding control (including vectors, hosts, and arthropods), and control of the animals (livestock) movements, with respect to trade and export [ , ] . because an intensive livestock trade exists between saudi arabia and its neighboring countries, there may be increased risk of reemerging viral diseases of all kinds [ , ] . this is supported by several previous studies concerned with the route of livestock trade between saudi arabia and the neighboring countries (e.g., rabies through yemen and/or oman [ , ] interestingly, some of these zoonotic viral pathogens were first exotic to saudi arabia (e.g., mers-cov and ahfv) and should be of more concern when reported in prevalence studies, and whenever they are detected by saudi authorities. epidemiological data should be focused more on both the trade routes and wildlife migration across the region, since these are potential risks for saudi arabia (e.g., from yemen, egypt, gulf areas, and sudan). fortunately, there are many ways and/or approaches to improve the control of such different zoonotic pathogens in animals and humans in saudi arabia. however, the control measures of these viral zoonotic pathogens will not only benefit saudi arabia or arabian peninsula but will also be of high benefit to other countries, especially those with low prevalence, by stopping or controlling the spread of the epidemic worldwide. prevention, control, and management of several zoonotic diseases usually require several important measures including the following. having vaccination protocols for all suspected animal species by the use of up to date vaccines and compliance with the standards needed for all animals. taking into account the highly needed and important investigation for these zoonotic viral diseases vectors, including vector breeding control (including vectors, hosts, and arthropods), and control of the animals (livestock) movements, with respect to trade and export [ , ] . because an intensive livestock trade exists between saudi arabia and its neighboring countries, there may be increased risk of reemerging viral diseases of all kinds [ , ] . this is supported by several previous studies concerned with the route of livestock trade between saudi arabia and the neighboring countries (e.g., rabies through yemen and/or oman [ , ] ; rvf through kenya, djibouti, and/or egypt [ , , ] ; cchf through sudan [ ] ; influenza through oman and egypt [ , , , [ ] [ ] [ ] ; wnv through emirates, egypt, jordan, and israel [ , , , , ] ; and dhfv through egypt [ ] ; as well as mers-cov and ahfv viral infections, which originated and are transmitted globally from saudi arabia) [ , , , , ] . therefore, it is clear that a huge gap still exists in the sharing of published data about the acknowledged epidemiology of zoonotic diseases in saudi arabia, which rigorously prohibits speculations about the health burden of people. currently, there are surveillance activities for some viral diseases-such as rabies, mers-cov, and influenza-but these are still being weakly addressed or neglected, especially at the human-animal interface. the important role of vaccination both in the prevention and control of animal diseases and the need to check the human sources in food or water must not be neglected. also, management of animals, both outdoors and indoors must be taken seriously. however, owners of pets clinics and pets stores should be held responsible in ensuring that they keep their pets' vaccination protocols up to date, and prevent any kind of animal behavior that might result in zoonotic risks to humans through bites or scratches by pets. therefore, pet clinics and/or pets stores should be always considered a serious public health issue and vaccination should be obligatory. therefore, the importance of the annual vaccination routine programs for all stray dogs against rabies, and regular investigation of other animals, should be considered. in addition to this, pet clinics and stores should monitor pets' health records, and their owners should be held fully responsible in ensuring that their animals remain healthy and fully vaccinated. this will guarantee for them and their neighbors a zoonotic disease-free environment (e.g., against rabies virus particularly in dogs). this is particularly important in view of the case of human rabies reported in march from a makkah hospital. this involved a -year-old saudi man who was admitted to the hospital with a history of an unprovoked scratch on his face by a dog. a month after his admission, his saliva pcr test confirmed rabies virus [ ] . nevertheless, rabies is endemic in animals in the arabian peninsula, with increasing numbers of reported cases form certain countries in the area including saudi arabia, yemen, and oman [ , ] . kuwait, qatar, and the united arab emirates are considered to be rabies-free, whereas there is no available information about bahrain [ , ] . furthermore, animal rabies cycle and cases reported in these endemic countries including saudi arabia are characterized by different animal species such as camels, cattle, goats, and sheep; however, the majority of cases are reported in feral dogs [ , ] . fortunately, studies about pets with different zoonotic infections from pet clinics and/or pet stores in saudi arabia have been rarely detected among cats, dogs, and baboons. however, there was a previous study, which reported the occurrence of toxocara canis infection in pets (dogs) in riyadh, saudi arabia [ ] . there were also two previous reports regarding a protozoan zoonotic infection of some pets with clinical manifestation, particularly in papio hamadryas baboon in riyadh [ , ] . in addition to this, another report highlighted the protozoan zoonotic infection in camels, in riyadh [ ] ; however, more of these kind of studies are needed, because, they provide important opportunities to present a clear picture about indoor and outdoor animals and zoonotic pathogens such as viral, bacterial, fungal, etc. which involved, in saudi arabia. by enhancing biosecurity and management in animal farms, the risk of reemerging pathogens particularly responsible for zoonotic diseases caused by viruses, can be reduced. this is a matter of economic importance; in view of the large livestock trade existing or that existed between countries in the indian ocean and eastern africa countries where several zoonotic diseases are endemic. however, a phylogenetic study strongly suggests that some zoonotic infections have been introduced into saudi arabia through ruminant trade [ , ] . furthermore, following the adoption of the recommended guidelines of the world organization for animal health through its office international des epizooties (oie) code, if such policies regarding the exportation and/or importation of animals are exactly followed, these would greatly limit the extent of this risk [ ] . furthermore, an emphasis should be made on surveillance to detect any sign of zoonotic disease that might occur in any animal kept directly in a quarantine station in any country of origin for days prior to shipment to another country to ensure no clinical sign develops during that period. in addition, the longer quarantine periods or restriction of imported animals-particularly pets (e.g., dogs, cats, rodents, and monkeys) or goats, sheep, and camels-from endemic countries may be effective in reducing the introduction of zoonotic viruses. of such measures, the control of vectors (e.g., ticks and mosquitoes), particularly the intermediate hosts and animal reservoirs, should be key components in the intervention strategy for zoonoses in saudi arabia. while the improving, enhancing, providing, and upgrading of laboratory techniques and/or testing in both veterinary and human medicines are fundamental to early detection and containing of any zoonotic disease or transmitted infection. indeed, epidemiologic evidence should be linked with the seasonal time during the year for different zoonoses, and/or with any symptoms related to zoonotic infections that occur on the mainland a few years earlier. up to date ecological factors on evolutionary issues, social movements, economic, and epidemiological mechanisms affecting zoonotic pathogens' or their persistence and emergence, are not yet well understood. however, studies on the ecological, socioeconomic, and health issues are needed to assess the sustainability and acceptability of measures by breeders, as well as information that ensures appropriate slaughtering or consumption practices, which will decrease the risk of infection to humans [ ] . due to these facts about the ecological cascade and evolutionary perspectives, authorities can provide valuable insights into pathogen ecology and can inform zoonotic disease control programs; and thus evaluate their global effect in terms of actual disease and its socioeconomic correlations. enhancing biosecurity and management in the treatments of various zoonotic infections may result in appropriate use of vaccinations, drugs, and antibiotics, however, the overuse of these agents result in various types of resistance. furthermore, regardless of the influenza virus resistance level to treatment, according to a serosurveillance, the enzootic influenza virus h n in egypt is endemic [ ] . the same result to oseltamivir-resistant influenza viruses are reported globally, with a high susceptibility to these antiviral drugs among all reported cases of the virus from egypt. resistance was also found in most infected viral cases that are usually acquired in humans through intensive contacts, particularly with backyard birds, among women and children [ , , , ] . therefore, drug regimens in saudi must include vaccines against this virus during hajj and umrah seasons, for egyptians. most importantly, epidemic zoonotic cases of influenza among pets has highlighted the importance of circulating influenza viruses globally, and the importance of ensuring the effective use of antivirals for the prophylaxis and treatment of influenza, especially because of the increased number of new pets stores in saudi arabia, particularly in riyadh [ , ] . thus, studies on drug resistance are considered to be of a high public health importance, although, this might demonstrate the best scenario of how drug resistance in saudi arabia can pave its own way and/or role into the reemerging of different zoonotic pathogens. on the other hand, few studies have been done in this area to identify the relationship between different gatherings and the occurrence of signs and clinical symptoms of viral infections, especially among humans of different ages and gender. however, there are several suggestions and information regarding zoonoses (e.g., influenza and mers-cov infections) in saudi arabia among the elderly, based on age and gender [ , ] . more recently, increased availability of limited public health data on the prevalence of some zoonotic diseases and associated risk factors or data that identifies the relationship between different zoonotic pathogen antibodies in pregnant women, are of importance [ , ] . central to the profound worldwide changes in religious beliefs and activities is the birth of a new era of both emerging and reemerging diseases that could be arranged under the umbrella of social movements, along with its own role in the spread of zoonotic diseases. thus, any prevention and/or control strategies against any zoonotic pathogen have to take this point of view into account. furthermore, annually, saudi arabia hosts the largest international gathering of hajj where many millions gather in a small geographical area. this puts saudi arabia in the front line of threats of pandemic diseases [ ] . thus, saudi arabia must keep a high level of alertness in monitoring the situation of these pathogens, particularly in view of the potential for global spread of pandemic viruses especially during winter and around the hajj season (e.g., mers-cov infections, ahfv, and influenza viruses). therefore, there is need to prevent further spread of the virus locally, regionally, and internationally. interestingly, with wnv outbreaks, the israeli-like wnv that was isolated in white storks in egypt in - suggests that migrating birds do play a crucial role in the geographical spread of the virus [ ] . recently, the same fact was again suggested in , when the same infection by this virus was introduced into turkey at the time of the outbreaks in saudi arabia and yemen; it was stated that the wnv virus might have been introduced via unlawful entry of the viremic domestic or wild animals through the borders, or by vectors carrying the virus to turkey [ ] . more recently, epidemiological data of zoonotic viral pathogens from saudi arabia and/or from other neighboring countries after it was confirmed through laboratory test isolation from dromedaries (e.g., rabies, mers-cov, rvfv, and wnv) may enhance a high interest in the search for other novel zoonotic viruses in dromedaries [ , , , , , ] . furthermore, the habits of ingestion off unpasteurized milk from camels as a rare delicacy by saudi people need to be checked. moreover, viral pathogens such as rvfv are acquired through the importation of camels, while the remaining pathogens (e.g., rabies and influenza viruses) are endemic worldwide. of these (e.g., influenza virus), there is need for a highly preventive zoonotic control in saudi, due to fact that the isolation and genetic characterization of h n was reported in among vaccinated meat-turkeys flock in egypt, a neighboring country, that was previously reported to have more than , travelers to saudi arabia during hajj pilgrimage seasons, annually [ ] . this might be considered as one of such important risk factor of possible introduction or spread of influenza pathogen in saudi arabia [ , ] . lastly, increased zoonotic pathogens surveillance, particularly influenza, during the hajj season, increased infection control interventions, screening, and quarantine of suspected cases, provision of adequate medical treatment, sustainable awareness, increased education and training of target groups at high risk (e.g., doctors, nurses, veterinarians, and animal workers such as farmers and abattoir workers, etc.) are of great importance to reduce the burden of zoonoses among saudi arabian localities. fortunately, in collaboration with three organizations-including the moh in saudi arabia, the usa centers for disease control and prevention, and the who-a successful preparedness plan during the hajj season was put in place to vaccinate all pilgrims before leaving their home countries [ ] . altogether, there is an urgent need for collaborative surveillance and intervention plans for the control of zoonotic pathogens in saudi arabia. with saudi arabia, the focal point of the ongoing zoonotic pathogens outbreak could be due to the large number of religious pilgrims congregating annually particularly in makkah, jeddah, and al-madinah, the main three cities for hajj and umrah, which drastically increased the potential for uncontrolled global spread of zoonotic infections [ ] . a zoonotic pathogen outbreak could be dramatically decreased among the annual saudi pilgrims if we take into account the fact that: jeddah governorate, the main seaport in saudi arabia is considered to be the main entry point for over million pilgrims coming for hajj or umrah annually. all these numbers of pilgrims arrive through the jeddah islamic port before going on to makkah, for the start of their umrah and/or hajj. surprisingly, the current review showed that during an outbreak, each of these eight most zoonotic viruses (rabies, mers-cov, influenza, ahfv, cchfv, rvfv, dhfv, and wnv) which occurred and/or cases confirmed in saudi arabia particularly from (jeddah and/or makkah) areas with at least one or all of these eight zoonotic viral pathogenic diseases [ , , , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , , , ] . the spread could also have been due to the fact that jeddah is the main port for animal importation to saudi arabia. at the same time, it is the closest area to several countries where some zoonotic outbreaks were reported. to enhance this spread, the role of the active circulation of zoonotic viruses, during their natural transmission cycle, has been reported, however, an importation might increase risk of disease introduction to saudi arabia. • almost annually, from the more than million pilgrims who come to makkah and madinah from different countries worldwide during hajj and umrah, the kingdom's revenue in was put at more than billion saudi riyals (~about . billion us dollars), % up from the figures. this hajj revenue accounted for % of the gross domestic product for the kingdom of saudi arabia. to avert all that number of health hazards from zoonotic diseases in view of economic facts, the global community and particularly the pilgrims need more gift items made in saudi arabia to control and prevent the spread of zoonotic diseases which could be transmitted among hajj and umrah pilgrims. therefore, the following recommendations are suggested in order to improve public awareness and/or health education of zoonotic viral diseases in saudi arabia: based on findings of previous studies, health education strategies could enhance the awareness of the saudi population regarding viral zoonotic diseases through health education program experiences of other countries, particularly during hajj and umrah seasons. this response can draw on the availability of several studies on how to improve, control, and prevent the spread of several zoonoses in both animals and humans, worldwide [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . public health authorities must highlight the importance of promoting health education and facilitate the outcomes of studies for reducing patient cases in saudi arabia. the saudi authorities and government bodies such as the moh should also launch different programs and workshops to increase public awareness about these zoonotic infections. this should involve the cooperation of the saudi regime, and the private and public sectors. different activities may be needed in saudi arabia-such as the practice of self-protection against these diseases, adult control strategies, control activities, and regular workshops-to achieve control and prevention. enhancing of self-awareness among people through health education programs or other strategies for the prevention of viral zoonotic diseases, which require vectors (such as mosquitoes, ticks, and fleas) for their transmission; are important issues on which the saudi population should be educated. they should also be educated about the adverse effects of arbitrary application of insecticides without prior knowledge on dose, resistance, and side effects. increasing the knowledge about the biology and ecology of the animal vectors in society is also crucial. furthermore, the saudi ministry of culture and information should establish intensive health education programs on television channels, radio, and newspapers to increase public awareness and to maintain hygiene conditions within the kingdom and in saudi houses. the saudi ministry of agriculture could play a big role by regularly controlling the application of vaccinations and/or antibiotics on animals which used in the veterinary sector, and also accounting the misuse of such agents following other developed and developing countries on controlling and/or accounting drug strategies [ , , ] . thus, veterinary regulations of animal antibiotics-including overuse of drugs and their application-must be enforced to alleviate the serious public health problems. funding: this research received no external funding. the authors thank the dental oral rehabilitation (dor) research center at king saud university, college of dentistry, kingdom of saudi arabia, riyadh for their support. also the authors wish to appreciate all the researchers whose articles were used in the present research. the authors declare no conflict of interest. the life and work of rudolf virchow - : cell theory, thrombosis and the sausage duel joint who/fao expert 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countries, thorough travel advice should be provided. not only information about diseases of specific countries but also general advice for travelling should be given on this consultation. before travelling to other countries, thorough travel advice should be provided. not only information about diseases of specific countries but also general advice for travelling should be given on this consultation. the following topics should be included in the travel advice consultation: vaccinations (general and country specific) country-specific diseases malaria prophylaxis mosquito prophylaxis (wearing bright long-sleeved clothes, avoiding perfume, staying in air-conditioned rooms, using a mosquito net, using insect repellents, staying inside at dawn and dusk) food consumption and drinking overseas (no consumption of ice cubes, uncooked meals, salads and food, which is exposed to flies, limited alcohol consumption) uv protection (using sun cream, avoiding sun exposure between . and . o' clock, remaining in shaded areas, wearing a hat and covering skin) fitness assessment for travelling, flying and diving challenges of different climates and their effects on the personal health (dehydration, hyperthermia) medications thrombosis counselling counselling on symptoms on return, which require review (fever, skin changes, abnormal bleeding, lymphadenopathy, diarrhoea) sexual transmitted diseases contraception rabies the following items should be asked to enable to give the appropriate advice: risk assessment of the travel in a particular country (transport, area of stay/ rural or resort, reason for travelling, appropriate conduct overseas, pre-existing diseases and medications) vaccination status accomodation and stopovers duration of the stay the vast majority of up-to-date travel information and information about tropical disease are available on who (world health organization) or cdc (centres for disease control and prevention) websites. information on these websites are frequently updated. before giving appropriate advice based on these online resources, it should be checked, which medications are available in the particular countries. hence, recommendations need to be adjusted individually. usually, a medication record is required at the customs. however, it might be sufficient, if the original medication box has the patients and prescribing doctors details (. table . ). malaria is a tropical disease transmitted by the female anopheles mosquito. the distribution of malaria is primarily in the tropics and subtropics of africa, central and south america, asia, papua new guinea and the western pacific islands. as popular diving spots are located in these areas, malaria prophylaxis and advice should be given. the who (world health organization) estimates the worldwide number of people affected by malaria with about million and , , deaths ( ). the plasmodium parasites need temperatures above °c in order to complete the entire growth cycle. therefore, malaria occurs in some places only seasonal. additionally, there are differences in anopheles species regarding the affinity to the host and their local distribution. some genetic factors are protected against malaria. for example, sickle cell anaemia gives a certain protection against p. falciparum and duffy negative blood group against p. vivax. it appears that after recurrent malaria infections, the body adapts to the disease. this means that an infection is possible, but the symptoms of malaria seem to be reduced. children and pregnant women have an increased risk of being affected by malaria. additionally, children have a high mortality rate. during pregnancy the resistance against malaria is reduced. it also poses an increased risk for the unborn child (low birth weight). anopheles is active especially at sunrise and sunset. different kinds of mosquitoes are rather active during the day and can transmit other diseases such as dengue. especially p. falciparum and p. vivax have resistances against antimalaria drugs. there are different plasmodium pathogens: p. falciparum: worldwide tropical and subtropical distribution, mainly in africa; pathogen of severe malaria causes million deaths per year; rapid growth in the blood with haemolysis and emboli due to cytoadherence of affected erythrocytes; - days of incubation, irregular fever spikes. p. vivax: mainly in asia, latin america and some countries in africa; the disease can be activated after months or years. incubation period of - days; fever spikes every days. p. ovale: mainly west africa and the western pacific islands. similar to the p. vivax, it can also infect people with duffy-negative blood group; incubation period of - days; fever spikes every days. p. malariae: worldwide distribution; typical -day cycle, untreated can lead to lifelong chronic malaria; incubation period - days; fever spikes every days. p. knowlesi: southeast asia, mainly infected animals. after the anopheles mosquito aspirates with gametocytes infected blood, the gametocytes develop to gamete in the mosquito's intestines. in the blood of the mosquito, the microgametes (male) penetrate the macrogametes (female), forming zygotes. then cells are changed to an elongated, motile ookinete. this evolves into an oocyst. after the oocyst bursts, sporozoites are released and get in the saliva of the mosquito. the entire cycle inside the mosquito takes - days. if sporozoites enter the human bloodstream through the saliva of the . symptoms of malaria appear after the incubation period. the incubation period varies depending on the pathogen. it can be between a few weeks and also takes up to several months or even a year (p. vivax or occasionally p. ovale). malaria can be divided in three different forms: malaria tertiana: pathogen: p. vivax and p. ovale; fever every second day with one day without fever, spontaneous remission after max. years malaria quartana: pathogen: p. malaria; fever every third day with days without fever, no spontaneous remission malaria tropica: pathogen: p. falciparum, irregular fevers due to the lack of synchronisation of the parasite reproduction, severe form of malaria (malaria maligna) with high fatality, recurrence up to years the fever has a specific pattern. in the first hour, strong rigors and increasing fever typically develop. the fever can reach °c and more for duration of about h. it is often associated with flushing, vomiting and nausea. the fever stage is followed by an approximately -h stage of severe sweating with decreasing fever. severe forms of malaria can be fatal in within few days. causes of death are cerebral malaria, respiratory failure with adrs and kidney failure. the main reason of these complications is the cyto-adherence ("bonding") of the erythrocytes. it results in a failure of the microcirculation followed by ischaemia of vital organs. . the treatment depends on the severity and the pathogen. in complicated malaria, admission to the intensive care should be considered, if more than one of the following criteria exists: inability of the oral intake of medication parasite load of erythrocytes > % severe symptoms of malaria (see table above) the treatment options of complicated malaria are: artesunate (allowed only in some countries): . mg/kg/bw iv; first dose on admission, repeated after and h, minimum duration of therapy h and then once a day, till oral therapy is tolerated. or combination of quinine + doxycycline or clindamycin. quinine: Ȥ first dose: mg/kg/bw iv over h or mg/kg/bw iv over min with subsequent administration of mg/kg/bw iv over h. Ȥ maintenance therapy: mg/kg/bw iv over h three times a day, beginning h after the completion of the first dose. Ȥ exemption: if the patient received three or more doses of quinine in the last h or had an mefloquine prophylaxis in the last h or received a mefloquine treatment in the last days. + doxycycline: mg iv twice daily for days (iv or oral) or clindamycin: Ȥ initial dose: mg/kg/bw Ȥ maintenance dose: mg/bw every h for days (iv or oral) after clinical improvement medication can be changed to a complete cycle of the oral therapy of an uncomplicated malaria (riamet ® or quinine with doxycycline or clindamycin). uncomplicated malaria can be handled on the normal ward. outpatient therapy with close supervision can be considered under the following conditions: parasite load of erythrocytes < %. age > months. no co-morbidity. pregnancy is excluded. ability of oral medication intake. p. falciparum is excluded. clinically stable under medical therapy for the last h. a daily blood smear is necessary during treatment to follow the process of the disease. the patient can be discharged from the hospital and continue treatment at home; if oral therapy is tolerated, a clinical improvement is achieved and the parasite count decreases. a week and a month after discharge, blood smears should be repeated. primaquine as eradication therapy is approved in some countries. it is the only drug that can be used to eliminate hypnozoites, which are the dormant forms of the malaria parasites that occur with p. ovale and p. vivax. because primaquine causes haemolysis in g- -pd deficiency, g- -pd status prior therapy needs to be established. if an eradication with primaquine is required in patients with g- -pd deficiency, a dose up to mg weekly for weeks, with monitoring for haemolysis, could be considered. in children methaemoglobinaemia can be provoked by giving primaquine. a single dose of primaquine mg for p. falciparum, p malaria and p. knowlesi can be given to sterilise the gametocytes. if malaria caused by p. vivax or p. ovale or co-infection with these parasites is suspected, a -day treatment with mg of primaquine twice a day is recommended. before commencing holidays overseas, medical advice should be given in order to assess the malaria risk of the particular country. in nearly all tropical areas, there is a risk of getting infected with malaria. in some tourist areas, this risk might be small, but infection is still possible. in particular day trips to more remote areas pose a risk. some areas have malaria outbreaks and therefore should be avoided. in general, mosquito bites should be avoided to minimise the risk of any mosquitoborne infections. mosquitoes transmitting malaria are mainly active at night, sunrise and sunset. however, mosquito bites are also possible throughout the day. long-sleeved shirts, long pants and closed shoes cover the skin and provide protection against insect bites. insect repellent for the skin and clothes offer additional protection. higher concentrations offer better and longer protection. the protection period of a normal insect repellent lasts usually only - h. slow release products can prolong the effect. mosquitoes avoid air-conditioned rooms. so staying in air conditioned rooms itself provides certain protection. spraying insecticides in rooms and surroundings can be helpful to repel and minimise the quantities of mosquitoes. the bed should be covered with a mosquito net (. fig. . ). chemoprophylaxis is important, because the main cause of malaria deaths is still inadequate chemoprophylaxis. there are different drugs for chemoprophylaxis available. they are subject to the travel location and the parasite's resistances to certain drugs. in addition, they differ in side effects, dosage and cost. except malarone ® , all other drugs for the chemoprophylaxis against malaria have to be taken weeks after leaving the country as they aren't sufficiently effective against the primary liver stages of malaria. mefloquine (lariam ® ) is the only malaria prophylaxis without absolute contraindication in pregnancy. diving (decrease in vigilance); - weeks (at least week) before entering the malaria-endemic country and weeks after return; lariam ® is a category b medication and is the only medication against malaria without absolute contraindication in pregnancy. the use in the first trimester should only be considered, if the expected benefits justify the potential risk to the foetus. however, recent studies suggest that even in the first trimester this medication is safe to take. the dengue virus is an arbovirus. it has four different serotypes (denv - ). dengue has a worldwide distribution in the tropics and subtropics, especially in asia and south america. approximately - million cases and about , with serious complications per year occur. there is a % mortality, which can be reduced to % with timely diagnosis and appropriate treatment. it has an increased risk for children under years and persons with previous dengue infections. the dengue virus is transmitted by the aedes aegypti mosquitoes. these mosquitoes mainly bite at day and in twilight (. fig. . ). z symptoms the incubation period is - days. there is a wide range in severity of dengue symptoms. the majority of infections cause minor symptoms. but dengue infections can be also quite severe (. table . ). in particular recurrent infections with dengue are associated with complications and severity of the disease. it is important for the treating doctor to remember that after the initial fever, the critical phase follows. therefore, the patient must be monitored closely during this time. the disease goes through three stages: fever phase (day - ): sudden high fever °c occasional associated with bradycardia; myalgia mainly in the spine, arms and legs ("breakbone fever"), headache; retrobulbar pain; rigors; metallic/bitter taste; vomiting; and dehydration. . critical phase (day - ): normal temperature with possible mild fever later on, leucopenia, exanthema, petechiae and lymphadenopathy. severe dengue: abdominal pain, spontaneous bleeding, volume shift in to the peritoneal space ("plasma leak"), pleural effusion, hepatomegaly (≥ cm), rapid increase in haematocrit and decreasing thrombocytes, shock (dengue haemorrhagic shock = dhs or dengue shock syndrome = dss), increased bleeding (dengue haemorrhagic fever = dhf) and organ failure (particularly liver). remission (after days lasting sometimes for weeks): risk of hyperhydration is given when extravascular fluid is reabsorbed without reducing the intravenous fluid administration. in particular in long remissions, fatigue and depression may be present. normally there are no long-term damages after a dengue infection, and the vascular changes recover completely. z treatment there is no medication available to treat dengue directly. the diagnosis of dengue can be demonstrated by pcr in the initial phase and using igm and igg a few days later. due to severe complications, the haematocrit, coagulation parameters, leukocytes and platelets have to be tested daily. thrombocytes < , cells/mm can rise the suspicion of dhf. if pleural effusion is suspected, a cxr should be obtained. by tightening a blood pressure cuff petechiae can be provoked (medium pressure of the systolic and diastolic pressure for min). this can be used as a diagnostic tool. an increase of the haematocrit of > %, pleural effusion, ascites or hypoproteinaemia could be a sign for extravascular fluid loss. the extravascular fluid loss is typically found in the initial phase. hence, fluid replacement therapy is crucial in this phase. as the extravascular fluid loss can come to an end quite quickly, a complication of the fluid replacement therapy is hyperhydration. decrease of haematocrit of > % after fluid administration can represent a fluid excess and hyperhydration. hence, careful monitoring of the fluid balance and weight are necessary. the therapy is adjusted according to its severity. if necessary, dic, blood loss or shock require specific treatment. like dengue, chikungunya is a mosquitoborne disease. the species transmitting the chikungunya virus (chikv) are aedes aegypti in the tropics and subtropics and aedes albopictus in colder regions (. fig. . ). these mosquitoes bite day and night, but mainly in the early morning hours and late afternoon. the incubation period is between and days. the symptoms are similar to that of dengue. patients suffer from sudden fever with headache, skin rash, fatigue, strong limbs and muscle pain. affected joints often are swollen. the symptoms generally last for few days but can persist for weeks and years. the disease has no long-term effects. for diagnosis rt-pcr and virological methods can be used in the initial phase. later, it can be diagnosed by igm and igg. igm peaks after - weeks and can be detected up to months. the treatment requires analgesia only. . yellow fever is a disease transmitted mainly by the aedes aegypti mosquito but also by other mosquitoes or ticks. the pathogen is a rnacontaining flavivirus. it has approximately , infections with approximately , deaths annually. % of cases occur in africa and the remaining % in south america. the risk of getting infected with yellow fever is with : - in africa and higher than : in south america (. fig. . ). the transmission occurs in rainforest areas (jungle or sylvatic cycle), where mosquitoes transfer the virus from monkeys to humans, in endemic areas of the savannah (savannah or intermediate cycle) either transferred from monkeys or human to humans via mosquitoes or in urban areas from human to human via mosquitoes. the incubation period is - days. the disease has two phases. the acute phase comes with fever, headache, myalgia, headand backache, loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea. the second phase occurs only in approx. % of infected humans within the next h. jaundice, abdominal pain and vomiting are rapidly developing, followed by diffuse bleeding (epistaxis and gi bleeding) and multi-organ failure (mainly kidneys). if symptoms of the more severe second phase develop, % of the patients die within the next - days. patients who survive usually recover without significant organ damage. the diagnosis can be made via a blood or tissue biopsy of the liver. there is no cure for yellow fever and only supportive measures can be taken. however, a very effective life-vaccination (stamaril ® ) is available. only authorised doctors are authorised to prescribe and give the vaccine. severe side effects of these vaccinations are severe allergic reaction ( : ), vaccine-associated neurotropic disease/post-vaccinal encephalopathy ( : ) and vaccine-associated viscerotropic disease/ multi-organ failure ( : ). for travelling into countries where yellow fever is endemic, vaccination is mandatory. the side effects seem to be age-related and occur increasingly with progressive age or in young children. the vaccination is contraindicated in children . · other mosquito-borne diseases below month and during pregnancy. analysis of yellow fever vaccines adverse events demonstrated an increased frequency of serious adverse events in persons age years and older. the risk of viscerotropic side effects in < years is : , in a population of - years of age : and in > years of age : . a failure to be vaccinated or being documented can lead to a refusal of entry into other countries or to a certain time in quarantine when leaving the area where yellow fever occurs. if there is a clinical indication against receiving yellow fever vaccine (e.g. children < month or poor immune status), a written medical exemption can be granted, to enable to travel to these countries without vaccination. absolute contraindications for a yellow fever vaccination are: allergy against the vaccine or egg protein age < months immunodeficiency neoplasia transplantations immunosuppressive therapies relative contraindications for a yellow fever vaccination are: age - months age > asymptomatic hiv infections and cd + t lymphocytes - /mm ( - % of the total in children < years of age) pregnancy lactation aedes aegypti spreads also the zika virus. however, it is also sexually, intrauterine and perinatal transmitted. currently the main distribution is countries in south and north america as well as the caribbean islands, singapore and some countries in south pacific islands. symptoms of zika infection may be fever, rash, arthralgia, myalgia, headache and conjunctivitis. but in most cases, an infection is asymptomatic (~ %). these symptoms are lasting for several days to a week. the incubation period is - days but is likely to be a few days to a week. the diagnosis can be made via pcr or serology. blood pcr can be detected only in the first week of the disease. urine pcr can detect the virus up to weeks. there is no specific treatment available. deaths are unlikely. there is a potential risk during pregnancy, as microcephaly or other birth defects (~ %) may develop. the zina virus cane be also transferred via semen and can affect unborn life. ross river virus (rrv) is transmitted by the bites of culex annulirostris, aedes vigilax, aedes normanensis and aedes notoscriptus in australia, papua new guinea, parts of indonesia and the western pacific islands. the main transmission time is in the humid summer month from december till march. the main symptoms are fever, rash, headache, myalgia, arthralgia and fatigue. the initial symptoms with fever last usually for - weeks. myalgia and arthralgia usually last longer. symptoms of fatigue and depression can be late complications. the incubation time is between days and weeks. the diagnosis is made with igm. there is only symptomatic treatment available. barmah forest virus (bfv) is transmitted by the same species as the rrv. it mainly can be found in australia. many people don't develop any symptoms. the incubation time is - days. if symptoms appear, they are similar to the one of rrv. the initial symptoms last for - weeks, and the arthralgia and myalgia may last for months. the diagnosis is made with igm. there is only symptomatic treatment available. sindbis virus (sinv) is related to the chikungunya virus. it is mainly transmitted via the culex and culiseta mosquitoes. it can be found in europe, africa, asia and oceania. the symptoms and the duration of the symptoms are quite similar to rrv and bfv. the diagnosis is made with igm. there is only symptomatic treatment available. the o'nyong-nyong virus (onnv) is related to the chikungunya virus but is restricted to africa. it has similar symptoms as the chikungunya virus but has additionally mainly cervical lymphadenopathy, and the affected joins rarely show signs of an effusion. most of the gastrointestinal tract infections are caused by poor hygienic conditions of the travel destination. occasionally ingested seawater can cause intestinal infections too. the main transmission routes are either food-borne or by contact. however, the most common cause for gastrointestinal infections is eating contaminated food. old, warmed up food, salads, unpeeled fruits, poorly cooked food, contaminated water (ice and already opened bottles with refilled water) and ice cream often have substantial quantities of pathogens and pose a risk. hence, the best protection against gi infections is avoiding contaminated food or drinks. usually gastrointestinal infections last for a few days and are self-limiting. if diarrhoea contains blood or mucus in combination of high fever for more than days, more thorough assessment is required. blood and mucus without fever are most likely related to a parasitic disease. if fever is present, it's most likely a bacterial or viral disease. but also climate change by itself or dehydration may be caused by autonomic dysregulation gastrointestinal symptoms such as nausea, weakness, vomiting and diarrhoea. with dehydration the dci risk increases. rehydration and supply of certain electrolytes such as sodium, chloride and potassium are the most important treatments for gastroenteritis. fatigue is a common associated symptom. tannins of black tea boiled for more than min might be beneficial for diarrhoea. the consumption of bananas is recommended because of the high content of potassium. but the best options are rehydration preparations in form of drinks, powders or icy poles. loperamide may slow down the peristaltic and give some relief from diarrhoea. probiotics may support recovery. a low fibre diet is rec-ommended in the active phase of diarrhoea. administration of antibiotics is rarely necessary and indicated. it only is used for serious illnesses or symptoms. reservoir: poultry or meals prepared with egg incubation: - h symptoms: fever, vomiting nausea, diarrhoea, occasionally blood and mucous in the stool duration: - days treatment: symptomatic; azithromycin g od for days or ciprofloxacin mg bd for days or ceftriaxone g od reservoir: water and food incubation: - weeks symptoms: headache, myalgia, bradycardia, roseola in the abdominal area, continuous fever - °c, porridge -like diarrhoea, intestinal bleeding and decrease of the fever after weeks treatment: symptomatic; azithromycin g od for days or ciprofloxacin mg bd for days or ceftriaxone g od; vaccination available reservoir: human, flies, food and faeces incubation: - days symptoms: fever, diarrhoea, sometimes with blood and mucus in the stool and severe abdominal pain treatment: symptomatic; ciprofloxacin bd for days, norfloxacin mg bd for days or bactrim / mg bd for days reservoir: food and water incubation: - days symptoms: mild to severe diarrhoea with fever and blood and mucous in the stool, most common cause for diarrhoea overseas treatment: symptomatic; norfloxacin mg od and ciprofloxacin mg od reservoir: food (particular strawberries) and water incubation: - weeks symptoms: diarrhoea like raspberry jelly, no fever! blood and mucous in the stool, risk for developing a liver abscess treatment: symptomatic, asymptomatic carrier, paromomycin mg tds for days; invasive, tinidazole g od for days or metronidazole mg tds for to days . . cholera (vibrio cholerae) reservoir: contaminated food and water incubation: - days symptoms: often mild gi symptoms, - % develop severe symptom with nausea vomiting, rice water-like diarrhoea and severe dehydration, mortality risk of - % treatment: rehydration, electrolyte substitution; vaccination available; azithromycin g single dose, ciprofloxacin g single dose reservoir: food (in particular sea food) and water incubation: - days symptoms: initial phase ( - days)flulike symptoms, gastrointestinal, hepatomegaly; hepatic manifestation ( - weeks), no jaundice (approx. %), jaundice ( %) with dark urine, jaundice, pruritus; hepatitis a has no chronic form, rarely fatal (fatality is age dependent) treatment: symptomatic, bed rest, avoidance of liver toxic substances (alcohol, medication); vaccination available japanese encephalitis is caused by a flavivirus, which is transmitted by mosquitoes (culex particularly c. tritaeniorhynchus). the hosts are usually pigs and water birds. in humans there are usually not sufficiently high concentrations of virus to serve as a host. the distribution is the asia, especially in rural areas. epidemics occur every - years (. fig. . ). the transmission can occur throughout the year but frequently peaks in the rainy season. there are about , cases per year. only about % of the patients are symptomatic. however, if symptoms develop, the mortality rate is - %. approx. - % of patients who survive have long-term neurological or psychiatric complications. mild courses of japanese encephalitis may be accompanied by mild fever and headache. severe cases show high fever, neck stiffness, photophobia, headache, disorientation, coma, convulsions, spastic paralysis or death. consequential damages may be behavioural disorders, convulsions, paralysis and speech disorders. the diagnosis can be established with blood tests and lumbar puncture. there is currently no treatment option. the vaccination is usually well tolerated and available for prophylaxis. there are various tropical diseases, which are present in poorer countries causing more or less severe symptoms. these diseases are termed "neglected tropical diseases" (ntd). the more common ntds are summarised in this chapter. there are three main conditions caused by these pathogens. the african trypanosomiasis (sleeping sickness) is transmitted by the tsetse fly. the distribution is only in some countries of the sub-saharan africa. seventy percent occur in the democratic republic of congo. tsetse flies are mainly found in rural areas. there are two forms causing sleeping sickness, t. brucei rhodesiense and t. brucei gambiense. t. brucei gambiense has an incubation period of months to years and t. brucei rhodesiense weeks to months. the initial phase is the haemolytic-lymphatic phase, in which pathogens replicate in tissues, blood and lymphatic tissues. symptoms are intermittent fever, headache, myalgia and pruritus. additionally, a painless, indurated chancre on the skin - days after the bite and lymphadenopathy (axillary and inguinal) can be associated. in the second phase, the cns affected causes continuous headache, behavioural disorders (mood swings and depression), delirium, sensitivity disorders, coordination problems and disruptions of the sleeping cycle (daytime somnolence). the diagnosis is mainly made clinically. only for the t. b. rhodesiense, a blood test (centrifuged or wet preparation) to data . detect the parasite is available. examination of buffy coat increases sensitivity. a biopsy of the lymph node to detect the pathogens can be diagnostic for t. brunei gambiense or be used for a culture and pcr. the card agglutination test for trypanosomiasis (catt) is a field test suitable for mass population screening in endemic areas for t. b. gambienses but has a low specificity and is hence only used for identifying suspected cases. all diagnosed patients need to have their cerebrospinal fluid examined for staging, which influences treatment options (. table . ). the treatment is dependent on the pathogen and the staging. if untreated, infections of both forms lead to coma and death. leishmaniasis has three forms: visceral, cutaneous and mucosal (kala-azar). there are about different pathogens, from which approx. are held responsible for these diseases. the disease is transmitted by mosquitoes or sandflies (phlebotomus and lutzomyia). the cutaneous form is the most common one, which causes skin ulcerations. typically this form appears weeks to months after the initial mosquito bite. initially papules are formed, which later ulcerate. they can be painful or painless. the visceral form affects organs, especially the liver, spleen and bone marrow. therefore, this form can be quite dangerous. the changes occur within months and years. hepatosplenomegaly and pancytopenia develop. the mucus form is rare. ulcerative changes of the mucous membranes (e.g. nose, mouth and throat) are typical for this. endemic areas for leishmaniasis are east africa, some arabic countries, india, bangladesh, brazil and some other south american countries. historically, the diagnosis was made by taking a biopsy (skin, bone marrow or other tissues) for culture. now pcr or serological testing with high sensitivity replaced biopsies for making diagnosis. as the visceral disease is fatal without treatment, it needs to be treated in any case. all other forms require normally no treatment. following medication is available: pentavalent antimonial (sb v ) compounds ( mg per day iv or im for days) liposomal amphotericin b ( mg od iv on day - , and ) miltefosine (in adults > kg mg times daily for days) azoles (fluconazole mg od for weeks, itraconazole mg bd for days, ketoconazole mg od for at least days) paromomycin (uncommonly used) pentamidine isethionate (uncommonly used) the chagas' disease is transmitted via an insect bite ("kissing bug") or by contaminated food. it occurs in central and south america. it has . an acute and chronic phase. in the acute phase within - weeks after the infection, localised swelling of the area of the insect bite (skin or mucous membranes), lymphadenopathy, bilateral orbital oedema, meningoencephalitis and myocarditis can occur. - % of all infections become chronic, causing arrhythmias with risk of "sudden death", cardiomyopathy and enlargement of the oesophagus (megaoesophagus) or of the colon (megacolon) even after years or decades. the cardiomyopathy consists of fibrosing myocarditis, causing arrhythmia (rbbb, left anterior fascicular block, st changes, premature ventricular beats and bradycardia) and ventricular failure. the diagnosis in the acute phase is made by a blood smear (thick and thin) to visualise the parasite. a serological test is also available. treatment is recommended in the acute phase and in patient up to the age of and no advanced cardiomyopathy with chronic chagas' disease (. table . ). in age groups above , benefits and risk need to be outweighed. worm infections are a major problem in underdeveloped countries. they occur mainly in rural areas. these conditions may cause insignificant symptoms but also lead to serious consequences or even cause death. because some dive sites are located far away from tourist centres, these infections should be discussed before travelling. this kind of roundworm is found in the tropical and subtropical regions of africa and southeast asia. the transfer follows on oral intake of eggs by contaminated food. the larvae are entering the bloodstream after hatching in the intestine. they reach the lungs via the blood and penetrate the lung tissue, and the larvae can be coughed up. if the sputum is swallowed again, the larvae reach the intestine, mature there within the next - months and lay eggs, which are then excreted via the faeces. the adult worms live about - years. infection is usually asymptomatic. however, abdominal pain, flulike symptoms, allergic skin manifestations, malnutrition, productive cough and a stridor can occur. the diagnosis can be made by examining the faeces (eggs, worms) or sputum (larvae). hookworms are found in tropical and subtropical regions of africa and latin america. the transmission is percutaneously or orally by ingestion of contaminated soil. in contaminated soil the larva is able to survive for about - weeks. larvae can penetrate the skin and enter the blood and reach the alveoli in the . lungs. from there they ascend in the airways, are swallowed again and finally get into the intestines. there larvae mature to adult worms. the worms attach themselves to the wall of the intestine and feed on blood. the eggs are excreted in the faeces and reach again the soil. the eggs can survive up to years. common symptoms are pruritus and rash at the entry site, abdominal pain, diarrhoea, weight loss, anaemia and extreme fatigue. the diagnosis can be made of the faeces. z filariasis filariasis has a worldwide distribution in tropical and subtropical regions. it is caused by wuchereria bancrofti and brugia malayi. it is transmitted by mosquitoes. the infective filariform grow inside mosquitoes and enter via its saliva during the bite. they migrate to the lymphatic vessels and lymph nodes where they develop into adults. they can live there for about years. the female worms produce microfila, which are circulating in the blood. absorbed by mosquitoes they develop within - weeks to the infective filariform. initially there are no symptoms. later lymph oedema in extremities or genitals is a common symptom. in men hydrocele can develop. the skin typically swells and hardens ("elephantiasis"). the diagnosis is made via the blood. detection in the blood smear has to be performed at night, as larvae only circulate in the blood at night. there is also a serological detection of anti-filaria igg available for diagnosis. the treatment with dec is the drug of choice. concurrent disease of loa loa or onchocerciasis is a contraindication for dec, because of the serious side effects (encephalopathy and deaths). ivermectin is used as a prophylaxis, but not as a therapy. z schistosomiasis (bilharziose) schistosomiasis can be found in tropical and subtropical regions worldwide. in addition to malaria, it is the most common parasitic disease. the parasite schistosoma is housed in freshwater snails. by being exposed to freshwater in these regions, infections can occur. the eggs are excreted in urine or faeces of the host. they hatch under optimal conditions and release miracidia. these miracidia infect freshwater snails and develop into sporocysts. these develop into cercariae and get released into the water, where they can penetrate the skin of the host. there, they shed their tail and become schistosomulae and migrate to the liver. in the liver they mature into adults. the paired adult worms migrate to the bowel and bladder, where they lay the eggs. a rash ("swimmers itch") may develop at the entry site on the skin. suprapubic pain and haematuria, abdominal pain, myalgia, fever, swelling of the lymph nodes, liver and spleen enlargement and eosinophilia can be additional symptoms. the risk of bladder cancer is increased with schistosomiasis. the diagnosis can be made in the stool and urine. the maximum excretion of eggs in the urine is between and pm. z trichuriasis (whipworm) whipworms have a worldwide distribution in the humid tropics. the eggs are orally absorbed via soil or unwashed vegetables or fruits. the whipworm grows in the large intestine. the eggs are excreted via the faeces. in the soil the eggs pass through various stages before getting absorbed again. the symptoms are abdominal pain, chronic diarrhoea, nausea, vomiting, inflammation of the intestine, anaemia and eosinophilia. the diagnosis is made with a stool sample. the treatment on the infection is dependent on the parasite (. table . ). leptospirae are long, motile spirochetes. they have a worldwide distribution, but infections occur more commonly in tropical and subtropical regions. they spread through infected urine, which enters water or soil. leptospires can survive for several weeks and months. infections can be caused by contact with either direct contact with the urine or other body fluids except saliva as well as with contaminated soil and water. the bacteria enter the body through the skin or mucous membranes. a broken skin increases the risk of infection. increased risk is after heavy rainfall or flooding. the incubation period is usually - days, but can range from - days. symptoms vary greatly. usually sudden onset of headaches, fever, chills, myalgia, nausea and vomiting, diarrhoea, rash and jaundice are common signs of the first phase for - days. if the patient doesn't recover the second phase (weil's disease) develops, with renal failure, ards, hepatomegaly, jaundice, haemorrhage and meningitis. this has a fatality rate of - %. untreated symptoms can persist for several months. treatment is either doxycyclin mg bd or benzylpenicillin . g qid or ceftriaxone g od for days. infections caused by rickettsia, orienta, ehrlichia, neorickettsia, neoehrlichia and anaplasma are summarised as rickettsial infections. rickettsias are divided into the typhus group and the spotted fever group. orienta make up the typhus group. the reservoir is found in mainly animals, like rodents, but some species are found in fish. the vector is commonly ticks. in scrub typhus the vectors are larval mites. others have fleas and lice as a vector. infection occurs either by bites of the vectors or by direct contact, inoculation or inhalation of contaminated fluids or faeces. the clinical presentation varies. mild symptoms are headache, myalgia, abdominal pain, cough and rash. some rickettsial infections, . q-fever is a zoonosis caused by the protozoa coxiella burnetii. the bacterium is quite resilient due to its sporelike life cycle and remains virulent for months even up to more than a year. the primary reservoir is cattle, goats, sheep and other wildlife like kangaroos, rats and cats. rarely is it transmitted by tick bites or by ingestion of unpasteurised milk or dairy products. the incubation time is usually - weeks but can range from days to weeks. the initial acute q-fever comes with sudden onset of high fever up to °c, headache (retrobulbar), myalgia, chills, non-productive cough and sweats. the symptoms settle within - days. % of all infections are however asymptomatic. often thrombocytopenia and abnormal lfts are found. complications are ards, endocarditis and meningoencephalitis. the diagnosis is based on detecting phase ii and phase i antibodies (igg) weeks apart. the initial test (phase ii) should be taken at the end of the first week of illness. igm and igg rise almost at the same time. a fourfold rise is diagnostic. an initial negative titre doesn't rule out q-fever. seroconversion occurs usually between days and but is almost always present by days. pcr testing can be used in the first weeks but before antibiotic administration. however, a negative pcr result doesn't rule out q-fever. chronic q-fever develops in . - %. it can result in endocarditis, aneurysms, osteomyelitis, hepatitis, neurogic (mononeuritis, optic neuritis), pulmonary (interstitial fibrosis, pseudotu-mor) and renal (glomerulonephritis) disease. chronic q-fever usually develops shortly after the infection. however, chronic endocarditis may not come apparent until - years or even longer. chronic fatigue syndrome is described in approx. %. typically in chronic q-fever, the initial igg titre is increasing (> : ). the treatment for acute q-fever is doxycyclin mg bd for days or for at least days after fever subsides and until clinical improvement. as serological confirmation takes time, treatment should not be delayed. early treatment is effective at preventing severe complications. for chronic q-fever, months of doxycyclin mg bd and hydroxychloroquine mg tds is recommended as standard treatment. rabies has an almost worldwide distribution. more than % of deaths occur in africa and asia. about % are children under years of age. dogs are the main vectors. in asia, there is also a risk of transmission through monkeys. in addition to other diseases, like the lyssavirus, bats or flying foxes can transfer rabies. it is transmitted by bites or scratch wounds but also by inoculation of saliva onto mucous membranes or eye of an infected animal. thorough cleaning of the wound and vaccination within hours can prevent the disease. the incubation period is usually - months but can be less than week and more than a year. initial symptoms include paraesthesia in the wound area. the disease can pass in two forms. the hyperactive form ( %) shows up with hyperactivity, manic behaviour, paranoia, hallucinations, delirium, hydrophobicity and occasionally aerophobia (triggered by the extremely painful spasms in the larynx area). the paralytic form ( %) is characterised by a slow but steady increasing paralysis. the paralysis begins in the area of the infection. the diagnostics can be established on the animal that has inflicted the wound. the tissue samples of the animal are taken from the brain (brainstem and cerebel-lum). the diagnosis in humans is difficult and unreliable. investigation of blood (antibodies), saliva (pcr), spinal fluid (antibodies) and skin biopsies (rabies antigen) are available. the vaccine and the immune globulin can be given during pregnancy. typical side effects of the vaccine are headache, myalgia, malaise, fatigue and nausea. treatment after potential infection (postexposure prophylaxis pep) includes: irrigation of the wound for a minimum of min and washing of the wound with water, soap, iodine or other disinfecting substances rabies vaccine rabies immunoglobulin into the wound area within days after the first vaccination following data should be recorded when a rabies vaccine is given overseas: address, email and telephone of the practice or hospital date of vaccinations batch number, name of the vaccine and manufacturer how many vaccinations are given application: subcutaneous or intramuscular injection who recommends the following approach with potential rabies after animal contact: vaccination against rabies is recommended for: travellers, who for more than month in areas, in which rabies is present professions that deal with bats or fruit bats professions, in which might get with rabies in contact (e.g., veterinary surgeon or nurse) laboratory workers who handle objects with rabies or lyssavirus after animal contact category + pre-exposure prophylaxis (prep) includes three vaccinations on day , and - . the dose is . ml intramuscularly or subcutaneously. the vaccination lasts for years. follow-up vaccinations (post-exposure prophylaxis = pep) include four vaccinations on day , , and . the dose is . ml intramuscularly. immunocompromised patients should receive five vaccinations with an additional vaccination on the th day. with previous vaccinations, two vaccinations are recommended on day and after exposure. it is not recommended to change the brand or the manufacturer during the course of vaccinations. however, it is possible, if that particular vaccine is not available. immunoglobulin should be administered with the first vaccination. the dose is iu/kgbw. the immunoglobulin preferably should be given in proximity of the wound. the immunoglobulin can be diluted, if the wounds is large, to enable to cover the entire wound area. the immunoglobulin is not recommended, if the first vaccination was given more than days ago, if prep or pep was completed or if an adequate serologic detection of vnab titres (≥ . iu/ml) is present. to avoid infection, no animals should be fed. bringing your own food or carrying items like handbags, water bottles, etc. should be avoided, if you stay in the range of monkeys. distance should be maintained to stray cats and dogs. the middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) is caused by a corona virus. corona viruses can cause mild flulike symptoms but also severe symptoms like the severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars). the mers-cov occurs . · mers mainly on the arabian peninsula (iran, jordan, kuwait, lebanon, oman, qatar, saudi arabia, united arab emirates and yemen). but through international travel, it can spread worldwide. recently it resulted in some cases in korea. mers has % mortality. the disease is transmitted through droplets or direct contact. the mers-cov also has a wide range of symptoms, from mild common cold symptoms and infections of the upper respiratory tract to a rapidly progressive pneumonitis, respiratory failure, septic shock and multi-organ failure. it seems the mers-cov has a low virulence, since the transmission occurs usually only through close contact by human to human, such as the care of a person suffering from mers. camels seem to be the original reservoir. mild forms with fever and mild respiratory symptoms, mers should be considered, if close contact with infected people existed prior to these symptoms. mers can be asymptomatic but also lead to respiratory failure and death. typical symptoms include fever, cough and shortness of breath. pneumonia or pneumonitis is often associated with mers. sometimes gastrointestinal symptoms such as diarrhoea and vomiting can occur. it has a high mortality of %. the treatment depends on the severity of the disease. caution in contact with camels in affected countries should be taken. eating insufficient heated camel meat and milk should be avoided. a suspicion of mers should be considered in individuals with the following risk profile: fever and pneumonia/pneumonitis and stay in endemic areas or contact with a symptomatic person from an endemic area within days before onset of symptoms fever and pneumonia/pneumonitis and hospitalisation in endemic areas or contact with camels and camel products in an endemic area within days before onset of symptoms fever and pneumonia/pneumonitis and contact with a mers diseased person within days before onset of symptoms cluster of patient (especially medical personnel) with severe respiratory symptoms with unclear aetiology tuberculosis is caused by an acid-resistant mycobacterium. m. tuberculosis is responsible for tuberculosis in more than %. it has global distribution but occurs more frequently in countries with low hygienic standards. tuberculosis spreads around the globe through international travel and immigration. it also shows a rising rate of resistances to conventional therapies. the time between the initial infection and tuberculin conversion takes approx. the diagnosis can be made with the tuberculin skin test (tst/mendel mantoux). days after the strictly intradermal injection of the substance, the induration at the injection site is measured. an induration of > mm may be suggestive of tuberculosis. it is considered a positive test if either the patient has a radiological proof, had close contact with someone with tuberculosis, and has symptoms of tuberculosis, is hiv positive or suffers from immunodeficiency. an induration > mm is considered as positive, when the patient who travelled to a country with high tb prevalence is an iv. drug user, homeless and a resident of nursing home or prison and has diabetes mellitus, silicosis, m. hodgkin's or end-stage renal failure. an induration > mm is considered as evidence of tuberculosis without any risk factors or symptoms. the tst can be negative in the first weeks after an infection as well as in patients suffering from miliary tuberculosis, m. hodgkin, sarcoidosis, viral infections, and lowered immunity, receiving an immunosuppressive therapy or at high age. a false-positive test can occur after multiple tsts, after vaccination against tuberculosis and infection of other mycobacteria. the interferon-γ test (quantiferon ® tb gold) offers an alternative testing method. this test has the same sensitivity as the tst but a higher specificity. moreover, this test is a confirmation test and isn't affected by previous bcg-immunisations. it consists of three parts, the control (to determine the baseline-interferon-γ), mitogen control (determining the ability of an immune response) and antigen detection (detection of prior infections). a cxr may demonstrate caverns or hilar lymph nodes, but is not a diagnostic tool to exclude tuberculosis. the treatment duration of uncomplicated tuberculosis is months, of complicated tuberculosis - months (. table . ). it's a combination treatment of different drugs. medications for the tuberculosis treatment are: isoniazid: mg/kgbw, max. mg /d; side effects: elevated serum transaminases, polyneuropathy, prophylaxis to avoid side effects of pyridoxine - mg/d a vaccination bcg vaccine is not recommended due to its side effects and the lack of efficacy. all vaccinations should be given days before travelling. minimum time for a sufficient protection is weeks (. divers alert network (dan) is a non-profit organisation for divers. they provide medical information and articles, diving insurance, life insurance and travel insurance. they also offer courses, support and research. dan has an international hotline for support and coordination of diving accidents but also for general medical advice overseas. european underwater and baromedical society (eubs) is a european organisation for diving and hyperbaric medicine. they provide guidelines for hyperbaric treatment and training of medical professionals for the hyperbaric medicine. the german organisation for diving and hyperbaric medicine is the "gesellschaft für tauch-und Überdruckmedizin" (getÜm). . . single dose certificate is valid for years, a new vaccination may be required after years to renew the certificate they provide guidelines for hyperbaric treatment and training of medical professionals for the hyperbaric medicine. brazil; office: tel: + - - - , emergency-hotline: + - - - . japan: japan marine recreation association, kowa-ota-machi bldg office: tel: + - - - , f ax southern africa: private bag x , halfway house, midrand eubs: webmaster@eubs.org gtuem: c/o bg-unfallklinik, professor-kuentscher-str. , d- murnau spums: st kilda road uhms: us highway , suite dan: www. diversalertnetwork. org dan europe: www. daneurope. org emedicine yellow fever chikungunya virus middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) parasites -african trypamosiasis (also known as sleeping sickness) parasites -american trypanosomiasis (also known as chagas disease) parasites -trichuriasis (also known as whipworm) air embolism of the brain in rabbits pretreated with mechlorethamine an examination of the critical released gas concept in decompression sickness accessed middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) key: cord- - xmoeoyh authors: thomas, helen lucy; zhao, hongxin; green, helen k.; boddington, nicola l.; carvalho, carlos f.a.; osman, husam k.; sadler, carol; zambon, maria; bermingham, alison; pebody, richard g. title: enhanced mers coronavirus surveillance of travelers from the middle east to england date: - - journal: emerg infect dis doi: . /eid . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: xmoeoyh during the first year of enhanced mers coronavirus surveillance in england, persons traveling from the middle east had acute respiratory illness and were tested for the virus. infection was confirmed in travelers with acute respiratory distress syndrome and of their contacts. patients with less severe manifestations tested negative. during the first year of enhanced mers coronavirus surveillance in england, persons traveling from the middle east had acute respiratory illness and were tested for the virus. infection was confirmed in travelers with acute respiratory distress syndrome and of their contacts. patients with less severe manifestations tested negative. east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) died in june in the kingdom of saudi arabia and was reported on september ( ) . the second case reported globally was in a qatari national patient who had been transferred from qatar to a hospital in england; preliminary data sharing on september indicated that isolates from the second case-patient had . % identity with the virus identified in the first case. ( ) . on september , , public health england (phe) (formerly the health protection agency [hpa]) established an enhanced surveillance system to rapidly detect and investigate possible cases of mers-cov infection among travelers to england from the middle east. the first months of surveillance in england identified additional case of mers-cov in a traveler returning from the middle east and cases among family contacts of this second case. definitions for possible and confirmed cases were established. possible cases were defined by clinical and epidemiologic criteria. clinical criteria specified acute respiratory syndrome (including fever ≥ °c or history of fever and cough) requiring hospitalization and clinical or radiologic evidence prompting suspicion of lower airway involvement not explained by another etiology. epidemiologic criteria specified travel to or residence in an area where infection with mers-cov could have been acquired during the days before onset of illness. at the time these criteria were initiated, the kingdom of saudi arabia and qatar were the areas indicated. a confirmed case was defined by respiratory samples testing positive for mers-cov by at least specific pcr assays targeting different regions of the mers-cov genome. because mers-cov is an emerging pathogen, case definitions were, and continue to be, revised in response to new information ( ), in agreement with world health organization case definitions ( ) ( ) ( ) . substantial revisions included extension of the geographic areas where infection could have occurred to include all countries neighboring those where infection could have been acquired (november , ), the recommendation to test patients with the appropriate clinical and epidemiologic criteria if they had an alternative etiology which did not fully explain their clinical manifestation (february , ), and extension of the incubation period to days (june , ). enhanced surveillance involved the collection of a minimum dataset for each possible case, including demographic data, clinical symptoms, travel and contact history, and results of testing for respiratory pathogens ( ) . nose and throat swab specimens and, when possible, lower respiratory tract specimens, were tested at of regional laboratories. although the testing guidelines recommended mers-cov testing after exclusion of alternative etiologies, other tests were conducted in parallel with mers-cov testing for most suspected cases. during the first few days of surveillance, a pan-coronavirus assay conducted at the phe national reference laboratory was used as a screening test; then the viral genome was fully sequenced. after the generation of mers-cov specific assays, a first-line screening assay targeting the viral genomic area upstream of the e gene ( ) was conducted, followed by confirmatory testing at the hpa/phe national reference laboratory. results of mers-cov testing are reported regularly in the hpa/phe weekly influenza report ( ). a descriptive analysis included the number of persons tested and proportion positive for mers-cov by key demographic, epidemiologic, and clinical characteristics. definition were tested for mers-cov. seventy-five travelers tested negative on the screening assay, and tested positive. positive results on the screening assay were confirmed by positive results at the hpa/phe national reference laboratory. in addition to testing the persons who met all of the possible case criteria, mers-cov testing was conducted on patients who had severe acute respiratory disease but did not meet the travel requirements: had a travel history outside the middle east, had no travel history in the relevant exposure period, and travel histories of the remaining were unknown. mers-cov was not detected in any of these persons. the clinical and epidemiologic characteristics of the persons tested and their mers-cov test results are shown in table . those tested ranged in age from months to years; ( %) had signs of pulmonary parenchymal involvement. the confirmed cases were in male patients, and years of age; both had severe acute respiratory symptoms requiring treatment by extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; both subsequently died. mers-cov pcr testing was conducted on contacts of the confirmed case-patients in england; of these contacts tested mers-cov positive ( , ). the positive predictive value for mers-cov infection of different combinations of signs and symptoms is shown in table . no case-patients who did not have pulmonary parenchymal involvement tested positive for mers-cov, and the positive predictive value of the clinical manifestations increased as the severity of disease increased. of the patients tested, had positive results for alternative respiratory pathogens, including with influenza ( influenza a and unlike surveillance for established organisms, surveillance for a novel pathogen requires analysis of information collected from all patients tested, even from those that test negative, to build knowledge of the predictive value of different epidemiologic and clinical manifestations. this report on the characteristics of patients traveling to england from the middle east and tested for mers-cov enables a first crude estimation of the positive predictive value of different signs and symptoms during the first year following the emergence of this pathogen. because this study is based on a cohort of suspected case-patients, of whom only laboratory-confirmed cases were identified during the surveillance period, estimates on the basis of identified symptoms are very imprecise ( table ) . however, in the context of an emerging pathogen, reporting such data progressively helps optimize case detection and surveillance systems. during the -month surveillance period, no patients who had respiratory symptoms but no pulmonary parenchymal involvement were positive for mers-cov by pcr, and the positive predictive value of signs and symptoms increased with the severity of clinical manifestation. this suggests that the case definitions that were in use during this period (which recommended mers-cov testing only for patients who met the epidemiologic criteria and had a severe respiratory illness) were appropriate. a range of respiratory pathogens were found in those patients that were mers-cov negative, highlighting the importance of looking for alternative diagnoses. however, the diagnosis of of the mers-cov case-patients was delayed because of an initial diagnosis of influenza. the testing algorithm was subsequently changed to ensure that patients meeting the possible case definition were tested for mers-cov if they had an alternative etiology which did not fully explain their clinical manifestation. the predictive value of the possible case definition depends on the incidence of infection and would be expected to vary across different population groups and change over time, especially in the context of an emerging pathogen. we encourage other countries to similarly report the characteristics of all patients tested for mers-cov to improve understanding of the predictive value of different clinical and epidemiologic manifestations in various populations at different times. this will help inform the evolving international public health response to this novel pathogen. severe respiratory illness caused by a novel coronavirus mers-cov case definitions and algorithms world health organization. interim case definition for case finding severe respiratory disease associated with novel coronavirus as of world health organization. revised interim case definition -novel coronavirus. interim case definition as of world health organization. revised interim case definition for reporting to who -novel coronavirus. interim case definition as of enhanced case and contact protocol v . . epidemiological protocols for comprehensive assessment of early middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus cases and their close contacts in the united kingdom detection of a novel human coronavirus by realtime reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction evidence of person-to-person transmission within a family cluster of novel coronavirus infections we thank all the clinical, microbiological, and health protection staff who have reported cases to the english enhanced mers-cov surveillance system and collected the relevant clinical, virologic, and epidemiologic data.dr thomas is a consultant epidemiologist at the national centre for infectious disease and control, public health england. her research interests include field epidemiology studies of infectious disease outbreaks and tuberculosis surveillance. key: cord- -buh e tm authors: tang, siming; ma, wanbiao; bai, peifan title: a novel dynamic model describing the spread of the mers-cov and the expression of dipeptidyl peptidase date: - - journal: comput math methods med doi: . / / sha: doc_id: cord_uid: buh e tm the middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) coronavirus, a newly identified pathogen, causes severe pneumonia in humans. mers is caused by a coronavirus known as mers-cov, which attacks the respiratory system. the recently defined receptor for mers-cov, dipeptidyl peptidase (dpp ), is generally expressed in endothelial and epithelial cells and has been shown to be present on cultured human nonciliated bronchiolar epithelium cells. in this paper, a class of novel four-dimensional dynamic model describing the infection of mers-cov is given, and then global stability of the equilibria of the model is discussed. our results show that the spread of mers-cov can also be controlled by decreasing the expression rate of dpp . the middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) coronavirus, a newly identified pathogen, causes severe pneumonia in humans, with a mortality of nearly %. human-to-human spread has been demonstrated, raising the possibility that the infection could become pandemic [ ] . a colorized electron micrograph shows the coronavirus mers-cov acute viral respiratory illness that is characterized primarily by cough, fever, and shortness of breath and is sometimes associated with severe and potentially fatal complications such as pneumonia and kidney failure. the illness was first observed in june in jiddah, saudi arabia, and soon afterward it was reported in other countries in the middle east, including jordan, qatar, and the united arab emirates (uae). it later was detected in europe, including cases in france, germany, italy, and the united kingdom; in the north african country of tunisia; and in countries more distant from the middle east, including china, malaysia, south korea, and the united states. the largest mers outbreak outside saudi arabia occurred in , when an individual who had recently traveled to the middle east subsequently fell ill in south korea, transmitting the disease to close contacts. the dissemination of the disease by infected travelers leaving the middle east suggested that mers had the potential to escalate into an international public health emergency. the possibility of a pandemic was thought to be impeded, however, by the limited ability of the disease to be passed from one person to another. mers is caused by a coronavirus known as mers-cov, which attacks the respiratory system. the recently defined receptor for mers-cov, dipeptidyl peptidase (dpp ), is generally expressed in endothelial and epithelial cells and has been shown to be present on cultured human nonciliated bronchiolar epithelium cells, providing further information on the respiratory tropism of mers-cov [ ] . symptoms of illness appear anytime from to days following infection. cough, fever, and shortness of breath are the primary symptoms, but others such as diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, and myalgia (muscle pain) can also occur. in some persons, infection produces no symptoms or only mild cold-like symptoms, whereas in others, particularly in persons with underlying medical conditions, infection can produce severe illness [ ] . it is well-known that dynamic models are still playing important roles in describing the interactions among uninfected cells, free viruses, and immune responses (see, e.g., [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] ). a three-dimensional dynamic model for viral infection is proposed by nowak et al. (see, e.g., [ ] [ ] [ ] ). ( ) in model ( ), ( ), ( ), and v( ) denote the concentration of uninfected cells, infected cells, and free viruses at time , respectively. the constant > is the rate at which new uninfected cells are generated (from a pool of precursor cells). the constants > and ≥ are the death rate of uninfected cells and the rate constant characterizing infection of the cells, respectively. the constant > is the death rate of the infected cells due to either viruses or immune responses. the infected cells produce new viruses at the rate during their life, on average having the length / , where > is some integer number. the constant > is the rate at which the viruses are cleared, and the average lifetime of a free virus is / . figure shows a interaction procedure between uninfected cells and mers-cov mediated by dpp receptors. based on basic dynamic model ( ) and figure , we propose the following novel four-dimensional dynamic model which describes the spread of the mers-cov and the expression of dpp :̇= in model ( ), ( ) represents the concentration of dpp on the surface of uninfected cells, which can be recognized by surface spike (s) protein of mers-cov (see, e.g., [ ] ). infected cells are produced from uninfected cells and free viruses at the rate ( ( ))v( ) ( ). it is assumed that dpp is produced from the surface of uninfected cells at the constant rate > . dpp is destroyed, when free viruses try to infect uninfected cells, at the rate ( ( ))v( ) ( ), and is hydrolyzed at the rate ( ). here, ≥ and > are constants. it is assumed that there is no undestroyed dpp on the surface of infected cells. all other parameters in model ( ) have similar biological meanings to that in model ( ) . the initial condition of model ( ) is given as ( ) ≥ , ( ) ≥ , v( ) ≥ , and ( ) ≥ . it is not difficult to show that the solution ( ( ), ( ), v( ), ( )) with the initial condition is existent, unique, bounded, and nonnegative for all ≥ (in fact, it also has ( ) > and ( ) > for all > ). if ( ) > , ( ) > , v( ) > , and ( ) > , it is easily proven that the corresponding solution ( ( ), ( ), v( ), ( )) is positive for all ≥ . furthermore, it can be easily shown that the set is attractive and positively invariant with respect to model ( ), the purpose of the paper is to study local and global stability of the equilibria of model ( ) by using roth-hurwitz criterion and constructing suitable lyapunov function (see, e.g., [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] ). the basic reproductive ratio of the virus for model ( ) is ( ) always has an infection-free equilibrium = ( , , , ) = ( / , , , / ). if > , model ( ) also has unique infected equilibrium * = ( * , * , v * , * ), where, for first, we have the following result. proof. at any equilibrium ( , , v, ), jacobian matrix of model ( ) by simple computations, we can get that the characteristic equation at is ( ) = ( + )( + )[ + ( + ) + ( − )] = . clearly, if < , all roots of ( ) = have negative real parts. hence, is local asymptotic stability by routh-hurwitz criterion. if = , ( ) = has the zero root = and three negative roots. hence, is linearly stable. construct the lyapunov function as follows: it is clear that is continuous on Ω and positive definite with respect to and satisfies condition (ii) of definition . in [ ] or lemma . in [ ] on Ω = Ω \ Ω . calculating the derivative of along the solutions of model ( ), we have, for ≥ , clearly, / ≤ on Ω by ≤ . define = { / = | ( , , v, ) ∈ Ω, ( , , v, ) < +∞}. let be the largest subset in which is invariant with respect to the set model ( ) . hence, we have that ⊂ ⊂ {( , , v, ) | ( , , v, ) ∈ Ω, = , = }. from the invariance of and model ( ), we can easily show that = { }. therefore, it follows from theorem . in [ ] or lemma . in [ ] that is globally attractive. this completes the proof. for local and global stability of the infected equilibrium * , we have the following result. where it is obvious that > ( = , , , ). furthermore, by using matlab program, it can been shown that Δ = − − has items in which all items are positive. hence, * is local asymptotic stability by routh-hurwitz criterion. construct the lyapunov function as follows: it is clear that is continuous on Ω and positive definite with respect to * and satisfies condition (ii) of definition . in [ ] or lemma . in [ ] on Ω = Ω \ Ω . calculating the derivative of along the solutions of model ( ), we have, for ≥ , since the arithmetical mean is greater than or equal to the geometrical mean, we have that * / + * / + v * / * v * * + v * / * v − ≤ , for any , , v, > , and that * / + on the other hand, notice the inequality in [ ] : we have ( ), we can also show that = { * }. hence, it follows from theorem . in [ ] or lemma . in [ ] that * is globally attractive. this completes the proof. let us first give some numerical simulations on the orbits of model ( ) . take the following a set of parameters, = = , = . , = = . , = , = . , = , and = . . we can compute the values of the infectionfree equilibrium and the basic reproductive ratio, = ( , , , . ) and = . < . figure (a) shows the trajectory of model ( ) with suitable initial condition, which shows that the infection-free equilibrium is asymptotically stable. let us take = . , and all the other parameters are the same as above. we can also compute the values of the infection-free equilibrium , the infected equilibrium * , and the basic reproductive ratio, = ( , , , ), * = ( . , . , . , . ), and = > . figure (b) shows orbits of model ( ) with suitable initial conditions, which shows that the infected equilibrium * is asymptotically stable. we would like to point out here that, based on the numerical simulations, the condition ( ) ≥ may be further weakened or even removed. finally, by using the basic reproductive ratio = / , let us give some simple discussions on the interactions between the protein dpp and the virus infection. usually, in the absence of any drug treatment, all the parameters in model ( ) and the corresponding basic reproductive ratio can be regarded as relatively fixed constants. if some drug treatment measures are taken, the effectiveness of the treatment can be reflected in the regulation of the parameter . for example, by increasing the value of , the value of the basic reproductive ratio of can be changed from greater than to less than . in the numerical simulations in this section, figure (b) shows that the virus infection will be persistent, when = . and = > . if increasing from = . to = . , figure (a) shows that the virus infection can be controlled, since = . < . the authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest. rapid generation of a mouse model for middle east respiratory syndrome middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (merscov) causes transient lower respiratory tract infection in rhesus macaques merse infectious diseases of humans: dynamics and control population dynamics of immune responses to persistent viruses virus dynamics: mathematics principles of immunology and virology mathematical analysis of hiv- dynamics in vivo host cell entry of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus after two-step, furinmediated activation of the spike protein global properties of basic virus dynamics models global asymptotic properties of virus dynamics models with dose-dependent parasite reproduction and virulence and non-linear incidence rate complete global stability for an sir epidemic model with delay-distributed or discrete global properties for virus dynamics model with beddington-deangelis functional response stability and hopf bifurcation in a delayed hiv infection model with general incidence rate and immune impairment global dynamics of a mathematical model of competition in the chemostat: general response functions and differential death rates necessary and sufficient conditions for permanence and global stability of a lotka-volterra system with two delays theory of motion stability and their applications the authors are grateful to drs. songbai guo and ke guo for their valuable suggestions. the research is partly supported by srtp of ustb (for s. tang and p. bai) and partly supported by the nnsf of china ( ) and national key r&d program of china (for w. ma). s. tang and p. bai performed local and global stability analysis and the numerical simulations and wrote the manuscript. w. ma designed the study, developed the methodology of invariance principle, and wrote the manuscript. all authors have read and approved the final manuscript. key: cord- -m kfom x authors: kyriakopoulos, anthony m.; papaefthymiou, apostolis; georgilas, nikolaos; doulberis, michael; kountouras, jannis title: the potential role of super spread events in sars-cov- pandemic; a narrative review date: - - journal: arch acad emerg med doi: nan sha: doc_id: cord_uid: m kfom x coronaviruses, members of coronaviridae family, cause extensive epidemics of vast diseases like severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) and coronavirus disease- (covid- ) in animals and humans. super spread events (sses) potentiate early outbreak of the disease and its constant spread in later stages. viral recombination events within species and across hosts lead to natural selection based on advanced infectivity and resistance. in this review, the importance of containment of sses was investigated with emphasis on stopping covid- spread and its socio-economic consequences. a comprehensive search was conducted among literature available in multiple electronic sources to find articles that addressed the “potential role of sses on severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov- ) pandemic” and were published before (th) of august . overall, ninety-eight articles were found eligible and reviewed. specific screening strategies within potential super spreading host groups can also help to efficiently manage severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov- ) epidemics, in contrast to the partially effective general restriction measures. the effect of sses on previous sars epidemics has been documented in detail. however, the respective potential impact of sses on sars-cov- outbreak is composed and presented in the current review, thereby implying the warranted effort required for effective sse preventive strategies, which may lead to overt global community health benefits. this is crucial for sars-cov- pandemic containment as the vaccine(s) development process will take considerable time to safely establish its potential usefulness for future clinical usage. severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) has periodically emerged as epidemics and its natural history could be utilized as a "compass" to comprehend and manage the current pandemic of sars-cov- . sars-cov- the etiologic agent of the novel coronavirus disease (covid- ) , be-although the prediction and subsequently the prevention of sses seems to be complicated, the virus, host, environmental, and mass behaviors determine relative approaches to prevent and control sses; core community health programs can inhibit and decrease the incidence and the effect of sses ( ) . nevertheless, horizontal austerity measures, such as recommending or compelling individuals to self-isolate at home, which might cause serious social and psychological burden, and quarantine, also leading to loss of income due to social distancing, are associated with negative psychological and religious effects, which can be long lasting ( ) , thereby leading to serious instability of the global society. prolonged social isolation and loneliness are associated with increased mortality ( ) . currently, limited piece of information exists regarding the effect of sses on coronavirus epidemics. the aim of this narrative review is to mainly focus on the potential impact of sses on large outbreaks of coronavirus. the development of an emergency sars-cov- vaccine has its potential usefulness and/or limitations and may result in severe health outcomes, which prompts better screening for sses in order to control coronavirus pandemics. to avoid, in most respects, literature selection bias ( ) , multiple electronic sources: medline/pubmed, scifinder, science direct and goggle scholar as well as researchgate and general (google) were investigated via queries with a nonrestricted time frame reaching the th of august . initial investigation of sses and sars, sses and mers, and sses and covid- , gave narrative results from pubmed. the selected literature, which is included in the study, is presented in table . same items were also searched in all other mentioned sources. the scope of the study was not only to investigate the transmission of sars-cov- due to sses, its comparison with sars-cov- and mers-cov, but also to assess the general global impact due to sses by covid- . therefore, further literature investigation was performed using the same electronic sources. further investigation was made on: a) the prevention of sses by coronaviruses causing sar- , mers and covid- , b) the socio-economic relation of sars-cov- , mers and covid- due to sses, c) the austerity caused by sses of covid- , and d) the relation of sses containment to future vaccination programs. for further investigation, the following items were searched: "sars, mers and covid- epidemic prevention", "sars mers and covid- infectivity and pathogenicity", "coronavirus sse prevention", sse coronavirus crisis and socio-economics", "holy cup reli-gion and transmission of pathogens and sses", and "coronavirus immunity and vaccination". studies providing an adequate determination of an sse related to sars, mers and covid- were primarily screened and selected by two reviewers (authors) blinded to one another. the results were thereafter cross-matched and duplicates were removed. based on this primary search, the socio-economic impact of coronavirus, produced by sses, was extrapolated by two other reviewers (authors). following this initial selection stage, further screening was performed by all reviewers, using the previously described search items to identify parameters determining the global impact of covid- due to sses. identified parameters included the global impact of immunity and vaccination, the holy cup and religion transmission, and the austerity caused by covid- and other coronavirus epidemics due to restrictions applied. all search results were cross-matched to remove duplicates and thereafter, exclusion and inclusion criteria were applied. after removing the duplicates, review was conducted on titles and abstracts. also, a decision was made to remove "news press opinions". computational model methodologies producing contradictory results, studies with wrong interpretation of sses, and studies with non-clear-cut results were also removed. studies using the interpretation "a super spreading individual, known as the index case, produces a cluster of sars, mers, and covid- secondary infections" were included. a second exclusion criterion was applied. in this stage, peer reviewed literature of recent dates, studies assessing sars, mers, and covid- epidemiology measures, studies on covid- restriction measures producing social and economic austerity, articles discussing the perspective for future vaccination and population immunity, and finally genetic studies on coronaviruses causing sars, mers, and covid- . by following the described methodology, on medline/pubmed: a) articles were found on sars and mers and sse, and b) articles were found on covid- and sses. out of: a) of the articles on sars and mers and sse, and b) out of the articles on covid- and sse were deemed relevant hits. after applying the exclusion criteria, articles from the first category, and from the second category were included in the study. suitable articles found by searching, which were selected and reviewed for each part, are illustrated in figure . further investigation in all other electronic sources described, using the same method- ( ) original research description of sse importance in covid- epidemic ! severe acute respiratory syndrome; ∧ middle east respiratory syndrome; &coronavirus disease- ; *super spread events; **when clearly indicated in article, the type of study is also mentioned. ology, increased the number of the included literature to a) and b) , for their respective categories of search. studies included from pubmed in these categories of searches are briefly described and listed in table . further, assessing the general global impact of sses related to covid- , using all the mentioned sources, via the same methodology, led to the inclusion of a) articles related to genetic analysis of sars-cov- and mers-cov and sars-cov- , b) articles related to super spread events, c) articles related to austerity, d) articles related to infectivity and pathogenicity of sars, mers and covid- , e) articles related to prevention of sses concerning human coronaviruses, f) articles related to socio-economic impact, and g) articles related to immunity and future vaccination. table illustrates the initial numbers of hits using all search items in all sources, and the final number of articles reviewed in each category. the involvement of sses in sars extensive outbreaks ( , , , ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) , necessitates urgent elucidation as global tranquility is disturbed by covid- pandemic. epidemiological research has proposed that the outbreak was related to a seafood market in wuhan (hubei, china), underlining the ongoing risk of viral transmission from animals to induce severe diseases in humans. metagenomic rna sequencing of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from a patient with pneumonia identified a novel rna virus strain from the coronaviridae family (called sars-cov- ); and phylogenetic analysis (by introducing the widely used in silico protein screening) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) of the complete viral genome ( , nucleotides) disclosed that the virus was most closely connected ( . % nucleotide similarity) with a group of sars-like coronaviruses (genus betacoronavirus, subgenus sarbecovirus) formerly isolated from bats in china ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . ( , , , ) , that closely related sars-like viral genes were traceable in chinese bat populations. authors claimed that these viruses were capable of infecting humans, by selective adaptations or adjustments, and thereby, causing a new epidemic ( ) . enhancement of virulence is also attributed to these adaptations due to acquisition of spike protein via adaptive mutations ( ) . continuous viral random mutations are possible through in- termediate host transmission, until a deadly virus develops, as illustrated in figure . recent evidence revealed that recombination within intermediate hosts has contributed to development of sars-cov- ( , ). asian outdoor markets could constitute the ideal places for continuous viral mutation exchanges ( ) . as presented in table , the best way to circumvent continuous virus production is targeted surveillance; to at least stop the overspreading by sses ( , , , ) . this has also been proposed by menachery et al. ( ) . sars-cov- is accountable for the unprecedented covid- pandemic ( ) , and the interplaying mechanisms involved in the pathophysiology of covid- include sars-cov- virulence, host immune response, and complex inflammatory reactions ( ) . emerging data, also, imply that the reser-voirs of sars-cov- infection may be similar to covid- ( , , , , ) , as remarkable similarities exist between sars and swine acute diarrhea syndrome (sads) in topographical, temporal, environmental and etiological backgrounds. however, the increasing coronavirus variety and spread in bats were recognized as a potential target to diminish future epidemics that might impend livestock, community health, and financial progress ( ) . probably, identification of animal and insect vectors that transmit the disease, identification and control of alternative routes of transmission like fecal-oral route, and identification of super spreader patient groups could help minimize the epidemiological extent compared to the one observed for sars-cov- infection worldwide. lessons from sars epidemic taught us that the key to control is minimizing the time from the diagnosis of infection to prompt hospital isolation and diminishing the probability table : key clinical and laboratory screening functions to appropriately forecast, prevent, and confront sars! coronavirus , and future coronavirus epidemic waves to estimate the probability of a major outbreak, use simulations of stochastic compartmental epidemic models. use of diagnostic tests to detect asymptomatic susceptibility and pre-symptomatic infectivity estimation of super spread events of current and previous coronavirus epidemics introduction of individual reproductive number. integrated and computational analysis of the influence of individual variation by binomial distribution and use of branching process analysis of disease data. genetic characterization of inpatient viral isolates to identify intermediate animal hosts facilitating the infection next generation sequencing of samples and cultured viral isolates to obtain full sequence and phylogenetic analysis application. environmental detection and continuous sewage monitoring rt-qpcr# screening on sewage systems, vectorsÙĹ and potential air transmission. autopsies and detection of serology conversion of potential vectors. heptad repeat region screening for positive selection computer simulation models to detect positive selection events e.g. codeml branch-site test coupled with bayes empirical bayes procedure, and mixed effects model of evolution. receptor recognition analysis of ace-ii+ to identify origin of crossspecies and human to human transmissions coronaviruses genetic sequencing and phylogenetic analysis of ace-ii to provide origin and efficiency of cross-species and human to human transmission and identification of intermediate hosts. !severe acute respiratory syndrome; #reverse transcriptase quantitative polymerase chain reaction; +angiotensin-converting enzyme-ii. fecal -oral frequent contact with wild animal reservoirs (including domestic animals) and birds** airborne and fecal -oral construction area workers air particles sewage system workers*** fecal -oral *in both community and hospital environments. **including slaughter houses, pet shops, animal and bird collectors and breeders, cow, and pig farmers. ***including workers coming in contact with environment contamination. !human immunodeficiency virus, #methicillin resistant staphylococcus aureus. of another sse ( ). the typically recognized - rule or the so-called "pareto rule", states that % of efforts lead to % of results ( ) . more specifically, this comprises a principally convenient state when tackling infectious diseases and is applied to investigate infection transmission, and initially among cattle farms. in this regard, woolhouse et al. ( ) reported that targeted actions concerning disease control and prevention in % of the farms that mainly supplied the basic reproduction number (ro) decreased spread by % ( ) . focusing on the covid- virus, ro is a sign of virus transmissibility, denoting the average figure of novel infections caused by an infectious individual in a totally naive population. for r > , the number of infected people tends to increase, whereas for r < , transmission is likely to stop; ro represents a chief model in the epidemics, signifying the risk of an infectious mediator with regard to epidemic spread ( ) . recent data indicate that the estimated mean ro for covid- is almost . , with a median of . and the interquartile range (iqr) of . , which is substantially higher than who's estimation of . . however, due to biased methodology, ro for covid- is expected to be about - , which is approxi-mately consistent with the who estimate ( ) . sses appear to be a main limitation of the ro concept. ro, when calculated as a mean or median value, does not include the heterogeneity of transmission between infected individuals ( ); two infective agents with equal r estimates might have noticeably diverse patterns of transmission. moreover, the goal of a health care system is to achieve ro < , which is probably only phenomenally feasible in certain conditions without scheduled prevention, recognition, and response to sses ( ) . naturally, epidemics follow the aforementioned / rule ( ) . specifically, in human population, due to heterogeneous exposure to infectious agent, the % core population may transmit the disease, widely. for sars, the rate might have been even lower than % ( ). the increased infectious potential of a small population subgroup seems to be related to immunodeficiency, such as in hemodialysis, cancer, immunosuppressive therapies ( , , , ) . additionally, facilitation of disease spread and transmission due to vector exposure has been investigated in relation to cockroaches ( ) . possible mechanical transportation by rats and cat ( , ) and air transmission ( ) in sars-cov- have also been studied. other animals capable of being sars-cov- carriers (excluding mice and rats), like pigs, ferrets, cats, and nonhuman primates have recently been introduced ( ), and contamination of sewage with sars-cov- , has probably preceded covid- outbreak in france ( ) . all these agents may contribute to a minimum of % of the total transmission potential ( ), maybe even more ( , ) . table displays possible super spreader groups; thus, indicating screening targets to prevent sses. sars epidemic taught us that control programs were inefficient in controlling the epidemic within a population, and failed to identify and provide a targeted infection diagnosis in groups causing potential sses ( , ) . on the other hand, sars-cov- having the ability to cause a pandemic rather than an epidemic, resulted in an increased number of cases and deaths; albeit having a lower mortality rate than sars coronavirus ( ) . sses during covid- may involve not only one city, but also a whole country or many countries, requiring investigation of their effects on a national or international level ( , , ). preventing and decreasing covid- -related sses necessitates the decryption of the mechanism through which sars-cov- spreads through super spreader individuals, for example within healthcare facilities ( , ) . healthcare facilities are essential for prevention and control of sses ( ) . sse prevention may enable us to even overcome initial low covid- virus infectiveness. the capability of the virus to produce sses troubles the epidemiological attempts to restrict viral spread only by isolating individuals at high risk and performing obsolete isolation at home for the general population as carried out in countries such as greece ( ) . during the sars epidemic in china (beijing) and singapore, the vast majority of infected individuals were barely infective and only % of the population was highly infectious, in contrast to many published sars models ( , ) . other ways of potential coronavirus transmission between hosts may provide explanations for enormous outbreaks ( ) . it should not be disregarded that coronaviruses cause both respiratory and intestinal infections and share common evolutionary roots with hepatitis viruses ( , ) . passing the cross-species barrier and genetic adaptation within hosts may promote virulence of coronaviruses in humans ( ) . this, prompts to specifically identify potential super spreader groups within populations through targeted diagnosis. some of these groups are listed in table . for this purpose, a usual infection must be distinguished from a super spread infection ( , ) . during sars epidemic, the coronavirus infectiousness mostly occurred in the late stages of infection ( , ) , whereas in covid- , viruses are transmitted even in pre-symptomatic stages ( ) . as with influenza a virus subtype h n transmission ( ) , accurate diagnosis of covid- in potentially asymptomatic super spreaders may help contain the magnitude of large outbreaks ( ) . in the case of diamond princess cruise ship, an earlyassessed r of . (âl'Ĺ times higher than the r in the epicenter of the outbreak in wuhan, china) was decreased to an assessed effective ro of . following on-board isolation and quarantine processes ( ) . similarly, in china (wuhan) the application of non-pharmaceutical interventions in the society, including a cordon sanitaire of the town; interruption of community transport, school, and most employment; and termination of all community events decreased the ro from . to . over a -week period ( ) . nevertheless, these strategies could not be maintained. emerging research evidence ( ) regarding sewage contamination that preceded paris covid- epidemic is pointing to the reports of from the health department of hong kong ( , ) , the noble work by ng ( ) , and urge for extensive environmental monitoring ( , ) to prevent future covid- relapses. however, the flow of genetic variation may be even more complex as illustrated in figure . therefore, advanced clinical and laboratory monitoring is required to prevent sses and thereafter, new coronavirus epidemics. assembly of key functions and screening techniques of reference centers is presented in table . newer therapeutic agents and protocol applications are promising ( ) , although probably carrying the possibility of resistance state ( ) . first, these also require specific diagnostic and surveillance strategies to overcome any unknown adverse epidemiology consequences ( ) . inhibiting wild meat markets and related consumption of wild meat by creating vivid campaigns could be a critical for interrupting the introduction of coronaviruses crossing from animals to the human population, as was the case for sars ( , , ) and middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) ( ) epidemics, and probably now for covid- pandemic ( - ) . furthermore, the food production process requires radical reconsideration, concerning the industrial environment of current food production and serious violations of natural ecosystems ( ) . current industrial procedures for preparing food increasingly favor conditions where viral evolution produces new mutations and increased rates of mutations ( ) , thus raising the probability of new and more infectious viral strains. in sars and mers epidemics, the role of sses in vigorously distributing the epidemics has been substantially proven ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . the new covid- epidemiology evidence also adequately highlights the important role of sses in homeland of china ( , , ) , although surprising evidence from neighboring countries show the unlikely role of sse in the spread of the disease ( ). the coronaviridae family is characterized by a positive-sense single-stranded rna genome. mouse hepatitis virus is a representative member of the family ( ) . additionally, human hepatitis e virus also has a positive-sense single stranded rna genome and shares a common evolution pathway with coronaviruses ( ) . hepatitis-related incidents were described for sars ( ) . the genetic recombination of these viruses within arbitrary intermediate hosts produced contagious strains that are extremely pathogenic to humans ( , ) . in this respect, the relation of sars-cov genetic sequences isolated from human, civets, and bats permitted us to find the reason for such a dangerous epidemic, which affected people on a worldwide scale in ( ) . moreover, the unpredictable epidemic of mers-cov posed a serious risk to the health of communities worldwide. these underscored the necessity for further research of the virus epidemiology and pathophysiology to develop successful therapeutic and preventive medications against mers-cov infection ( ) . while sars-cov- is genetically and structurally connected with mers-cov, it has its own exclusive structures which are responsible for its quick spread throughout the world ( ). specifically, variations in coronavirus pathogenicity within different species ( ) make the understanding of sars epidemics even more unclear through their capability to overcome the barrier for cross species transmission, which also alters their infectivity status ( , ) . as a result, boosting the pathogenic behavior of coronavirus strains, within species ( ) , and across species barriers ( ) , which is a reflection of their positive adaptation to rapid recombination events ( ) . the recent mers epidemic revealed the tendency of the strain to genetically adapt and produce greater outbreaks ( ) as occurred in sars epidemic in ( ) . however, mainly for socioeconomic reasons, alarm signals were ignored until recently ( ) . a new phylogenetic analysis technique employed on clustered covid- strains displayed a geographic variation preference in infectivity and pathogenesis ( ) . this is probably due to predominating strain's tendency to cause an sse as an outcome of a multi-factorial epidemic process presented in figure ( , ) . marked sses for covid- have already been fully characterized and warrant urgent investigation ( , ) . as presented in tables and , each way of transmission should be investigated. heterogeneity of epidemic characteristics across nations ( ) implies that in this way we may minimize coronavirus transmission. therefore, salvation of national economic catastrophes will also be achieved in this way ( ) . thus, the whole biomedical science machinery needs to perform targeted diagnosis of sses and share the obtained experience. subsequently, central authorities will no longer need excessive non-specific contact measures, which will in turn normalize both societal and economic activities. on the other hand, improper understanding of how covid- spreads resulted in societal imbalance due to arbitrary restriction of social and religious life including holy communion cup. it has been consecutively demonstrated by expert research that the holy cup (chalice) and the holy cloth are not sources or pathways, for potential spreading of infectious diseases including human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) ( ), hepatitis b virus (hbv) ( ) as well as other communicable pathogens ( ) . specifically, a review ( ), considered other relative studies. in this review, the possibilities that the shared communion cup can act as a vehicle for indirect transmission of human immunodeficiency virus, since it was detected in the saliva of infected individuals, was investigated. it was emphasized that although for bacterial contamination, the alcoholic content of the wine, the material that the cup is made of, or the practice of partially rotating the cup, cannot stop the occasional transmission of microbes, the microbial transmission was considerably reduced by the intervening use of a cloth to swab the lip of the cup between communicants. notably, it was emphasized that transmission means not an obligatory inoculation or infection. furthermore, it was also emphasized that out of the epidemiology of microbes transmitted via saliva, particularly for the transmission of the herpes viruses, the indirect transmission is rare, and indeed transmission is highly possible by other means than by the saliva. it was also emphasized that neither hepatitis b virus nor human immunodeficiency virus infection can be transmitted by saliva, rendering their indi-rect transmission also less likely by inorganic objects. finally, the study concluded that no episode of disease transmission has ever been reported as a result of the shared communion cup use, and that there was not any scientific evidence that the communion cup practice should be abandoned due to the possible risk of spreading of any infection ( , ) . likewise, kingston et al. ( ) , by considering relative papers, also concluded that there is no evidence that the holy communion cup spreads infections. moreover, more recent estimations also demonstrated that no infections have ever been observed as a result of religious rituals including christian common communion chalice practice ( ) ; whereas, data of previous studies implied that saliva could play a role in hbv transmission, are likely to be trivial ( ) . similarly, recent evidence indicate that, although hbv dna and hcv rna can be discovered in the saliva of infected patients, they seem unlikely to transmit infection ( ) . it should be noted that, as in the case of coronavirus ( , ) , hbv also exists in many body fluids including saliva, nasopharyngeal fluid or tears by measures of qualitative and pcr methods ( ) . the detection of hbv dna in saliva motivated our study group to investigate the potential viral transmission through the holy communion cup. two successive retrospective studies were conducted to investigate the role of holy communion as an independent risk factor of hbv dispersion. the first preliminary study included patients from our registry of those with chronic hepatitis b under entecavir (jannis kountouras-personal communication) treatment ( ) , and in the next step, the relative registry of another department of the same hospital was incorporated. other parameters studied, the substantial independent categorical variable to evaluate our hypothesis was the patients' occupation, thereby introducing two sub-groups; priests and non-priests. this classification was performed based on a standard active and perpetual exhibition (at least once weekly) of priests to many people's saliva, as a part of the grounded process of the holy communion cup. the control group comprised of the aggregate of orthodox priests in greece ( , ) and the rest general population ( , , ) at that timeframe. approval of the institutional ethics committee was obtained and all predispositions of the helsinki declaration were fulfilled. the reservoir database did not include any personified information (name, id number, etc.) and thus no informed consent was required. pearson's chi-squared test with degree of freedom was performed to evaluate whether there was a statistically significant difference between the frequencies of hbv infection in case and control groups and statistical significance was set at p < . . the first single-centre registry included patients and one ( . %) of them was a priest. chronic hepatitis b was significantly more frequent among non-priests compared to priests (x ( , n= )= . , p < . ). the extended sample (n= ) included the registry of another department and an aggregate of four ( . %) priests were diagnosed with chronic hepatitis b. likewise, the chi-square test revealed that non-priest subjects were more likely to suffer from chronic hepatitis from hbv infection compared to priests (x ( , n= ) = , p < . ). in conclusion, both of our analyses indicated a lower prevalence of hbv chronic hepatitis among priests when compared to other occupations. currently, vaccines for covid- are in pre-clinical development, and no final clinical phase has been ended due the recent emergence of the disorder. many global entities have stated their plans to produce a vaccine for covid- . according to the who, candidate vaccines are being produced for covid- as of march , ( ) . importantly, for production of highly effective and safe covid- vaccines, features such as the possibility of the induction of antigen-dependent enhancement (ade) and additional severe opposing effects previously detected with sars and mers should be considered. ade is a phenomenon that occurs when non-neutralizing antibodies against proteins of a virus increase, also increasing virus infectivity ( ) . in this regard, coronaviruses can escape the immunity provided by inactivated or recombinant protein vaccines via fast evolution ( ) . the problem with live attenuated vaccines is that the coronavirus can recover its virulence via serial passages in cell culture or in vivo ( ) . moreover, vaccination in animals and humans could facilitate, rather than inhibit, the pathogenesis of the targeted viruses. this can be the consequence of an ade phenomenon. this underlines a mechanism by which specific antibodies facilitate infection with the targeted virus, or cell-based augmentation, a process resulting in an allergic inflammatory response induced by immunopathology ( , ) . many experimental sars-cov- vaccines have been formulated from whole inactivated viruses, due to their advantage of large-scale production, multiple epitope presentation and high conformation stability ( ) . one such vaccine uses viruses from ay a strain of sars-cov- , which are double inactivated using formalin and uv irradiation, the socalled double-inactivated virus (div) vaccine ( ) . although div had initially been demonstrated to induce neutralizing antibodies and to protect against sars-cov- viral replication, both in tissue culture and in young mice, it soon became apparent that older mice suffered from vaccine-induced immune pathologies, including failure to contain viral replication, augmented clinical disease and associated symptoms, and increased inflammatory response and eosinophilic influx ( , ) . in this respect, there is an overlap between the immunopathologic responses connected with coronavirus disease and vaccination, and the role of t helper (th) cells in immune augmentation and eosinophilic lung immunopathology; host th polarized inflammatory reactions portray an important role in the pathophysiology of covid- pneumonia and edema ( , ) . eosinophilic pathology, indicating increased pathogenesis and disease severity in the elderly, has been attributed to the nucleocapsid (n) protein, despite the incorporation of multiple sars-cov- antigens in the div ( , ) . this is on grounds that the n protein is a strong modulator of innate immunity, also acting as an interferon antagonist, and therefore, it has the capability to induce inflammation with subsequent immune pathology in situations of heterologous viral challenge or in immune senescence, where patients fail to mount effective immune responses against the disease ( , ) . the route of transmission is important to be established for sars cov- . as seen with other important infectious diseases of a) air borne transmission such as tuberculosis ( ), b) orofecal transmission such as hev ( ) and c) blood transmission such as hbv and hepatitis d virus ( ) , even if efficient vaccination is established, understanding of sses is still important. recent research data on the immune receptors used by coronaviruses, which reflect their ability to propagate in the human population, imply that complex immune reactions are responsible for a cell to cell transmission. in addition to ace-ii receptor, as is the case with sars-cov, mers-cov ( ) and possibly for sars-cov- ( , ), viruses use complex receptor recognition systems common to immunopathology damage mechanisms in coronavirusinfected individuals, which clearly define the clinical outcome ( ) . therefore, application of vaccines that may interfere with antibody-mediated infection by coronaviruses ( ) without true epidemiologic containment of coronaviruses, to restrict genetic adaptation events and inevitably producing an sse, may be a miscellaneous attempt. however, synergy of sse prevention measures with proper vaccination can provide a robust attempt for disease containment. this study aimed to perform a literature review. although effort was made to decrease the risk of bias of results via double-blind screening of literature and employment of multiple electronic search engines, bias cannot be eliminated due to incomplete retrieval of identified research and biased estimations of included literature conclusions and methods used. outcome of the study may also contain biased estimations originating from wrong interpretation of super spreading individuals in literature reviewed for sars, mers, and covid- outbreaks. although the importance of sses in covid- was recognized by this study, more data from future accumulated epidemiology studies are needed to justify these findings. taken all together, management of sses is mandatory to yield efficient control over sars-cov- . this is achievable through early diagnosis of pre/asymptomatic infected individuals within potential super spreading groups. prevention of outbreaks is more essential, especially due to the lack of efficient vaccination and therapeutic protocols, which necessitates efficient monitoring, as sars-cov- virus follows complex infectious patterns. the sars-cov- epidemiological models that do not take sses into consideration seem to lead to confusing results with high uncertainty. sars-cov- causes prolonged "pandemics" through complex adaptation routes. currently, in addition to the high technology utilized for diagnosis, clinical observation is indispensable to deeply comprehend sses and prohibit further outspread of covid- . reference laboratories with efficient and accredited molecular and serological diagnosis must be inter-linked between countries. all these parameters could contribute to avoiding a second blind unjustified response that characterized the first covid- pandemic spread. understanding the epidemiology of covid- through sses could be preventive for future epidemics. a systematic meta-analysis research methodology, when covid- epidemiology data accumulate further, would be advisable to confirm the conclusions of this study. this study did not involve the participation of any humans or animals as it was based only on literature research. ak inspired the conception and drafted the initial manuscript. jk revised substantially the manuscript, intellectual content and provided disclosed data for hbv investigation. ak and jk made the primary double-blind search. ap, jk, ak, mn, and ng, made all other 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manuscript are available upon request all authors declare that they have no competing interests. no funding or grant was received for this study. we thank our families for providing moral assistance to accomplish this study. key: cord- - tqm g authors: mirzaei, rasoul; mahdavi, farzad; badrzadeh, fariba; reza hosseini-fard, seyed; heidary, maryam; salimi jeda, ali; mohammadi, tayeb; roshani, mahdane; yousefimashouf, rasoul; keyvani, hossein; darvishmotevalli, mohammad; zarei sani, melika; karampoor, sajad title: the emerging role of micrornas in the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov- ) infection date: - - journal: nan doi: . /j.intimp. . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: tqm g the novel coronavirus disease (covid- ) pandemic has imposed significant public health problems for the human populations worldwide after the influenza a virus (iva) (h n ) pandemic. although numerous efforts have been made to unravel the mechanisms underlying the coronavirus, a notable gap remains in our perception of the covid- pathogenesis. the innate and adaptive immune systems have a pivotal role in the fate of viral infections, such as covid- pandemic. micrornas (mirnas) are known as short noncoding rna molecules and appear as indispensable governors of almost any cellular means. several lines of evidence demonstrate that mirnas participate in essential mechanisms of cell biology, regulation of the immune system, and the onset and progression of numerous types of disorders. the immune responses to viral respiratory infections (vris), including influenza virus (iv), respiratory syncytial virus (rsv), and rhinovirus (rv), are correlated with the ectopic expression of mirnas. alterations of the mirna expression in epithelial cells may contribute to the pathogenesis of chronic and acute airway infections. hence, analyzing the role of these types of nucleotides in antiviral immune responses and the characterization of mirna target genes might contribute to understanding the mechanisms of the interplay between the host and viruses, and in the future, potentially result in discovering therapeutic strategies for the prevention and treatment of acute covid- infection. in this article, we present a general review of current studies concerning the function of mirnas in different vris, particularly in coronavirus infection, and address all available therapeutic prospects to mitigate the burden of viral infections. for centuries, infectious diseases have caused a significant damage to human health and devastated the entire organisms [ ] . currently, there is no particular medication or prophylactic vaccine for the eradication of all types of coronaviruses, such as severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov- ), severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov- ), and middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the novel human coronavirus, named sars-cov- , is the causative agent of the coronavirus disease (covid- ) pandemic, initially identified in wuhan, hubei province, china, which has now affected millions of individuals over the world [ , ] . the sars-cov- is a beta coronavirus (a positivesense, enveloped, and single-stranded rna) belonging to the coronaviridae family [ , ] . human coronaviruses (hcovs) cause respiratory tract infections (rtis). some of these infectious agents, such as human coronavirus nl (hcov-nl ), human coronavirus oc (hcov-oc ), and human coronavirus hku (hcov-hku ), may be benign and cause the common cold. nonetheless, the science of virology has characterized a group of highly pathogenic human coronaviruses, including sars-cov, over the past two decades, which caused infectious diseases in about , people in the world with a fatality rate of ~ % or mers-cov in that infected , cases with a mortality rate of % [ ] . numerous studies indicated that these pathogenic coronaviruses led to the emergence of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards), leading to extensive pulmonary inflammation, dyspnea, and even death. compared with mers and sars-cov- , sars-cov- tends to spread more quickly than other types of coronaviruses; nevertheless, it has a lower mortality rate of - % [ ] . by november , , more than , , million cases have been diagnosed in countries, and more than , , deaths have been reported [ ] . micro-rnas (mirnas) are classified as small molecules with a length of - nucleotides [ , ] . they are noncoding single-stranded rnas that can suppress the translation of mature messenger rnas (mrnas) [ ] . micrornas are significant regulators of the gene expression process and play a decisive function in different biological phenomena, including cell propagation, differentiation, growth, and apoptosis [ ] . recently, it has been known that mirnas contribute to the regulation of both innate and adaptive immune systems by controlling the expansion and activation of immune cells [ ] . as mentioned earlier, there is no definite therapy or vaccine to treat and prevent highly pathogenic coronaviruses. therefore, seeking new biological strategies for the therapy of viral diseases is highly recommended. data imply that mirnas have important functions in modulating the immune system toward respiratory viruses, such as hcovs that include sars-cov- , mers, sars-cov- , and other types of hcovs, human metapneumovirus (hmpv), human rhinovirus (hrv), iv, and rsv. also, changes in the expression of mirnas in epithelial cells may participate in the pathogenesis of both severe and chronic respiratory infections [ ] . this review will summarize the recent discoveries associated with mirnas in various respiratory infections caused by viruses, especially coronavirus, and address all feasible therapeutic options to mitigate the burden of vris. the humoral immunity is immunologically categorized as an acquired immune response in which t helper cells collaborate with b cells to differentiate these types of cells to plasma cells [ ] [ ] [ ] . plasma cells can synthesize specific antibodies (abs) against a particular viral antigen (ag) [ ] . secreted abs are capable of blocking viruses to prevent them from entering the host cells. henceforth, they play an influential defensive role in preventing infection and its recurrence [ ] . the capability of humoral immune responses as well as b and t cell epitopes against sars-cov have been broadly investigated and mapped to analyze the envelope as well as spike (s), nucleocapsid (n), membrane (m), and envelope (e) proteins (structural proteins) [ ] . angiotensin-converting enzyme (ace ) acts as a receptor for the entrance of sars-cov- when infecting the epithelial cells of the lungs. it has been discovered that the s proteins of -ncov and sars-cov- have similar structural dominant t cell epitopes [ ] . for the generation of compensating abs, two proteins are needed to support b cell epitopes in the form of receptor binding domains (rbd) [ ] . a potent t cell response is a prerequisite for generating a higher concentration of neutralizing abs [ ] . it has been demonstrated that a specific site is not required for t cell epitopes compared with b cell epitopes; thus, they are abundantly expressed in viral infections [ ] . t helper cells participate in the switching of isotypes, stimulating b cells to secrete immunoglobulin m (igm) and immunoglobulin g (igg) abs against sars-cov- . also, seroconversion may occur, which could be mediated by the production of t helper cells [ ] . following this phase, at the end of week , igm starts to disappear. simultaneously, igg can persist for a more extended period, implying that igg abs may be potent protectors during infection [ ] . current evidence strongly suggests that the t helper (th ) response is a crucial factor for successful controlling of mers-cov and sars-cov- , and it might be the same for sars-cov- [ ] . cellular immunity is immunologically named as acquired immunity [ ] . in contradiction of the humoral immune responses, cellular immunity can kill infected cells mediated by t cells [ ] . t helper cells are responsible for the overall direction of adaptive immune responses. in contrast, cytotoxic t cells are implicated in killing and eliminating cells infected with viral agents [ ] . for the construction of potent vaccines, cellular immunity granted by t cells would be indispensable, as shown by murine sars-cov and mers-cov models [ ] . it has been demonstrated that t cell deficiency results in failure of viral clearance in infected mice, suggesting the significance of these cells in viral clearance [ ] . pointing back to mers-cov and sars-cov- , it has been indicated that cd + (interferon (ifn)-γ and tumor necrosis factor (tnf)-α) and cd + (tnf-α, ifn-β, and interleukin (il- )) memory t cells can be persevered in patients recovered from sars-cov for up to four years while having a functionality by the propagation of t cells, generation of ifn-γ, and delayed-type hypersensitivity (dth) responses [ ] . currently, the study results show a distinct memory t cell response to the s library of peptides belonging to sars-cov years after the onset of infection [ ] . different cd + t cells were detected through the clearance of mers-cov in a murine model [ ] . these data could be analyzed in the case of sars-cov- [ ] . nevertheless, the current study demonstrated that the numbers of cd + and cd + t cells are reduced in individuals infected with sars-cov- , resulting in the compromised generation of memory t cells in patients recovered from sars-cov- [ ] . several reports have studied the diverse lymphocyte populations in subjects with sars-cov- infection. in a study by qin et al. [ ] lymphocytes were evaluated in subjects and according to their results, the total amount of b, t, and nk cells was significantly diminished in the infected group as nk and t cells were below the usual rate, while b lymphocytes were within the lower range of the reference rates [ , ] . t lymphocytes are usually the most changed by the viral infection, nevertheless, the numbers of cd + t, cd + t and nk cells were within the normal range in qinʼs study [ ] . moreover, studying several subsets of t lymphocytes showed that both cytotoxic t (cd +cd +) and helper (cd +cd +) lymphocytes were below the normal rate in subjects with covid- , and the t helper/suppressor ratio within the normal rates [ ] . additionally, covid- subjects showed lower numbers of regulatory t lymphocytes (treg) (cd +cd +cd +cd low+), and this decrease was particularly documented in critical covid- cases [ ] . also, a reduction in stimulated (cd ro+cd +cd +cd +cd low+) regulatory t and naïve (cd ra+cd +cd +cd + cd low+) lymphocytes was documented in critical covid- subjects [ ] . cytokine storm syndrome (css) occurs; meanwhile, massive amounts of proinflammatory cytokines are secreted by immune cells due to the overreaction of the human immune system to the external signals [ , ] . one study showed css as one of the complications of covid- [ ] . this study was in line with the data on death-related risk factors of sars-cov- infection [ ] . ards is highly correlated with css as the immune effector cells secrete high amounts of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines during ards, leading to the uncontrolled systemic inflammatory responses [ ] . transforming growth factor beta (tgf-β) [ ] . in the case of mers-cov, increased expression of proinflammatory cytokines, such as ifn-α, il- , as well as chemokines, including ccl- , cxcl- , and cxcl- , have been reported [ ] . in a study, xu et al. found that peripheral blood of covid- subjects had an extremely high rate of ccr t-helper (th ) lymphocytes, sustaining a th -type css in this infection [ , ] . cytokine storm-induced ards has destructive effects on the immune system, resulting in multiple organ failure and subsequent death [ ] . this deleterious effect has caused similar mortality in the sars-cov- outbreak as in sars-cov- and mers-cov infections [ ] . it is now known that drugs that target il- , il- , il- , and ifn-γ are useful for attenuating cytokine storm syndrome in other viral infections. this casts a doubt on the effectiveness of these therapeutic agents for mitigating the severity of covid- [ ] . recently, one of the specific inhibitors of il- was demonstrated to be effective in reducing covid- severity in a few cases of patients in china [ ] . css is a crucial factor that determines the intensity of signs, the mortality rate, and the onset of extrapulmonary signs during covid- [ ] . severe infections show features suggestive of a series of pathologies associated with css, in which multi-organ failure and hyper inflammation are demonstrated following excessive cytokines produced from an enhanced immune stimulation [ ] . hence, studies with css are promising and could urge further pathogenetic studies on identification of effective therapeutic biomarkers. the innate immunity is regarded as the primary defense line against most infectious agents, such as bacteria, viruses, and other pathogens, posing a hazard to the host [ ] . it has been reported that mirnas contribute to regulating the function of dendritic cells, epithelial cells, monocytes, granulocytes, nk cells, and macrophages that participate in innate immune responses [ ] . activation of the intracellular signaling pathway triggers the innate immune response and stimulates the coupling of pathogen-associated molecular patterns (pamps) with pattern recognition receptors (prps), which are specialized transmembrane proteins. this family of proteins includes nod-like receptors, toll-like receptors (tlrs), and rig-i-like receptors (rlrs), which have a fundamental function in antimicrobial protection [ ] . since the primary target of vris is the epithelial cells, these types of cells are involved in viral-induced immune responses. for instance, stimulating the epithelial cells by tlr agonists incites the expression and synthesis of chemokines, ifns, and cytokines [ ] . the most effective stimulating response is achieved by treating epithelial cells with tlr ligands, which detect double-strand rnas (dsrnas) produced as intermediate products during the replication of viral genomes [ ] . recently, it has been shown that mirnas effectively participate in signal transduction of tlrs [ ] . studies have indicated the enhanced expression of mir- a and mir- b in response to lipopolysaccharide (lps) when exposed to the thp- cell line. this finding was in agreement with other related studies, indicating that similar responses occur upon the activation of the tlr signaling pathway in myeloid cells in response to fungal, viral, and bacterial agonists of tlrs [ , ] . interestingly, no significant rise was seen in the expression of mir- a after the stimulation of tlr- , tlr- , and tlr- in response to bacterial and viral nucleic acids [ ] . these results were in contrast to findings obtained from the expression of mir- , which showed increased levels following the activation of tlr- and tlr- in response to poly i: c and cpg, respectively [ ] . several lines of evidence showed that mir- is a definite regulator of the pro-inflammatory cytokines, as demonstrated by research carried out on the transgenic mouse model [ , ] . also, reports indicated that mir- a could modulate the tlr signaling pathway by targeting traf and irak , which are introduced as protein complexes involved in the activation of il- βr, tlr , tlr , and tlr signal transduction [ , ] . studies showed that mir- is overexpressed upon tlr activation in human monocytes and neutrophils [ , ] . remarkably, it has been reported that the stimulation of tlr , a signal transduction activator dependent on myd , did not influence the expression of mir- , denoting that mir- induction is linked with signal transduction dependent on myd activation in monocytes. current evidence indicated that the activation of tlr , tlr , and tlr / promotes the activation of the myd signaling pathway, leading to an improvement in the expression of mir- in human monocytes and neutrophils [ ] . following the exposure of murine macrophages to tlr , tlr , and tlr agonists and lipopolysaccharide (lps), the expression of mir- is activated [ , ] . a recent study showed that mir- has anti-inflammatory properties and attenuates excessive inflammatory responses [ ] . mirnas control the expression of some cytokines involved in the activation of innate immune responses [ ] . the generation of some cytokines, such as tnf-α, il- , and il- are lowered after the induction of mir- and mir- , associated with tlr , tlr , and tlr activation [ ] . except for ifn-γ, proinflammatory cytokines, such as il- β, induce mir- expression [ ] . other receptors belonging to the prps family, such as rlrs, consist of melanoma differentiationassociated gene (mda ) and retinoic acid-inducible gene (rig-i) [ ] . rlrs are surrounded in the cytoplasm and contribute to the identification of viral components [ ] . viral infections caused by negative-and positive-sense rna viruses, such as iv and rsv, can lead to rig- activation, while mda can identify picornaviruses, such as rvs [ ] . rv can induce antiviral responses by triggering rig-i, tlr , and mda activation [ ] . furthermore, the stimulation of hela cells infected with rv led to the enhanced levels of mir- b, implying that the expression of this mirna is regulated by ifn-and rig-mediated signaling pathways [ ] . adaptive immunity is a member of the antigen-specific defense system, mediated by t and b lymphocytes [ ] . recently, it has been indicated that the mir- - cluster is the primary regulator of t cell proliferation involved in t cell expansion, leading to the increased endurance of these cells by the impairment of the expression of pro-apoptotic protein-encoding mrnas, such as phosphatase, tensin homolog, and bcl- [ ] . the expression of some sets of mirnas contributes to the polarization of t helper cells. for instance, mir- enhanced the differentiation of th- cells, whereas mir- promotes the development of th- cells [ ] . besides, mirnas are responsible for the regulation of mechanisms underlying the central-adaptive immune responses, such as presenting ags, engaging mir- , and promoting the development of b and t cells in the presence of mir- a [ , ] . li and colleagues [ ] observed the expression of mir- a in immature t cells resident in the thymus. this mirna can also modulate t-cell receptor signal transduction by suppressing the activation of various phosphatase enzymes [ ] . in contrast to human naive t cells, mir- a is highly expressed in human t cm [ , ] . studies indicated that mir- a interferes with apoptosis initiation and targets the fas-associated death domain [ ] . correspondingly, the engagement of mir- a in the acquired immunity is more pronounced when the overproduction of mir- a leads to the disturbed production of il- and action of activator protein- [ ] . several studies showed that the memory and effector cd + t cell-mediated antiviral responses recruit mir- for their activation [ ] . cd + t cells lacking mir- exhibit decreased effector responses, and they are unable to be differentiated into memory cells [ ] . another study conducted on mice knock-out for mir- and infected with iv demonstrated the impaired clearance of viral infection in these genetically-manipulated animals [ ] . besides, mir- -deficient cd + t cells are more resistant to the anti-proliferative properties of ifns and show increased ifn-i signaling [ ] . a study conducted by lind et al. [ ] showed that immunity to the lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus is compromised in mir- -deficient mice. remarkably, mir- is overexpressed in resting primary human b cells infected with ebv that cause the increased survival of virus within the lymphoblastic cells. this implies the importance of mir- for ebv latency. therefore, mir- seems to be a vital component of antiviral responses. the immune responses against vris, such as iv, hrv, human coronavirus (hcov), hmpv, and rsv, are correlated with the aberrant expression of several mirnas in epithelial cells and participate in the pathogenesis of chronic and acute forms of respiratory disorders (table ) [ ] . in this section, the role of mirnas in vris is comprehensively reviewed. rv causes upper respiratory tract infections (urtis) in adults and children. the epithelial cells resident in the respiratory tract is the main target of rv [ ] . rv is a single-stranded-rna (ssrna) virus that possesses icosahedral capsids and belongs to the picornaviridae family [ , ] . the dsrna is generated during viral replication and is identified by rig-i and tlr [ , ] . bioinformatics software have recently enabled us to efficiently predict whether the natural or designed mirnas can target some viruses to act as therapeutic agents [ ] . several studies showed that mir- and mir- could regulate innate immune responses against rv- b due to targeting the genetic components of rv [ ] . it has been shown that the knock-down of these two mirnas can stimulate rv replication [ ] . mir- b contributes to the immune response against rv, leading to the decreased expression of the transmembrane region of vldlr and lpr [ ] . these two receptors are hijacked by twelve rv types, including rv , rv , rv , rv , rv , rv a, rv b, rv , rv , rv , rv , and rv [ ] . the genome of rsv is a negative-sense ssrna, encoding proteins (ns , ns , m, p, n, sh, m - , m - , g, f, and l), which is related to the paramyxoviridae family [ ] [ ] [ ] . rsv is a prevalent human pathogenic respiratory virus that attacks the lower respiratory tract (lrt) and causes similar clinical symptoms to those of the common cold in children and adults. the virus is classified as a respiratory virus regularly isolated from hospitalized children with bronchitis [ ] . primary infection typically causes acute illness, whereas secondary infection can provoke obstructive bronchitis [ ] [ ] [ ] . in hbepc, rsv can reduce the production of mir- , while the degree of let- i and mir- b production is increased after h of infection [ ] . increased expression of let- i and mir- b has been reported in rsv-infected hbepc lacking ns and ns proteins, implying that these proteins have antagonistic properties against mir- b and let- i; thus, suppressing the generation of type i ifn [ ] . among mirnas aberrantly expressed during the infection period of rsv-a , mir- , mir- a, mir- - p, mir- , mir- , and mir- are more affected compared with others. except for the mir- , the expression levels of all the aforementioned mirnas are increased [ ] . a case-control study explained that patients infected with rsv had a marked decrease in the expression of mir- c, mir- b, mir- c, mir- b, mir- a, mir- b, and mir- when compared with healthy individuals. in contrast, the expression levels of mir- , mir- , let- d, mir- a, and mir- were elevated [ ] . in this case-control study, subjects were allocated to three groups based on the severity of the disease: mild, moderate, and severe. the results demonstrated that mir- a and mir- expression decreased in the moderate group [ ] . some investigations indicated that rsv could provoke different expression levels of mirnas in at least two various ways. first, the induction of let- b and let- i is dependent on the expression of ifn-β in hbepc and monocyte-derived dendritic cells (mddcs) [ ] . second, mir- b is not induced by ifn-β while being reliant on the expression of nf-κb in hbepc [ ] . evidence also demonstrates that rsv can diminish mir- expression in hbepc [ ] . rsv infection can lower the expression of some mirnas, such as mir- - p, let- f, mir- , mir- b, mir- a- p, mir- , and mir- [ ] . all of these mirnas have related victims, such as genes encoding the cell cycle proteins (ccnd , dyrk , and elf ), suppressor of cytokine signaling gene (socs ), and chemokines (ccl ) [ ] . moreover, the rsv g-protein can increase the expression of let- f, having an antagonistic activity against dyrk and ccnd . these proteins contribute to cell cycle check in the g phase and enhance viral propagation [ ] . it has been demonstrated that mir-let- is vital for inducing the host genes during viral infections [ ] . hmpv is a recently identified prominent member of the paramyxoviridae family [ ] , including the human parainfluenza virus [ , ] . ns and ns are non-structural genes, which are not expressed in the genome of hmpv with eight open-reading frames: ′-n-p-m-f-m -sh-g-l- ′ [ ] . some clinical trials demonstrated that hmpv is responsible for developing pediatric lrti [ ] [ ] [ ] . previous works have indicated that hmpv causes some alterations in the expression of a collection of mirnas, such as mir- , let- f, mir- , mir- a, mir- , and mir- a* which are expressed in epithelial cells resident in the respiratory tract [ ] [ ] [ ] . it has been reported that hmpv is responsible for regulating the expression of mirnas in a cells. among these mirnas highly expressed in a cells is let- f, which can target the rna polymerase enzyme of hmpv to control the viral replication [ ] . the influenza virus (iv) is an ssrna virus related to the orthomyxoviridae family, consisting of three influenza viruses: a, b, and c [ ] . type a influenza virus (iva) is sub-categorized based on two proteins expressed on the exterior surface of the virus: neuraminidase and hemagglutinin (n and h proteins, respectively) [ ] . to date, types of h proteins, along with types of n enzymes, have been characterized [ ] . influenza a (h n or h n ) and b have currently the highest incidence rate in the united states [ ] . iv is a highly contagious respiratory disorder, characterized by the emergence of featured signs, including cephalea, fever, coryza, myalgia, sore throat, and coughing [ ] . the iv preferably infects the upper respiratory tract (urt); nevertheless, in severe cases, the lower respiratory tract (lrt) (bronchioles) might also be infected with the virus [ ] . the mirnas expression during iv infection might be dysregulated [ ] . many mirnas, including mir- , mir- , and mir- , can hinder the replication of iva h n , resulting in the reduced iva gene expression in infected cells [ ] . the mrna degeneration of the pb protein (contributing to the viral propagation of iva) by the host mir- , mir- , and mir- is one of the exemplary mechanistic roles of mirnas [ ] . suppression of the m protein expression by let- c regulates the replication of the iva in a cells [ , ] . studies indicated a substantial reduction in the production of mir- and mir- - p in human alveolar basal epithelial cells during the iv infection [ ] . coronaviruses are responsible for a broad range of respiratory infectious diseases, from mild urtis to critical and life-threatening forms of the disease [ ] . up to now, the role of mirnas in the infectivity of coronaviruses has not been examined in in-vivo studies. a limited number of invitro studies were carried out on the oc virus, and some in-silico analyses have been conducted on sars-cov and mers-cov [ ] . the coronavirus oc causes the common cold [ ] . the n protein of coronavirus is requisite for viral replication and binding the genomic rna to produce helical capsids. the oc n protein triggers nf-kb activation by attaching to its negative regulator called mir- [ ] . whether the activation of nf-kb contributes to viral replication directly or acts as a bystander to limit the viral replication has not been so far revealed [ ] . compared with other pathogenic coronaviruses, a lower rate of oc virulence, along with minor symptoms, may affect the interaction between infected and non-infected subjects and consequently increase the distribution of the virus within a community [ ] . this innovative mechanism to boost gene expression may explain how rna viruses suppress the host immune scheme or induce pathological alterations in humans [ ] . sars-cov- is a newly-identified coronavirus that and e proteins, serve as targets for host mirnas. [ ] . the abolition of viral replication may support the viral evasion from the immune system surveillance until the infection of other cells [ ] . these outcomes describe how sars-cov- can cause some changes in the host mirna expression pattern to its authority. regarding the sars-cov- , it is thought that this virus cannot encode its mirnas [ ] . however, in due progress of evolution, the virus may evolve some highly sophisticated mechanisms to take advantage of the host cellular biosynthetic system and evade from the cellular defense mechanisms [ ] . under specific conditions, sars-cov- employs cellular mirna transcripts to promote its own progress [ ] . in a pioneer work, mallick et al. [ ] assessed mirna-interfered host-sars-cov- interplays in bronchoalveolar stem cells (bascs) at the early stage of the disease. they found that bascs could be categorized as a subset of oct- + ace + cells and major targets for sars-cov infection [ ] . recently, it has been discovered that sars-cov- could enter the host cells, contaminate pulmonary bascs, and regulate its developmental steps through molecular controls-mirnas [ ] . the interaction between the host mirnas and viruses exhibits a planned scenario to control the viral replication to prevent immune elimination until the infection of other cells [ ] . afterwards, the virus undergoes rapid mutations to optimize target-mirna mismatches and promote its propagation until cells reach an entirely differentiated status [ ] . mallick et al. [ ] indicated that bascs are the primary target cells for sars-cov. they revealed that the mirnas- *, - - p, and - are upregulated following sars-cov infection in bascs to suppress the viral replication and escape from the immune system [ ] . it has also been noted that n and s proteins downregulate mir- and mir- in bascs to manage several steps of the differentiation process in these cells and activate inflammatory chemokines to downregulate the activity of the ace enzyme [ ] . these processes effectively account for a fruitful viral transference and reproduction within bascs, leading to the ongoing destruction of lung cells and loss of repair capacity [ ] . generally, this study revealed the different modes of exploiting cellular mirna tools by a virus to its benefit. [ ] . an in-silico study recognized some mirnas ( table ) that possess remarkable sequence identity to hairpin constructions in the mers-cov genome. these mirnas may accordingly downregulate the viral gene expression to hinder its replication [ ] . in a recent study, zhanga et al. [ ] , investigated the impact of host cerna (competitive endogenous rna) alternations along with the biological circrnas (circular rnas) on calu- (human lung adenocarcinoma epithelial) infected with in mirna expression (table ) [ ] . these phenomena pave the way to better understand hostvirus interactions and design novel antiviral agents against mers-cov, a highly fatal respiratory disorder. the host mirna expression has a fundamental effect on viral pathogenesis control through interfering with t cells and immune reactions to viral infections [ ] . the mir- is the primary described example of a cellular mirna that targets the viral rna genome that decreases viral replication within the cells [ ] . besides, it has been demonstrated that two proteins (l and p) of vsv are targets of mir- and mir- , while mir- a targets the nef protein of hiv to inhibit its replication. moreover, some mirnas, including mir- , mir- , mir- , mir- , mir- , mir- , mir- , and mir- , target the hcv proteins such as c and ns a proteins to suppress the translation/replication by provoking ifn signaling [ ] [ ] [ ] . hence, mirna can provide a featured concept for elucidating the pathogenesis and infectivity of the new pandemic sars-cov- . while the sars-cov- is far related to sars-cov- , some relationships have been found in their manifestations. however, there are marked discrepancies between the two disorders [ ] . currently, numerous countries deal with sars-cov- , and such a prevalence makes the virus prone to undergoing some mutations and developing variations in different populations [ ] . several lines of evidence showed that viral pathogens could evade the immune system surveillance by utilizing the host mirnas [ , ] . khan et al. [ ] analyzed the host mirnas profile and the epigenetic regulators of the different expression levels of mirnas among sars-cov and sars-cov- . they applied computational procedures to prognosticate possible host and viral mirnas and their potential tasks in various operative pathways [ ] . they also distinguished multiple presumed host mirnas (with antiviral function) capable of targeting sars viruses and their mirnas to target the host genes [ ] . the contrast among the host mirna profiles associated with distinct sars-cov- genomes among distinct nations with corresponding normalized deaths elucidated some mirna clusters correlated with raised mortality rates [ ] . in this context, khan and colleagues [ ] detected that the provoked cellular mirnas could act as a double-edged sword for host protection, as they have significant functions in compensating the viral infection. additionally, mirnas can function as proviral determinants. khan et al. [ ] indicated that both sars-cov- and sars-cov- viral mirnas can target a wide range of signaling pathways associated with the immune system, and some sars-cov- mirnas can target a set of immuneassociated signaling pathways, including autophagy and ifn-i signaling, suggesting their immuneevasion tools for continued latency inside hosts [ ] . besides, various crucial cellular pathways can be modulated by sars-cov- , which may result in extended aberrations in cases with comorbidities such as cardiovascular disorders, diabetes, and respiratory difficulties [ ] . this inflammation-linked micrornas, such as mirna- , following infection with these viruses [ ] . infection of the calu- with sars-cov- approximately causes a -fold increase in the expression of the ifn-stimulated response element genes and the expression of cytokines, such as cxcl or il compared with sars-cov- [ ] . they showed the significant increased expression of mir- in cells infected with sars-cov- [ ] . this mirna has been correlated with numerous viral diseases [ ] [ ] [ ] , and has been recognized as a regulator of immune cell differentiation, especially t-cells [ , ] . the involvement of this mirna in directing the innate immune responses has further been addressed elsewhere [ ] . recently, mir- - p induction was determined to be provoked in a murine model infected with the iva [ ] . significantly, in the study of wyler and colleagues, the pulmonary damage caused by ards was reduced by the elimination of mir- , denoting that this mirna could be a possible curative target for the treatment of covid- [ ] . additionally, in bioinformatics studies by another team, some mirnas, such as mir- - p, let- g- p, mir- - p, mir- b, mir- - p, mir- - p, and mir- a- p have been identified in sars-cov- disease [ ] . in another bioinformatics work by sardar et al. [ ] , a unified sequence-based examination of sars-cov- genome from diverse geographic places was carried out to recognize notable genomic characteristics of sars-cov- by integrated analysis. their analysis revealed nine host mirnas that can conceivably target sars-cov- genes (table ) [ ] . interestingly, they found that nine mirnas did not have targets in another related viral genomes, including those of sars-cov- and mers [ ] . liu et al. [ ] used computational methods to investigate the sars-cov- genome for alleged mirnas and detected the viral mirna targets on the virus, and human genome simultaneously and also detected the human mirnas that can target the viral genome. besides, they examined mirnas implicated in dysregulation prompted by a viral disease that involved the immunity and cytoskeleton structure, which are the common critical biological means modulated by the mirnas, induced by infection [ ] . notably, they observed that hsa-mir- - p could target the s gene of sars-cov- , and that mir - p (virus-encoded mirna) enhanced the induction of tmprss by increasing the virulence of sars-cov- in the intestine. ivashchenko et al. [ ] studied how mirnas can protect humans from covid- using bioinformatics tools. they found that among mirnas, three mirnas, including mir- - p, mir- - p, and mir - p, were recognized as the common significant mirnas communicating with the guide rna of sars-cov- , mers-cov, and sars-cov- [ ] . using the genome sequences of several mirnas, including mir- - p, mir- - p, and mir- - p, they identified the cc-mir (complete complementary mirna) in the guide rna of coronaviruses [ ] . the indicated that the binding sites of these cc-mirs did not create intramolecular networks in the d construction of the guide rna of sars-cov- , mers-cov, and sars-cov- [ ] . hence, the cc-mirs can join guide rna via these sites out of the race [ ] . it has been revealed that in these coronaviruses, cc-mirs are devoid of target genes among subjects encoding genes with a Δg/Δgm of higher than %, implying that these cc-mirs do not affect the translation of the mrna in humans [ ] . it has been shown that cc-mirs could be employed as remedial molecules by being fused with exosomes or additional biological vesicles to be transferred within the lung through inhalation [ ] . the transfer of cc-mir within the blood can hinder the propagation of the virus in the bloodstream and the entire organs it can penetrate [ ] . the recommended approach of the hindrance of coronaviruses replication can further be employed for other viruses. in another study, tak-sum chow and colleagues predicted and examined the micrornas in the human lung epithelium (hle) that could target sars-cov- [ ] . they have recognized micrornas (from human) with the ability of targeting the sars-cov- genome [ ] . this study indicated that six of these micrornas are differentially expressed simultaneously in in-vitro sars-cov- infection. besides, microrna targets (for sars-cov- ) and microrna targets (for mers-cov) have been found [ ] . furthermore, and micrornas have been typically distinguished in two other investigations. more investigations into distinguishing authentic micrornas that target the coronavirus will help understand the importance of micrornas as a cellular security mechanism toward pathogenic coronavirus diseases [ ] . sabbatinelli et al. [ ] investigated the levels of mir- - p, mir- a- p, and mir- - p in the serum of subjects with covid- receiving tocilizumab along with sex and age-matched healthy control. the study results indicated that the serum levels of mir- a- p were significantly lowered in cases who did not respond to tocilizumab [ ] . they also demonstrated that among non-responders, those with the lowest serum levels of mir- a- p experienced the most adverse outcomes [ ] . finally, they proposed that the biomarkers in blood, such as mir- a- p, can present a molecular connection between inflammation and the covid- clinical course, thus expanding the drug arsenal toward this global health threat [ ] . the authors also demonstrated that between non-responders, those with the lowermost levels of mir- a- p in serum experienced a majority of unfavorable consequences. it has been found that ace helps in maintaining the blood pressure as well as electrolyte balance and it also decreases the level of angiotensin ii in the circulation by suppressing the reninangiotensin-aldosterone system (raas) conferring anti-hypertensive influences [ ] . currently, it has also been found that ace acts as a receptor for the s protein of sars-cov- that plays a pivotal activity in covid- [ ] . of note, in severe covid- patients, various health complications, such as hypertension, cardio-vascular disorders, and diabetes have been reported [ ] . in particular, it has been found that ace is produced in cardiomyocytes and raised in individuals with cardiac disorders [ ] . in an outstanding study by lu et al. [ ] , several mirnas with the ability of modulating ace which can be exploited to control the sars-cov- receptor were investigated. their findings showed that both ace mrna and ace protein rates are suppressed by mir- c in animal cardiomyocytes and more importantly, in cardiomyocytes derived from humans [ ] . lu et al. [ ] found the first mirna candidate that could target ace in cardiomyocytes that could be used as a preventive approach for cardiovascular complications in covid- patients [ ] . ace is one of the crucial factors by which sars-cov- accesses the human cells, and it has been noted that internalization of the sars-cov- requires not only binding to ace but also the tmprss (transmembrane protease serine ) [ ] . of note, the potential involvement of tmprss and targeting it in covid- as a novel therapeutic method has not been fully evaluated. in a study by matarese et al. [ ] the micrornas that specifically target tmprss were evaluated by an in-silico approach. they found mir- - p as a proper candidate and mechanistically validated it as a modulator of tmprss transcription in two different umbilical vein endothelial cells derived from the human lung [ ] . overall, these data show that tmprss can be a promising target by specific non-coding-rnas in the treatment of covid- patients. to date, there is no available drug to increase/ inhibit any mirnas in vris; nevertheless, progress has been made in other disorders. the primary inhibitory medication designed for mir- was constructed in , and it is currently in a phase ii trial for hepatitis c therapy [ ] . mrx is the primary artificial mirna ( ) used to treat advanced hepatocellular carcinoma [ ] . in further investigations, artificial mirnas have been produced to transfect mononuclear cells of peripheral blood with liposomal carriers [ ] . these procedures boost particular proinflammatory cytokines, such as tnf-α, and promote innate immunity [ ] . the most current purpose of these mirnas was to establish modern vaccines by attenuated viruses filled with an expression cassette (ec) encoding an artificial mirna to target necessary viral proteins [ ] . the viral pr -amir- np was produced by inserting an ec for mir- in attenuated iv within viral genes (genes encoding non-structural proteins). the target of this mirna is the nucleoproteins of iv [ ] . this vaccine is given by intranasal injection, protecting against various dissimilar viral strains [ ] . plants also generate mirnas that can control the replication of viruses [ ] . for example, the expression of pb and ns proteins in ivas (h n and h n ) was repressed by mir- (a mirna in honeysuckle) [ ] . the absence of an in-vivo delivery system is a fundamental challenge for the advancement of mirna-based therapeutics. up to now, aerosolization is the most traditional and valuable tool for passing small rnas in the respiratory tract with a micro sprayer [ , ] . this method presents the possibility of mirna transmission for potential applications in ris. concerning covid- , the viral glycoprotein called the s protein mediates viral entry to the target cells via binding to the ace expressed on cell surface [ ] . the s glycoprotein is activated through proteolytic cleavage by a host protease called furin [ ] . adam (a disintegrin and metalloprotease controls the ace expression on the plasma membrane, promoting the protein shedding [ ] . the notch signaling elevates furin expression, while repressing adam via mirna- . hence, blocking the initiation of notch signaling pathway may serve as an approach to hinder the entry of virus into the cells by diminishing furin and increasing adam shedding (such as γ-secretase inhibitor) [ ] . besides, approaches that can increase the expression of adam , such as the application of antagomir to mirna- , must be considered [ ] . commercializing a novel medicine is time-consuming and expensive owing to the administrative manners correlated to pre-clinical and clinical analyses. notwithstanding, we believe that various molecules previously investigated and expanded after the former sars-cov- disease in can be used as a platform for developing active molecules for the current sars-cov- disease. one of the exciting facets of these molecules is the feasibility of changing the functionality of the viral replication machinery and disrupting the secondary construction of the central 'utr genomic area [ ] . major molecules reported in recent works are natural rna molecules which have exhibited no side effects in in-vivo and can penetrate the cells without the need for transmission vehicles or transfecting tools. this is a beneficial characteristic as, usually, rna molecules are not much alive per se. they demand a means to enter the cells; for example, mrna- is transported via lipid nanoparticles to covid- patients (phase-i clinical trial) [ ] . additionally, antagomir has been characterized to act on mirnas turnover [ ] . antagomir is a new type of engineered oligonucleotide, which can specifically silence the endogenous mirnas [ ] . in this regard, such approaches can act with a good efficacy on covid- patients with severe conditions due to the css [ ] . antagomirs -easy to be produced in the laboratory, and cheaper than traditional biological approaches, especially when produced in a large scale -could be customized upon the immunological hallmarks of a given condition to block the activation of a range of compounds, effectively tailoring the whole cytokine storm to prevent the patient from having serious, life-threatening complications associated with the covid- . taken together, antagomir can be used to specifically tailor the action of key mirnas that contribute to the inflammatory process in covid- patients, and can improve the clinical symptoms of these patients. using the administration of mirnas, the armory that can operate to combat sars-cov- is encouraging and conceivably very efficacious. as postulated, a few of these curative possibilities could mitigate covid- signs or diminish viral replication. we firmly propose that none of these opportunities should be dropped unexamined, as identifying an efficacious vaccine could be an extraordinarily long and unpredictable way. this work did not receive any particular grant from funding agencies in the commercial and public sectors. none declared. [ ] the mir-let- c expression was remarkably raised in iv-infected a cells. [ ] let- f human metapneumovirus following rsv infection, the let- f expression was significantly increased. [ ] mir- - p human metapneumovirus the hmpv provokes mir- - p expression. [ ] mir- human metapneumovirus during hmpv infection, has-mir- - p expression was increased. hmpv (wild type) infection does not provoke mir- a and mir- expression, but the virus deficient the m - gene enhancing mir- and mir- a. [ ] mir- a, mir- human metapneumovirus the mir- a* was diminished by hmpv infection. [ ] mir- respiratory syncytial virus the rsv infection significantly diminished the expression of mir- . [ ] mir- , let- i respiratory syncytial virus the expression of let- i was observed in healthy hbepc cultures infected with an rsv that deficient ns and ns proteins. [ , ] let- respiratory syncytial virus the increase in the expression of let- b was observed in hbepc cultures infected with an rsv. [ , ] mir- - p respiratory syncytial virus following the rsv infection, mir- - p targets the trkb and apaf genes and result in trkb-brain-derived neurotrophic factor binding as well as apoptosis. [ , ] mir- respiratory syncytial virus during the rsv disease, the low-affinity p ntr receptor gene was declined via mir- . [ , ] mir- respiratory syncytial virus in patients infected with rsv, the expression levels of mir- b and mir- c were reduced. [ ] mir- respiratory syncytial virus among the mir- family, in patients infected with rsv, the expression of mir- a and mir- c were reduced. [ , ] mir- respiratory syncytial virus among the human mir- family, the expression levels of mir- c were declined in rsv infected patients contrasted to the control group. [ , ] the host cerna and circrnas analysis in human lung adenocarcinoma epithelial cells contaminated with the highly pathogenic mers-cov indicated that mers-cov infection could impact on host gene expression. [ ] mir - p, mir- - p, mir- , mir- a- p, mir- - p, mir- a- p, mir- - p, mir- ax, mir- - p, mir- - p, mir- , mir- - p, and mir- - p the computational approach provided an exciting hypothesis that those mirnas involved in mers-cov pathogenesis, and this approach may help to understand host-pathogen interplay better and promote new antiviral treatment toward mers-cov. [ ] mir- a- p, - - p, and - - p in patients with covid- that not respond to the tocilizumab treatment, the levels of mir- a- p were decreased in the serum. also, this study's data suggest mirs in the blood, such as mir- a- p, can act as biomarkers and provide a molecular link between inflammation and the covid- clinical course. [ ] mir- c sars-cov- i a study investigated several identified mirnas which could regulate ace which may be exploited to regulate the sars-cov- receptor. their data reveal that both ace mrna and ace protein levels are inhibited by mir- c in rat primary cardiomyocytes and importantly, in human-derived cardiomyocytes [ ] mir- - p sars-cov- in a study evaluated the micrornas that specifically target tmprss . through a bioinformatic approach, they identified mir- - p as a suitable candidate and they mechanistically validated mir- - p as a regulator of tmprss transcription in two different human endothelial cell types, derived from the lung and from the umbilical vein [ ] global trends in epidemiology of coronavirus disease (covid- ) virus against virus: a potential treatment for -ncov (sars-cov- ) and other rna viruses a realistic two-strain model for mers-cov infection uncovers the high risk for epidemic propagation development of genetic diagnostic methods for novel coronavirus (ncov- ) 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acidinducible gene i-inducible mir- b inhibits infections by minor group rhinoviruses through downregulation of the very low density lipoprotein receptor influenza a virus-induced expression of a galnac transferase, galnt , via micrornas is required for enhanced viral replication cellular microrna let- c inhibits m protein expression of the h n influenza a virus in infected human lung epithelial cells human metapneumovirus infection induces significant changes in small noncoding rna expression in airway epithelial cells comparative analysis of mirna profile in human dendritic cells infected with respiratory syncytial virus and human metapneumovirus non-coding rnas and their role in respiratory syncytial virus (rsv) and human metapneumovirus (hmpv) infections microrna- modulates rsv replication in human bronchial epithelium by targeting ngf expression comparative analysis of mirna profile in human dendritic cells infected with respiratory syncytial virus and human metapneumovirus mirpower: a webtool to validate survival-associated mirnas utilizing expression data from breast cancer patients diverse functions of mir- family in different cell contexts the mir- family: genomics, cell biology, and relevance to renal and cardiovascular injury mir- regulates the proliferation and apoptosis of nephroblastoma cells through targeting c-myc micrornas in lipid metabolism a role of mir- in the regulation of adipogenesis mir- b targets ksrp to coordinate tlr -mediated epithelial defense against cryptosporidium parvum infection microrna as type i interferon-regulated transcripts and modulators of the innate immune response micrornas and their target gene networks in breast cancer the role of micrornas in respiratory viral infection: friend or foe? a computational approach for predicting role of human micrornas in mers-cov genome this work was supported by the hamadan university of medical sciences, hamadan, iran. key: cord- -mmkrwj t authors: snijder, eric j.; limpens, ronald w.a.l.; de wilde, adriaan h.; de jong, anja w. m.; zevenhoven-dobbe, jessika c.; maier, helena j.; faas, frank f.g.a.; koster, abraham j.; bárcena, montserrat title: a unifying structural and functional model of the coronavirus replication organelle: tracking down rna synthesis date: - - journal: biorxiv doi: . / . . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: mmkrwj t zoonotic coronavirus (cov) infections, like those responsible for the current sars-cov- epidemic, cause grave international public health concern. in infected cells, the cov rna-synthesizing machinery associates with modified endoplasmic reticulum membranes that are transformed into the viral replication organelle (ro). while double-membrane vesicles (dmvs) appear to be a pan-coronavirus ro element, studies to date describe an assortment of additional coronavirus-induced membrane structures. despite much speculation, it remains unclear which ro element(s) accommodate viral rna synthesis. here we provide detailed d and d analyses of cov ros and show that diverse covs essentially induce the same membrane modifications, including the small open double-membrane spherules (dmss) previously thought to be restricted to gamma- and delta-cov infections and proposed as sites of replication. metabolic labelling of newly-synthesized viral rna followed by quantitative em autoradiography revealed abundant viral rna synthesis associated with dmvs in cells infected with the beta-covs mers-cov and sars-cov, and the gamma-cov infectious bronchitis virus. rna synthesis could not be linked to dmss or any other cellular or virus-induced structure. our results provide a unifying model of the cov ro and clearly establish dmvs as the central hub for viral rna synthesis and a potential drug target in coronavirus infection. epidemic, cause grave international public health concern. in infected cells, the cov rna- synthesizing machinery associates with modified endoplasmic reticulum membranes that are transformed into the viral replication organelle (ro). while double-membrane vesicles (dmvs) appear to be a pan-coronavirus ro element, studies to date describe an assortment ro [ , , ] , was entirely possible and started to attract attention. notably, dmvs can be also formed in the absence of vrna synthesis by expression of key transmembrane nsps [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . moreover, several studies suggested a lack of direct correlation between the number of dmvs and the level of cov replication in the infected cell [ , ] . the interpretation of the cov ro structure and function was further compounded by the discovery of different ro double-membrane spherules (dmss) we first set out to analyse the ultrastructure of mers-cov-infected huh cells under sample preparation conditions favourable for autoradiography (see materials and methods) (fig , s video). strikingly, in addition to the dmvs and cm that are well established hallmarks of beta-cov infections, the presence of small spherules, occasionally in large numbers, was readily apparent (fig a and b) . these spherules were notably similar to the dmss previously described for the gamma-cov ibv [ ] . their remarkably regular size of ~ nm (average diameter . ± . nm, n= ), a delimiting double membrane and their electron- dense content, made these spherules clearly distinct from other structures, including progeny virions, which had comparable diameter (fig c and d ). the double-membrane spherules (dmss) generated during ibv infection were previously described as invaginations of the zippered er that remain open to the cytosol [ ] . in mers-cov-infected cells, the dmss were connected to the cm from which they seemed to derive ( fig e) . clear openings to the cytosol could not be detected for the large majority (~ %, n= ) of the fully reconstructed dmss, which suggests that the original invagination may eventually transform into a sealed compartment. this type of apparently closed dmss were also present, though in a lower proportion (~ %, n= ), in ibv-infected cell samples processed in an identical manner (s the d architecture of mers-cov-induced ro aligned with previous observations for other cov [ , ] . no clear openings connecting the interior of the dmvs and the cytosol could be detected. all three types of mers-cov-induced membrane modifications appeared to be interconnected, either directly or indirectly through the er. while dmss were connected to cm, and cm to er, er membranes were often continuous with dmvs (fig f, arrowheads) . therefore, like other covs, mers-cov infection appears to induce a network of largely interconnected modified er membranes that, as a whole, can be considered the cov ro. quantification of the autoradiography signal per subcellular structure (see also s table) . labelling densities and relative labelling indexes (rli) in different subcellular regions of (c) vero e cells infected with sars-cov (moi ) or (d) huh cells infected with mers-cov (moi ). radioactively-labelled uridine was provided for the indicated periods of time immediately before fixation at hpi and hpi, respectively. control mock-infected cells are excluded from the rli plots, as rli comparisons between conditions require the same number of classes (subcellular regions) and these cells lack ros and virions. budding vesicles (fig a-c) .the m and s proteins also localized to the golgi complex, aligning with previous observations for other covs [ , , , ] . the mers-cov n protein was found in regions with cm and dmss, though the distribution of signal was homogenous and dmss were not particularly densely labelled (fig d) . the presence of the assembly, or the s protein (fig e and f ). previously, the cm induced by sars-cov and mhv were shown by iem to accumulate viral nsps, while dsrna signal was primarily found inside the dmvs [ , ] . similarly, nsp mapped to the cm induced in mers-cov infection, but also to the dmss to a comparable extent (fig g) . our attempts to combine dsrna antibody labelling with thawed cryo-sections were unsuccessful, which made us resort to hpf-fs samples. in these, however, while dmvs were easily detected, the morphology of cm and dmss was less clearly defined. nevertheless, dsrna signal was clearly associated with dmvs, while the dark membranous regions between dmvs that we interpreted as cm and dmss clusters appeared devoid of signal (fig h and i ). in summary, for the antibodies tested (recognizing n, m, s, nsp , and dsrna), the labelling pattern in mers-cov-induced dmss closely resembled that of the cm, from which they seem to derive. the absence of labelling for key proteins in virus assembly, like the m and s proteins, strongly suggest that dmss do not represent (spurious) virus assembly events. the comprehensive analysis presented here demonstrates that viruses across different cov genera induce essentially the same type of membrane structures. after somewhat disparate observations [ , , , , , ] , the unifying model that emerges from our study is that our results add to studies that, in the last years and after much speculation, have started to provide experimental evidence that the dmvs induced by +rna viruses are active sites of vrna synthesis [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] . however, it is not clear that dmvs always play the primary role in virus replication that we demonstrate here for cov. for picornaviruses, for example, virus- were freeze-substituted in a leica afs system with . % (wt/vol) uranyl acetate as previously described [ ] , with the only modification that acetone was replaced by ethanol from the last washing step before lowycril infiltration onwards. cell sections ( nm thick) were incubated with the primary mouse antibody, then with a bridging rabbit anti-mouse-igg antibody (dako cytomation), and finally with protein a coupled to -nm gold particles. after immunolabelling, samples were additionally stained with % uranyl acetate and reynold's lead citrate. large mosaic em maps containing dozens of cell profiles were used for the quantitative analysis of the newly-synthesized rna autoradiography signal (see s table) . for each cov, different conditions (infected and mock-infected cells, plus different labelling times) were compared using only samples developed after the same period of time. the analysis of the signal in different subcellular regions was carried out using home-built software. areas of µm were randomly selected from the mosaic em maps and the autoradiography grains present in those areas were manually assigned to the underlying cellular structures. the abundance of the different types of subcellular structures was estimated through virtual points in a × lattice superimposed to each selected area, which were also assigned to the different subcellular classes. regularly along the process, the annotated data per condition was split into two random groups and the kendall and spearman coefficients, which measure the concordance between two data sets [ ], were calculated. new random regions were added until the average kendall and spearman coefficients resulting from random splits were higher than . and . , respectively (maximum value, ). labelling densities and relative labelling indexes (rli) were then calculated from the annotated points [ ] . for the analysis of the association of vrna synthesis with each of the different ros motifs, the specific dmvs, dmss and cm included in the analysis were carefully selected. only individual dmvs that were at least one micron away from any other virus-induced membrane modification were included in the analysis. for every grain present in an area of nm radius around each dmv, the distance to the dmv centre was measured. in the case of dmss, which were always part of clusters of virus-induced membrane structures, only dmss in the periphery of these clusters were selected. the quantified signal was limited to sub- areas devoid of other ro motifs, which were defined by circular arcs (typically o to o , radius nm) opposite to the ro clusters. cms are irregular structures that appear partially or totally surrounded by dmvs. only large cm (> . µm across) were selected in order to make more apparent (if present) any decay of the autoradiography signal as the distance to the surrounding dmvs increased. for each autoradiography grain, both the distance to the closest cm boundary (d ) and the distance to the opposite cm edge (d ) were measured. the relative distance to the cm edge was then calculated as d /(d +d ) and expressed in percentages. all the measurements in different dmvs, dmss and cm were made using aperio imagescope software (leica) and pooled together into three single data sets. autoradiography is a classic technique that allows the em visualization of a radioactive marker, usually targeting a certain process, and thus reveals the subcellular localization of that process [ , ] . tritiated uridine, for example, can be used to locate active rna synthesis [ ] [ ] [ ] , as shown also in this study. a clear advantage over the use of alternatives for metabolic labelling of newly-synthesized rna (e.g. br-uridine, br-utp, -ethynil uridine) is that the radioactive precursor is chemically identical to the natural substrate. after labelling, the samples are immediately fixed and processed for em. the location of the radioactive marker can then be made apparent by applying a highly-sensitive photographic emulsion (a nuclear emulsion) on top of the cell sections and exposing it for several weeks to months. the beta particles that are emitted as a result of tritium disintegrations generate electrons that get trapped in the silver halide emulsion and create a "latent image". when the emulsion is developed, these negative charges promote the reduction to metallic silver, generating electron-dense grains that are visible by em. in principle, given enough time to accumulate enough radioactive disintegrations, even low levels of the radioactive marker could be detected. in practice, other factors (e.g. background radiation, emulsion aging) set some limits to autoradiography, which is nonetheless a very sensitive technique. the resolution of em autoradiography is limited by the fact that radioactive disintegrations generate beta particles that are emitted in random directions. importantly, the probability of giving rise to signal degreases with the distance from the radioactive source; however, some beta particles may travel up to a few hundred nanometers before striking the photographic emulsion [ ] . therefore, it is important to keep in mind that the silver grains may not directly overlay the structure containing the radioactive source. quantitative analyses of the signal that take this factor into account, like those presented in this study, become indispensable to maximize the information that autoradiography can provide. as for mer-cov-infected cells (fig ) . tomographic slices through two regions containing membranous replication factories induced by plus- strand rna viruses ultrastructure of the 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early endonuclease-mediated evasion of rna sensing ensures efficient coronavirus replication mechanisms and enzymes involved in sars coronavirus genome expression a new virus isolated from the human respiratory tract reverse genetics system for the avian coronavirus infectious bronchitis virus the coronavirus spike protein is a class i virus fusion protein: structural and functional characterization of the fusion core complex ultrastructure and origin of membrane vesicles associated with the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus replication complex monoclonal antibodies to double-stranded rna as probes of rna structure in crude nucleic acid extracts towards a solution to mers: protective human monoclonal antibodies targeting different domains and functions of the mers-coronavirus spike glycoprotein resolution of a gold latensification-elon ascorbic acid developer for ilford l emulsion correlated fluorescence and d electron microscopy with high sensitivity and spatial precision a rapid method for assessing the distribution of gold labeling on thin sections dmss (white arrowheads) and zippered er (white arrows). most zippered er consists of long stretches of though branching zippered er, closer to the cm described for beta-cov, was also present (b) virus particles (black arrowheads) budding into the er membranes were often observed. scale bars analysis of previously described samples of cov-infected cells, prepared for em either by hpf(a) or cryo-plunging (b). a targeted search revealed the presence of dmss (white arrowheads) in close association with cm. in comparison with the chemically fixed samples used in this study, the superior ultrastructural preservation of cryo-fixation results in less distorted membranes, but also in a denser cytoplasm and darker cm that makes dms less apparent. (a) example from a mers-cov-infected huh cell sars-cov-infected cell ( hpi) metabolic labelling of newly-synthesized vrna in ibv-infected cells and analysis of the autoradiography signal. vero cells infected with ibv were pre-treated with actinomycin d for hour, then labelled for or min with tritiated uridine a) overview of an ibv-infected vero cell ( min labelling). the areas containing dmvs and zippered er are outlined in yellow and blue, respectively, and other subcellular structures annotated (n, nucleus; m, mitochondria; au, autophagosome; vcr, virion-containing regions). the autoradiography signal accumulates in areas of virus-induced membrane modifications that often only contain dmvs close-up of the area boxed in black in (a), which contains dmvs the contrast between the densely labelled dmvs and the zippered er and dmss largely lacking signal is apparent and suggests that the autoradiography grains sometimes present on the latter structures arose from radioactive disintegrations in the surrounding active dmvs. (c) in agreement with this possibility, most of the dmss ( %) were devoid of signal, and most of those that contained label where close to an active dmv (n dms = ). (d) furthermore, the distribution of autoradiography grains around dmss resembled that of a random distribution dmvs proved that these structures are associated with vrna synthesis, as the signal reaches maximum values in the proximity of the dmvs (n dmvs = ). ((c, d) see materials and methods for the selection criteria and details) electron tomography of the membrane structures induced in mers-cov infection animation illustrating the tomography reconstruction and model presented in fig b. the video first shows the tomographic slices ( . nm thick) through the reconstructed volume, and then surface-rendered models of the different structures segmented from the tomogram cm (blue) and dmvs (yellow and lilac, outer and inner membranes), er (green), and a vesicle (silver) containing virions (pink). the movie highlights the dms association with cm techniques and applications of autoradiography in the light and electron microscope autoradiography & radioautography. electron microscopy: principles and techniques for biologists association of polioviral proteins of the p genomic region with the viral replication complex and virus-induced membrane synthesis as visualized by electron microscopic immunocytochemistry and autoradiography escaping host factor pi kb inhibition: enterovirus genomic rna replication in the absence of replication organelles the origin, dynamic morphology, and pi p-independent formation of encephalomyocarditis virus replication organelles. mbio mers-coronavirus replication induces severe in vitro cytopathology and is strongly inhibited by cyclosporin a or interferon-alpha treatment sars-coronavirus replication is supported by a reticulovesicular network of modified endoplasmic reticulum table data sets and sampling for the quantifications of the autoradiography signal presented in fig c and key: cord- -q exf s authors: toosy, arshad haroon; o'sullivan, sean title: an overview of middle east respiratory syndrome in the middle east date: - - journal: fowler's zoo and wild animal medicine current therapy, volume doi: . /b - - - - . - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: q exf s nan middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) is an emerging infectious zoonotic disease caused by a novel coronavirus (cov). mers was first reported in in jeddah, kingdom of saudi arabia (ksa), and in jordan, respectively. the disease was considered a potential pandemic threat to public health in the persian gulf region. (see also chapter .) most known covs infect and circulate in animals, mainly bats, but a number of covs are known to cause human disease (see also chapter ). [ ] [ ] [ ] the rapid emergence of mers-cov coupled with its limited geographic distribution has led to the suspicion that this is a zoonotic disease with an animal reservoir, and the evidence supports the hypothesis that dromedary camels (dcs) are the reservoir host. in dcs mers-cov causes a mild, transient upper respiratory tract (urt) infection. [ ] [ ] [ ] a mild or asymptomatic disease has also been reported in humans, but this is not always the case. mers-cov infection in humans often results in a severe, life-threatening disease of the lower respiratory tract (lrt), with high mortality. , , immunocompromised, elderly people and those with comorbidities, usually with a history of close contact with infected dcs, are particularly susceptible. is a positive-sense enveloped single-stranded rna virus and is the first lineage of c betacoronavirus known to infect humans. , it is more closely related to bat covs hku and hku (lineage c) than to the severe acute respiratory syndrome cov (sars-cov, (lineage b). , recent genome sequencing analysis reported the genomic evolution rate ( . × substitutions per site), suggesting that mers-cov diverged from its viral ancestor in march . analysis of human mers-cov sequences has identified several circulating genotypes. these distinct genotypes are phylogenetically classified into clades a, b, and, most recently, c, which correlate with outbreaks of mers among humans. , , , the emergence of divergent mers-cov clades in humans since is consistent with several independent sporadic introductions into the human population from an animal reservoir, of which the camel was unquestionably the source. , , , pathogenesis host cell entry of mers-cov is mediated by the binding of mers spike (s) proteins to a specific cellular receptor known as dipeptidyl peptidase (dpp ). dpp is expressed on the epithelial and endothelial cells of most human organ tissues in ex vivo studies using human tissue culture lines; this may account for the multisystem clinical spectrum of the mers-cov infection. , a strain cultured from a fatal human case was experimentally inoculated into three dcs using intratracheal, intranasal, and conjunctival routes. a mild transient disease resulted in submucosal inflammation and necrosis in the urt and lrt, but the alveoli remained unaffected. experimental inoculation of rhesus macaques (macaca mulatta) and common marmosets (callithrix jacchus) resulted in mild to severe lrt disease causing multifocal interstitial pneumonia in the macaques and extensive fatal pneumonia in the marmosets. , , since at least . several mers-cov serologic surveys confirm that the disease is not present in domesticated livestock (namely, horses, sheep, goats, and cattle) and is enzootic in the dc population across the arabian peninsula as well as in north and east africa. , , , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] historically, the camel was the mainstay of land-based trade transportation and was used extensively as a food source across the entire region prior to industrialization during the latter part of the th century. , the free movement of humans and animals across the region supports the widespread prevalence and genetic diversity of mers-cov in the dc populations of arabia and east africa today. , the temporal dynamics of mers infection in dcs in al-ahsa, ksa, was examined by collecting nasal swabs and lung tissue during postmortem examination from two independent groups of animals over the course of a year and testing these for mers-cov rna by real-time reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (rt-rtpcr). positive samples were typically associated with young immunologically naive animals (< years of age) rather than adults (> years of age). seasonal peaks were detected during the winter months and coincided with the calving season, less extreme environmental conditions, cooler ambient temperatures, and higher relative humidity, for the transmission of infection amongst susceptible individuals. this seasonal peak has also been described in epidemic nosocomial outbreaks in humans that occur more frequently during the winter months. , extensive virologic evidence has been accumulated since supporting the epidemiologic link between dcs and humans in the transmission of mers-cov, although epidemiology mers-cov belongs to a lineage commonly associated with bats, the closest relatives of which lineage were recently identified in vesper bats (i.e., various species of the family vespertilionidae) from europe, asia, and south africa. initial research efforts have focused on establishing an epidemiologic link between bats and humans. , , , there is no conclusive evidence to support the theory that bats are the source of human infection, although there is consensus that bats are the ancestral hosts of the disease. , , a related mers-like cov virus, isolated from an african pipistrelle bat (pipistrellus hesperidus) in uganda, has shown high divergence of the s protein nucleotide sequence compared with an index mers-cov s protein sequence ( % amino acid identity divergence). this suggests that the two viruses differ significantly in receptor binding properties, implying that the mers-like cov virus is not a zoonotic threat and supporting the theory of a common ancestry. to date the only direct link between bats and human disease was a single instance when an rna sequence from a fatal human mers index case showed a % nucleotide match of a polymerase chain reaction (pcr)-amplified sequence of a fecal pellet from an egyptian tomb bat (taphozous perforates) collected in the same area of bisha, ksa. the human fatality was an owner of four dcs, which also tested positive for the same strain of mers-cov. at present, bat-to-human infection by mers-cov is considered to be purely speculative. surveillance of dcs in ksa has shown that mers-cov clade b has been enzootic in the camel population in arabia genetic deep sequencing methods (i.e., high-throughput sequencing) have been readily available to researchers since the disease was first reported. sequenced data have been used in these cases to successfully construct the phylogenetic tree between related viruses and hosts. , , , direct mers-cov antigen detection is possible but has been rarely performed. immunochromatography assays and monoclonal antibody-based capture elisas targeting the mers-cov nucleocapsid protein have been described. since the virus was first reported in , a range of comprehensive laboratory tests has been developed. , to better understand the disease, it has been important to collate sampling methodology data, laboratory results, and analyses in combination with clinical and epidemiologic data. until laboratory assays are fully validated, a combination of molecular and serologic laboratory tests is required to improve confidence in laboratory diagnosis during outbreaks. in cases of mild or asymptomatic infection, full validation of serologic assays is required to rule out false-negative results. validation is also required to successfully apply newly developed diagnostic serology algorithms to inform public health decisions. , , treatment therapeutic options for mers-cov are limited. supportive treatment is indicated for hospitalized patients, but vigilance for complications is essential. empirical use of antimicrobial agents or steroids has not succeeded in reversing the progression of severe disease. , , no specific drug or vaccine is currently available to treat mers. indeed, it has been stated that the complexity and time required for the development and registration process of drugs for human use impedes the ability to counter the rapid threat against an emerging infectious agent. for example, there is no vaccine available against sars-cov because of the brevity of the threat to the public health. , it is likely that a mers-cov vaccine for human use may not be developed due to a lack of commercial interest, or if the threat posed by mers-cov declines in the meantime. nevertheless, given the prevalence of mers-cov infection in the middle east's dc population and due to the potential for spillover to the human population in direct contact with dcs, the development of a vaccine for use in dcs may be feasible. , , a recent successful trial of a mers orthopoxvirus vaccine has conferred mucosal immunity in the urts of dcs. eradication of mers-cov from herds may be possible, if vaccines are administered to young, immunologically naive camels prior to exposure. , , identification of the zoonotic source of mers guides control strategies at the human-animal interface. , by preventing spillover of mers-cov from animals to humans, the risk of nosocomial and familial outbreaks in the middle east could be eliminated. strategic serosurveys of humans using samples collected after have been infrequent. , , there is a paucity of baseline data to describe the proportion of the potentially infected human population for much of the arabian peninsula and all of east africa, including the horn of africa. the exact mechanism of transmission from camels to human remains uncertain. sustained close contact is most probably necessary for transmission by aerosolized droplets, as mers-cov viral rna has been detected in air samples from a barn housing infected dcs in qatar, and the virus may remain viable in aerosol for up to minutes. , [ ] [ ] [ ] the potential public health risk resulting from aerosol-generating activities ranges from contamination of a room occupied by a symptomatic patient to slaughter practices. , , aerosolized transmission of mers-cov has been attributed to hospital outbreaks in ksa and south korea. , , mers-cov spreads inefficiently from human to human, but transmission is effective in a hospital environment, where susceptible individuals are concentrated and the risks are amplified by poor infection prevention and control (ipc) protocols. in some reported cases of mers, direct contact with camels was not apparent. , camel-to-human transmission through other routes is, however, possible owing to the consumption of unpasteurized camel milk or raw camel meat and in traditional medicine, when camel urine is consumed as a natural remedy for a variety of ailments. , a recent survey has found that infected camels may shed mers-cov virus in milk and urine, and the virus has been shown to remain infectious for days in milk stored at °c. , the transmission risks associated with the handling of camel products, raw milk, urine, and meat during animal slaughter are yet to be fully elucidated. further studies are needed to demonstrate the potential of camel-to-human transmission. serologic methods with high sensitivity and specificity to detect mers-cov antibodies have been developed for use in seroepidemiologic studies. methods include indirect immunofluorescence assays, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (elisas), protein microarray technology, and microneutralization (mn) assays. , [ ] [ ] [ ] pseudoparticle virus neutralization tests (ppnts) and conventional mn assays have also been used to detect neutralizing antibodies to mers-cov. validated molecular assays have been developed. , , rt-rtpcr is the preferred diagnostic method for the detection of mers-cov and has been endorsed by the who. confirmation of mers in suspected cases requires the screening of samples targeting a number of genes specific to mers-cov, namely up e, orf a, orf b, and n genes. , , , its infancy. aside from bats, the role that other wildlife may play in the ecology of mers-cov in east africa and arabia is yet to be elucidated. at present the implementation of intensive ipc measures in human health care is vital, including improving education and awareness among healthcare workers. , most human cases have been linked to lapses in ipc, as one-fifth of viral infections have been reported among healthcare workers. , stringent precautions while handling suspected mers-cov patients include the use of personal protective equipment (ppe) (i.e., disposable gloves, gowns, respiratory protection, and eye protection). , , immunocompromised individuals and those with preexisting medical conditions should avoid close contact with dcs. , public health authorities should adopt a standardized public health response protocol to include standardized case reporting methodology as defined by the who. , standardization of case definitions aids accurate calculation of a case fatality ratio by including mild or asymptomatic cases. the health authority of abu dhabi in the united arab emirates recently implemented a standardized reporting option for mers, successfully incorporating it into existing epidemiologic surveillance systems with the aim of enhancing surveillance, educating healthcare workers, and ensuring laboratory capacity. in countries where mers-cov is enzootic in dcs, mers control at the animal-human interface is unlikely to succeed unless appropriate preventive strategies are implemented. these should include the following: • strict regulation of camel movement with imposition of a requirement for mers clearance prior to the importation and transport of camels, including animals presented for slaughter. • camels with detectable mers-cov rna should be quarantined and tested at regular intervals. • use of appropriate ppes while handling dcs. • increased awareness among camel owners and the general public of the risks of consuming unpasteurized camel milk and urine. this may prove challenging given the depth of customs and beliefs in some areas. • accelerated development of safe and effective mers vaccines for animal and human use. , conclusions mers-cov has been observed for only years, and vigilance is vital for the containment of the disease due to the high case fatality rate in humans and possible genetic instability of the virus. continued laboratory testing, genetic sequencing, analysis, timely data sharing, and clear communication are essential if such vigilance is to be effective. nonetheless, despite the potential for a pandemic outbreak at multiple mass gatherings during the islamic calendar (hajj, eid, and umrah) there were no reported outbreaks of mers during or immediately after these events. as such mers-cov is not a virus of pandemic concern. since our understanding of mers has increased greatly although gaps in knowledge still exist. the understanding of the disease's ecology-especially the interplay between camels, humans, and the environment-is still in who mers-cov global summary and risk assessment middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus "mers-cov": current knowledge gaps evidence for zoonotic origins of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) origin and animal reservoir middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov): animal to human interaction middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in dromedary camels: an outbreak investigation evidence for camel-to-human transmission of mers coronavirus middle east respiratory syndrome: an emerging coronavirus infection tracked by the crowd who emergencies: mers-cov. available at mers coronavirus: diagnostics, epidemiology and transmission dipeptidyl peptidase is a functional receptor for the emerging human coronavirus-emc full-genome deep sequencing and phylogenetic analysis of novel human betacoronavirus middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in dromedary camels in saudi arabia pathogenesis of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus replication and shedding of mers-cov in upper respiratory tract of inoculated dromedary camels response to emergence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus transmission of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections in healthcare settings hospital outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus detection of the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus genome in an air sample originating from a camel barn owned by an infected patient mers-cov outbreak in jeddah-a link to health care facilities mers coronavirus: data gaps for laboratory preparedness asymptomatic mers-cov infection in humans possibly linked to infected camels imported from oman to united arab emirates an orthopoxvirusbased vaccine reduces virus excretion after mers-cov infection in dromedary camels centers for disease control and prevention: interim prevention and control recommendations for hospitalized patients with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov). available at an animal model of mers produced by infection of rhesus macaques with mers coronavirus further evidence for bats as the evolutionary source of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in bats, saudi arabia mers coronaviruses in dromedary camels middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) coronavirus seroprevalence in domestic livestock in saudi arabia antibodies against mers coronavirus in dromedaries middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) serology in major livestock species in an affected region in jordan isolation of mers coronavirus from a dromedary camel mers-cov in upper respiratory tract and lungs of dromedary camels, saudi arabia the authors wish to thank the following: h. e. ghanim mubarak al hajeri and the senior management of al ain zoo for their encouragement and support, dr. ahsan ul haq of dubai camel hospital for his technical insight, and dr. andrew higgins, fellow of the zoological society of london and honorary editor in chief of the veterinary journal, who reviewed the manuscript. key: cord- -dau tz u authors: lee, mi-kyung; kim, sinyoung; kim, mi-na; kweon, oh joo; lim, yong kwan; ki, chang-seok; kim, jae-seok; seong, moon-woo; sung, heungsup; yong, dongeun; lee, hyukmin; choi, jong-rak; kim, jeong-ho title: survey of clinical laboratory practices for middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus outbreak in the republic of korea date: - - journal: ann lab med doi: . /alm. . . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: dau tz u background: it is crucial to understand the current status of clinical laboratory practices for the largest outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infections in the republic of korea to be well prepared for future emerging infectious diseases. methods: we conducted a survey of clinical laboratories in medical institutions and referral medical laboratories. a short questionnaire to survey clinical laboratory practices relating to mers-cov diagnostic testing was sent by email to the directors and clinical pathologists in charge of the clinical laboratories performing mers-cov testing. the survey focused on testing volume, reporting of results, resources, and laboratory safety. results: a total of clinical laboratories responded to the survey. a total of , mers-cov real-time reverse transcription pcr (rrt-pcr) tests were performed. most of the specimens were sputum ( . %). the median turnaround time (tat) was . hr (first and third quartile, . and . hr) in medical institutions. the median tat of more than a half of the laboratories ( . %) was less than hr. many laboratories were able to perform tests throughout the whole week. laboratory biosafety preparedness included class ii biosafety cabinets ( %); separated pre-pcr, pcr, and post-pcr rooms ( . %); negative pressure pretreatment rooms ( . %); and negative pressure sputum collection rooms ( . %). conclusions: clinical laboratories were able to quickly expand their diagnostic capacity in response to the mers-cov outbreak. our results show that clinical laboratories play an important role in the maintenance and enhancement of laboratory response in preparation for future emerging infections. on may , , middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) was confirmed for the first time in an infected patient in the republic of korea. although the primary case traveled to the united arab emirates and saudi arabia, the patient did not initially report his recent travel in those countries [ ] . this case led to transmission of mers-cov both within a hospital and between hospitals and eventually resulted in the largest outbreak of mers-cov infections outside the arabian peninsula. at that time, we had limited information on mers-cov, and only a few clinical laboratories were prepared to perform molecular diagnostic testing for the virus. during the longer than two months of the outbreak, confirmed cases were diagnosed by real-time reverse transcription pcr (rrt-pcr) of mers-cov, and specimens from tens of thousands of suspected cases, including individuals who contacted the confirmed cases, were submitted for this testing. many clinical laboratories were instructed to set up facilities to perform mers-cov rrt-pcr on site in a short time to fight against the transmission of this virus in their own institutes. an earlier outbreak in of a novel strain of h n influenza virus a (h n influenza) affected laboratories worldwide, with a potentially tremendous impact on the practices of clinical laboratories [ ] . the outbreak of h n influenza also had a great influence in the republic of korea. the field of molecular testing for pathogens has been expanded in clinical laboratories, and the molecular testing industry has responded quickly with the production of new molecular test kits. numerous studies, including viral etiology, epidemiology, risk factors, clinical and laboratory characteristics, and diagnostic tests, have been reported [ ] . despite the fact that clinical laboratory practice was a critical element in the response to the h n influenza outbreak, there are only a few reports regarding this aspect of testing [ , , ] . the ability of clinical laboratories to respond appropriately to an outbreak is significant in pathogen control. therefore, it is crucial to understand the current status of clinical laboratories in the republic of korea in order to be well prepared for any future emerging infectious diseases. in this article, we present the results of a survey of clinical laboratory practices during the mers-cov outbreak. the study population consisted of clinical laboratories performing diagnostic testing for mers-cov in medical institutions (hospitals and medical centers) and referral medical laboratories among clinical laboratories accredited by the korean laboratory accreditation program [ ] . this survey was an initiative of the mers-cov laboratory response task force of the korean society for laboratory medi-cine. we conducted a survey of clinical laboratories. a short questionnaire to assess clinical laboratory practices related to mers-cov diagnostic testing was sent by email to the directors and the clinical pathologists (laboratory physicians) in charge of the clinical laboratories performing mers-cov tests. the survey focused on the number of tests and the number of positive test results for mers-cov, turnaround time (tat), request process, collection and transportation of specimens, testing and reporting, communication of results, laboratory safety, and reagents and equipment. a total of clinical laboratories ( . %, / ), including medical institutions and referral medical laboratories, responded to the survey. the number of beds in the medical institutions was as follows: < beds, institutions ( . %); - , beds, ( . %); and > , beds, ( . %). all clinical laboratories used rrt-pcr as the detection method for mers-cov. the number of mers-cov rrt-pcr tests performed was collected from medical institutions and five referral medical laboratories. data up to july , were collected according to the day and specimen type. a total of , mers-cov rrt-pcr tests were performed at medical institutions (n = , ) and five referral medical laboratories (n = , ) (table and fig. ). the proportion of medical institutions was significantly underestimated because one tertiary care hospital submitted responses for the survey but not the specimen list, and the numbers of mers-cov rrt-pcr tests and positive specimens at this institution would have been predominant in the reporting medical institutions. mers-cov rrt-pcr testing at all medical institutions and referral medical laboratories increased dramatically in early june (fig. ). the number of clinical laboratories that initiated mers-cov testing increased in the first two to three weeks (fig. ) . daily test volumes peaked on june ( , tests) and began to decrease thereafter (fig. ) . among the , mers-cov rrt-pcr specimens, ( . %) and ( . %) specimens were positive and indeterminate, respectively ( and specimens at medical institutions, and specimens at referral medical laboratories; table ). most of the specimens for mers-cov rrt-pcr were sputum ( . %). a total of . % of all specimens tested and . % of positive specimens were specimens from the lower respiratory tract, such as sputum, bronchoscopy specimens, or tracheal aspirates ( table ). all nasopharyngeal aspirates (n = ) were negative for mers-cov rrt-pcr. the tat is defined as the time from the receipt of specimens in the laboratory to the reporting of the results. unfortunately, % of the laboratories (nine medical institutions and five referral medical laboratories) were not able to provide or analyze data on tat. the median tat was . hr (first and third quartile, . and . hr) for medical institutions, and the minimum and maximum median tat (first and third quartile) were . hr ( . and . hr) and . hr ( . and . hr), respec- tively. the median tat of more than a half of the laboratories ( . %) was less than hr. the results were reported within hr in all medical institutions except one ( table ). in the referral medical laboratories, the results were reported in less than - hr (during weekday daytime) or - hr (during weekday nights and weekends). table shows the current status of clinical laboratories in medical institutions with respect to their response to the outbreak of mers-cov infections. many laboratories were able to perform testing throughout the week ( . %, / ) and ran tests once or twice per day. specimen was collected mainly by clinicians, and all specimens were directly transported person-to-person. in most cases, clinicians filled out the specimen request information form, and doctors of laboratory medicine completed the test report form. most of the mers-cov rrt-pcr tests were performed only by clinical laboratory technicians of molecular genetics divisions ( . % of laboratories). the test results were primarily reported by clinical pathologists via electronic processing. laboratory biosafety preparedness in response to the mers-cov outbreak included class ii biosafety cabinets ( %, / ); separated pre-pcr, pcr, and post-pcr rooms ( . %, / ); negative pressure pretreatment rooms ( . %, / ); and negative pressure sputum collection rooms ( . %, / ). as shown in table , the current status of clinical laboratories in referral medical laboratories was similar to that of medical institutions in many aspects. specimens were transported twice or three times a day. many laboratories ( %, / ) used phosphate-buffered saline for pretreatment of sputum specimens. all reagents for the detection of mers-cov were components of ready-made kits, and the powerchek mers real-time pcr kit (kogenebiotech, seoul, korea) was the most commonly used kit ( . %, / ). most laboratories used cfx (bio-rad laboratories, hercules, ca, usa) or abi or systems (life technologies, carlsbad, ca, usa) for rrt-pcr ( . %, / ) ( table ). the emergence of novel viral pathogens and the evolution of pandemics have presented a new and complex challenge to public health care systems at every level [ , , , ] . the outbreak of h n influenza eventually turned out to be relatively mild, despite the fear it engendered as the potential early stage of a pandemic. breban et al. [ ] suggested that mers-cov does not yet have pandemic potential. nevertheless a mers-cov outbreak recently occurred in the republic of korea, and its characteristics were very different from those of the outbreak of h n influenza. the mers-cov outbreak was more serious than expected, and numerous problems arose concerning infection control and prevention in hospitals and among the general public. because clinical laboratories are usually on the front lines for the detection of emerging pathogens, the ability of these laboratories to respond to an outbreak is critical for infection control and prevention. the elements of clinical laboratory preparedness and responsiveness include availability of personal protec- tive equipment and its appropriate use, availability and use of appropriate testing supplies, adequacy of staffing, and infrastructure requirements including laboratory space [ ] . in and , the european centre for disease prevention and control (ecdc) and the who regional office for europe conducted a joint survey [ ] . although the number of countries that had laboratory capabilities to detect and confirm mers-cov increased in ( . %, of countries) compared with ( . %, of countries), a half of the countries were still unable to test mers-cov [ ] . the present study reveals a snapshot of the current status and capability of clinical laboratories to respond to the mers-cov outbreak in the republic of korea. most clinical laboratories participating in the survey were considered to have sufficient capacity to respond to the outbreak. immediately after the mers-cov rrt-pcr test was approved, many laboratories were able to perform testing seven days a week and the number of tests reported increased dramatically. the median tat of more than a half of the laboratories ( . %) was shorter than hr, and the minimum median tat was . hr. the results were reported within hr in all medical institutions except one. one limitation of our study is that even though we obtained responses from the majority of medical institutions and referral medical laboratories, the results may not be fully representative for a number of reasons. data were collected before the end of the mers-cov outbreak and did not include some major medical institutions and public health laboratories such as the korea centers for disease control and prevention. in addition, our results report the number of mers-cov rrt-pcr tests, and not the number of mers-cov cases. previously, sousa et al. [ ] suggested that the use of upper respiratory specimens (e.g., nasopharyngeal swabs) for mers-cov diagnosis might not be as sensitive as the use of lower respiratory tract specimens. the laboratory diagnostic guidelines for mers-cov testing of the korean society for laboratory medicine recommended using specimens from the lower respiratory tract. in the present survey, the number of positive results from mers-cov rrt-pcr was significantly higher in specimens obtained from the lower respiratory tract ( . %, / , ) compared with specimens from the upper respiratory tract ( . %, / , ) (p = . , chi-square test). therefore, the specimen type is expected to have a significant impact on diagnostic sensitivity and should be considered when testing emerging pathogens. for laboratory biosafety in response to the mers-cov outbreak, class ii biosafety cabinets were adequately supplied but high-end engineering facilities such as negative pressure sputum collection and pretreatment rooms were not readily available. however, no laboratory-acquired infections were reported during the outbreak, thus standard precautions with droplet precautions appeared to be sufficient for the prevention of laboratory-acquired infection of mers-cov. nonetheless, improvements in engineering laboratory biosafety are needed for preparedness to test agents with a higher biosafety level. clinical laboratories have the primary responsibility for testing specimens to support clinical decision-making. although public health laboratories also test specimens to aid clinical decisions, their roles in surveillance, strain identification, and tracking of drug resistance are arguably their main priorities [ ] . moreover, clinical laboratories often have resources available that allow for rapid expansion [ ] . in conclusion, the results of this survey contribute to the comprehensive view of clinical laboratory response in the republic of korea to the recent outbreak of mers-cov. on the basis of currently available data, clinical laboratories in korea were able to expand their diagnostic capacity in a short time and achieve a tat of shorter than nine hours with testing seven days per week to response to the recent mers-cov outbreak, although the delay in the early period of the outbreak should be improved. therefore, clinical laboratories should be ready for the maintenance and enhancement of laboratory responses in preparation for future emerging infections. ah ra cho preliminary epidemiological assessment of mers-cov outbreak in south korea ginocchio cc. a survey-based assessment of united states clinical laboratory response to the h n influenza outbreak h n influenza laboratory surge response to pandemic (h n ) outbreak initial response of health care institutions to emergence of h n influenza: experiences, obstacles, and perceived future needs clinical pathology laboratory inspection and accreditation in korea i: development of the system and its trial mers-cov outbreak in jeddah--a link to health care facilities preparedness of institutions around the world for managing patients with ebola virus disease: an infection control readiness checklist interhuman transmissibility of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: estimation of pandemic risk laboratory capability and surveillance testing for middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in the who european region mers coronavirus: data gaps for laboratory preparedness laboratory surge capacity and pandemic influenza no potential conflicts of interest relevant to this article were reported. key: cord- -r tg s authors: john, maya; shaiba, hadil title: shiny framework based visualization and analytics tool for middle east respiratory syndrome date: - - journal: advances in data science, cyber security and it applications doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: r tg s people in the middle east have been affected by the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers co-v) since . new cases are continuously reported especially in the kingdom of saudi arabia, and the risk of exposure remains an issue. data visualization plays a vital role in effective analysis of the data. in this paper, we introduce an interactive visualization application for mers data collected from the control and command centre, ministry of health website of saudi arabia. the data corresponding to the period from january , to february , was used in the present work. the attributes considered include gender, age, date of reporting, city, region, camel contact, description and status of the patient. the visualization tool has been developed using shiny framework of r programming language. the application presents information in the form of interactive plots, maps and tables. the salient feature of the tool is that users can view and download data corresponding to the period of their choice. this tool can help decision makers in the detailed analysis of data and hence devise measures to prevent the spread of the disease. mers is a viral disease that was first discovered in when a patient in saudi arabia was diagnosed with critical respiratory distress and kidney trouble [ ] . the infection can either be asymptomatic or show symptoms such as cough, fever etc. along with difficulty in breathing [ ] . the disease has been brought under control in all middle eastern countries except saudi arabia where each month, new cases are still reported. studies have confirmed that this disease is zoonotic and camels are its significant reservoir [ , ] . people in close contact with infected camels and health care professionals who care for infected patients have a high risk of acquiring the infection. many cases of community and household acquired infections have been reported from saudi arabia [ ] . the ministry of health, saudi arabia has issued guidelines for infection prevention, control and management. to the best of our knowledge, there is a lack of interactive visualization tools for mers data visualization in saudi arabia. this work deals with developing an application where users can interactively view information about the infection in the form of plots, tables and maps. the data used in this study was obtained from the saudi ministry of health website and it includes the cases reported in saudi arabia from january , to february , . by viewing the data visualizations, users can analyze mers cases better, find trends, monitor the disease and help authorities set detection and prevention guidelines. the mers data analyzed consists of cases reported during the first two months of the year . the information is present in the form of a pdf file corresponding to the cases reported each week. the cases reported contains details which include the date of reporting and patient information such as personal information, demographic information, camel contact details, description of infection and status of the disease. the latitude and longitude of the regions and cities are stored in separate .csv files. the details of the attributes present in the database are shown in table . shiny is an r package used to create interactive web applications [ ] . the shiny framework is a reactive programming model where browser refreshing is not required to instantiate the output changes when the user modifies the input. it can be used to build web applications without using javascript coding. shiny combines the computational power of r programming language with the highly interactive nature of the web. leaflet package is used to create interactive maps in r based on the javascript library leaflet [ ] . these interactive maps can be rendered in r markdown, shiny apps, rstudioide and r console as it was developed in association with htmlwidgets. the leaflet( ) function is used to create the map widget. the different types of layers which can be included in the map widget are map tile, markers, lines, polygon, popups, raster images, color legends, layer groups, layer control etc. the maps created can be zoomed or downsized interactively. the googleviz package in r facilitates the use of google chart apis [ ] . interactive charts can be incorporated into web pages using google charts. the data stored in r data frames can be visualized in the form of google charts without uploading the information to google. an internet connection is required to view the output rendered by this package. the mers data visualization tool was developed using r programming language. the tool consists of three sections (tabs) namely "different cases analysis", "miscellaneous analysis" and "summary" section. the users can choose the period for which they would like to visualize the mers data. in the case of different cases analysis, the user can view the information as pie charts and maps, or tables. the users can view details about either all the cases together or recovered cases, death cases or hospitalized cases separately. the details regarding the cases can be viewed with respect to all cities, all regions or cities within a region. in the case of the option "cities within a region", the user has to choose a region from the drop down list provided. unlike conventional pie charts, the pie charts created using googleviz package are interactive in nature. by pointing the cursor over a portion in the pie chart, one can understand the actual number of cases in that particular part of the chart. in the map, places are marked based on longitude and latitude of that place. on clicking the marker displayed in the map, the name and number of cases in that place will be displayed as a pop-up. based on the number of cases, markers are assigned colors such as red, orange or yellow. the colors red, orange and yellow represent "large number of cases", "moderate number of cases" and "few number of cases" respectively. the information in figs. and is presented in the form of pie chart and map. the screen shot of the page corresponding to different cases analysis is shown in fig. . the figure depicts the analysis of all mers cases reported for the first two months of the year with regard to cities. it can be inferred from fig. that during that period . % of the patients recovered from the disease and the maximum number of cases ( %) were reported from the city of wadi aldawasir. the analysis based on all cases reported in "all cities within riyadh region" during january to february is shown in fig. . it can be observed from the figure that majority of cases in riyadh region were reported from the city of wadi aldawasir. nearly % of the infected people in riyadh region recovered from the disease. the application page with table output is shown in fig. . it can be observed from the table that people died due to mers in riyadh region during the first two months of the year . the table which displays the information is interactive in nature. when the user clicks a column name in the table, the records in the table are sorted based on values in the clicked column and displayed accordingly. the table also has provision for searching values and selecting the number application page corresponding to "different cases analysis" tab for cities within a region of records to be displayed in a page. the users can also download the details contained in the table. the different cases analysis will help decision makers in gathering information regarding the cases reported in different places. this type of analysis is essential to identify disease prone areas and hence take measures to curtail the spread of infection. the miscellaneous analysis consists of analysis based on age, camel contact and months. the users can analyze the data for all cases, death cases or recovered cases. depending on the user's choice, the analysis corresponding to all cities, all regions or cities within a region are displayed. analysis based on age. the infected people are divided into three age categories namely below years, - years and greater than years. in the case of age based analysis, the information is displayed both in the form of pie chart and stacked bar chart. the pie chart represents the number of cases corresponding to each age group. the stacked bar chart depicts the number of cases in each age group corresponding to the location type selected. the screen shot corresponding to age category wise analysis is shown in fig. . the figure corresponds to the analysis corresponding to all cases reported with respect to cities for the first two months of the year . it is evident from the pie chart fig. that the percentage of cases reported is . %, . % and . % for the age group below years, - years and above years respectively. the age category wise helps in understanding the number of cases reported among people of different age groups. this type of analysis will help in identifying which group has more mortality rate and health authorities may conduct extensive analysis of causes leading to death. analysis based on camel contact. camels have been identified as a carrier of the disease, and hence it is essential to perform analysis of patient cases involving camel contact. depending on the choice of the user, the information is displayed for "all cases", "death cases" or "recovery cases". the analysis is carried out for "all cities", "all regions" or "cities within a region". the details are displayed as pie chart, map and table. the pie chart represents the numbers of cases corresponding to the location type selected by the user. the places where camel contact cases are reported are marked in the map. this can help in analyzing whether the cases pertaining to people with camel contact are clustered in a region or not. the table displays the details of infected people who had contact with camels. the data visualization based on camel contact is shown in fig. . the figure depicts the analysis corresponding to all cases with regard to cities in saudi arabia. it can be observed from fig. that % of the camel contact based cases were reported from the city of wadi aldawasir. camel contact based analysis of mers patients is highly essential to identify places where people in contact with camels have been infected with the disease. this will help health authorities in taking more measures to spread awareness about the precautionary methods to be taken when handling camels. the infected camels in such regions may be identified and isolated to prevent the spread of the disease. month-wise comparison of the data can be carried out for "all cases", "death cases" and "recovery cases". the stacked bar chart for cases reported in different months is plotted based on the location type specified by the user. when the cursor is moved to a region in the bar chart, the number of cases in the particular month will be displayed corresponding to the location. the screenshot corresponding to month-wise comparison is shown in fig. . the figure portrays the analysis corresponding to death cases reported in various regions. the maximum number of death cases were reported in riyadh region during february. monthwise analysis is useful in identifying whether the infection is related to climate. summary based visualization gives a graphical summary of the count of the "status of the patients" for different attributes. the information is depicted in the form of stacked bar charts where the charts are plotted based on the frequency of status of patients corresponding to different values of the attributes. this visualization will help the users in getting an overall idea regarding the distribution of data with regard to the status of the patients. figures and depict the screenshots of the visual summary of data for the first two months of the year . figure confirms the earlier findings that riyadh region and specifically wadi aldawasir city has the highest number of mers cases and death cases. figure shows that most mers patients are male and that people below years are less likely to get infected by mers. elderly patients are more prone to die of mers. the majority of patients were not in contact with camels and death rate was low in the case of patients in contact with camels. many patients acquired the infection from healthcare facilities and high death rate is reported among this group. the users can view information corresponding to their period of interest. the interactive feature of the pie chart prevents the chart from being cluttered with description. the use of maps to represent the information will give an idea regarding the spatial distribution of mers cases. these maps will help the health authorities to identify the areas with large number of cases and hence alert the hospitals and the general public regarding that. the interactive nature of the table helps the users in analyzing the data as per their requirement. a salient feature of the application is that the users can easily download details corresponding to the period of their choice. analyzing the data based on camel contact will aid health authorities to identify the areas where many such cases are present and hence intensify the awareness programs to reduce the rate of infection. in this paper, we have created an interactive visualization tool for mers co-v infection cases based on details of cases reported in saudi arabia. the attributes used include the date of reporting, city, region, age, gender, description of the disease, camel contact and status of the patient. the user can view details regarding all cases, recovered cases, death cases or hospitalized cases for all the cities, all regions or cities within a region. our tool provides the flexibility to view information in the form of charts and maps, or downloadable tables. the analysis is also carried out based on age group, camel contact and month-wise cases. by viewing the maps, users can easily differentiate between places based on the number of cases. moreover, the users can view a visual summary of the number of cases for different values of attributes based on the status of the patients. understanding and analyzing the disease related information can help decision makers in setting guidelines for preventing and controlling the spread of disease. location-based analysis of the infection is highly essential in formulating region specific awareness programs to reduce the rate of infection. isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia main factors influencing recovery in mers co-v patients using machine learning mers-cov infection of alpaca in a region where mers-cov is endemic middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: risk factors and determinants of primary, household, and nosocomial transmission key: cord- -yrhlg wm authors: ha, kyoo-man title: a lesson learned from the mers outbreak in south korea in date: - - journal: j hosp infect doi: . /j.jhin. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: yrhlg wm nan middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) viruses can spread rapidly to many people, and thus pose a global pandemic threat. mers viruses broke out in one hospital in pyeongtaek, south korea (hereinafter korea), on may , . thirty-six patients died and people were infected. the koreans experienced a national crisis, contributed to by the poor initial response of the affected hospitals, an inadequate response from the government, the economic depression that followed the outbreak, and the psychological impact of the outbreak on the korean population. to date, the korean government has not taken systematic actions to deal with global pandemics in the future. this article comments on how korea can learn from its response to a mers outbreak to be better prepared to control other epidemic and pandemic infectious diseases. we define the korean reaction (which includes four major stakeholders) as a hospital infection control issue (figure ). the four stakeholders were either directly or indirectly involved in the outbreak of mers in korea. we argue that the nation has to transform its current reaction into an emergency management issue involving all stakeholders. hospitals mainly because of poor ventilation and ineffective disinfection in one hospital, mers viruses began to spread rapidly to patients, visitors, and even to healthcare workers. a few neighbouring hospitals also showed a similar pattern of nosocomial transmission. consequently, healthcare workers made all efforts to improve infection control or hygiene; however, this took time. therefore, hospitals became major stakeholders in preventing the loss of human lives. the korea centers for disease control and prevention (kcdc) under the ministry of health and welfare (mw) insisted on not sharing mers information from the hospitals with the public at the initial stage of the outbreak under the pretext of hospital protection, although in reality this decision may have been based on nepotism. further, the ministry of public safety and security (mpss), which is a single, comprehensive emergency management agency, did not implement any specific action to prevent the loss of human lives. thus far, only the kcdc has tried to improve preparedness against similar pandemics. some koreans were involved in manipulating the facts on the mers outbreak and then spreading rumours through the internet or mobile phones. further, given the korean culture, many people did not realize that it was not advisable for them to visit the infected patients in hospitals and share their drinks or foods. also, a few infected residents attempted to go to public places without permission from the government. however, the majority of residents considered the mers outbreak to be a national emergency and thus paid attention to its progress by exchanging relevant information. other stakeholders took steps to efficiently respond to the outbreak of mers. for instance, business establishments continued to operate but measured the body temperature of their customers and distributed hand sanitizers to them, which nonetheless constituted an incomplete preventive measure. mass media also attempted to trace and reveal the sources of rumours, in the process causing political conflicts. many schools temporarily cancelled classes, although unnecessarily, so that their students could stay at home. the military isolated infected soldiers in remote facilities, but this move came rather late. korea did not give all four stakeholders equal involvement in dealing with the mers outbreak. rather, one stakeholder e healthcare workers in hospitals e played multiple roles in controlling mers viruses. thus, the situation was perceived as almost entirely a hospital infection control issue. considering that the mers outbreak was not only a health issue but also an emergency management issue, the model for controlling similar epidemics or pandemics in the future-oriented model should involve all stakeholders in an early and co-ordinated response. emergency management consists of four phases: emergency prevention/mitigation (legalization, inspection, disease prediction, etc.), emergency preparedness (emergency operation planning, training, etc.), emergency response (infection control, health treatment, etc.), and emergency recovery (insurance, medical evaluation, etc.). appropriate roles and responsibilities in all the phases have to be assigned to each of the four stakeholders in advance. although many stakeholders tried to play their own roles during the mers outbreak in korea, their responses were somewhat late and unco-ordinated, and thus contributed to the national crisis. in fact, their specific roles and responsibilities should have been assigned before the mers outbreak. in this context, nations should implement regular training in and exercise of emergency management measures. pandemics, as a type of emergency, pose three kinds of risk: loss of human lives, economic damages, and psychological impact. in the case of the mers outbreak in korea, local government and hospitals were oriented toward decreasing the number of deaths, mainly because they regarded the outbreak as an infection control issue. they did not realize the need to address the economic damage or the psychological impact on the general population, especially at the initial response stage. without a co-ordinated response, the mers outbreak caused considerable economic damage in korea. almost nobody dared to visit shopping malls for fear of infection. further, because mers scared away foreign tourists, including many chinese and some japanese visitors, the tourism industry suffered considerably. thus, the national economy was significantly depressed, and the economic growth projection fell to about %. regarding the psychological impact, most people worried about catching mers and thus wore masks whenever they went out. similarly, many primary and middle schools throughout the peninsula cancelled classes to protect their students from mers, contrary to the recommendation of the world health organization. hospitals played a major role in reducing the loss of human lives during the mers outbreak; however, this does not mean that they have done extraordinary work. after pyeongtaek st mary's hospital failed to screen the first infected patient, mers viruses spread to many parts of korea. further, the samsung medical center in seoul refused to share mers information with the public, which made the situation worse. hence, hospitals need to be more professional in dealing with infection control, in particular by educating quarantine doctors and in following the hippocratic oath. the kcdc and mw will certainly remain the major government institutions that should take charge when a pandemic occurs in korea. however, the mpss must also become proactively involved during such an outbreak. thus far, the mpss officially considers only three types of hazard under its management scope: fires, floods that accompany typhoons, and maritime accidents. as a co-operative or co-ordinating institution in relation to all hazards, the mpss must therefore extend its activities to the kcdc, other departments, and local government, and apply countermeasures against new diseases. contrary to the expectation of the government, the level of emergency awareness of korean residents increased considerably during the mers outbreak, particularly as the death toll rose. these residents should now directly demand that the government and the whole nation take more systematic actions against new pandemics toward achieving efficient emergency management. the public must also be willing to challenge cultural practices, and in particular to co-operate with restrictions on visiting hospitals. other stakeholders, including business establishments, mass media, schools, and the military played their own roles in responding to the outbreak of mers within their areas. however, they should have approached the issue more seriously from the beginning of the emergency response instead of merely acting as outsiders in a national crisis. considering that a pandemic may spread quickly to anyone, these entities should join the major stakeholders from the initial response stage. the mers outbreak in korea in may to july caused the biggest loss of human lives due to the disease outside the middle east. thus far, however, the korean government has yet to comprehensively improve its national response against pandemics. the key tenet is that korea must not consider the mers outbreak to be a hospital infection control issue. rather, the nation must regard such an outbreak as an emergency management issue involving all stakeholders, particularly in fighting against new pandemics in the international community. middle east respiratory syndrome e advancing the public health and research agenda on mers e lessons from the south korean outbreak federal emergency management agency. introduction to continuity of operations planning for pandemic influenzas mers in south korea and china: a potential outbreak threat? what can we learn from mers outbreak in south korea? none declared. none. key: cord- -wrui i l authors: fadaka, adewale oluwaseun; sibuyi, nicole remaliah samantha; adewale, olusola bolaji; bakare, olalekan olanrewaju; akanbi, musa oyebowale; klein, ashwil; madiehe, abram madimabe; meyer, mervin title: understanding the epidemiology, pathophysiology, diagnosis and management of sars-cov- date: - - journal: j int med res doi: . / sha: doc_id: cord_uid: wrui i l the emergence of coronavirus disease (covid- ) in december has resulted in over million cases and , deaths globally, affecting more than countries. covid- was declared a pandemic on march by the world health organization. the disease is caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus- (sars-cov- ). there is limited information on covid- , and treatment has so far focused on supportive care and use of repurposed drugs. covid- can be transmitted via person-to-person contact through droplet spread. some of the recommended precautionary measures to reduce the rate of disease spread include social distancing, good hygiene practices, and avoidance of crowded areas. these measures are effective because the droplets are heavy and can only travel approximately meter in the air, settling quickly on fixed surfaces. promising strategies to combat sars-cov- include discovery of therapeutic targets/drugs and vaccines. in this review, we summarize the epidemiology, pathophysiology, and diagnosis of covid- . we also address the mechanisms of action of approved repurposed drugs for therapeutic management of the disease. covid- has become one of the most dangerous pandemics in recent history. the pandemic has claimed more than , lives, with more than million reported cases since the original outbreak. the disease is caused by sars-cov- , a zoonotic pathogen that acquired mutations as it crossed the species barrier from bat to pangolin enabling it to infect humans. sars-cov- was confirmed as a novel coronavirus using molecular methods and initially named novel coronavirus ( -ncov). the disease caused by this virus was later renamed covid- by the world health organization (who). sars-cov- is highly infectious and has spread to more than countries in all continents. hence, the virus was declared a global threat (pandemic) by the who. sars-cov- has a single-stranded positive sense rna genome (þssrna) approximately kb long. the sars-cov- genome is organized similarly to those of sars-cov- and middle east respiratory syndrome (mers)-cov. using phylogenetic analysis, the sars-cov- genome was demonstrated to share % sequence similarity with a bat cov genome. sars-cov- belongs to the b-coronavirus genus that includes sars-cov- and mers-cov. the clinical symptoms of covid- include fever, cough, and pneumonia, which makes the disease enormously dangerous with a high case fatality rate. , in contrast to other b-coronaviruses, many sars-cov- deaths have resulted from multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (msof) rather than respiratory failure. this could be attributed to the widespread distribution of angiotensin converting enzyme- (ace- ), the primary receptor for sars coronaviruses, in multiple organs. , ace- is expressed as a cellsurface molecule in the respiratory tract (epithelium, arterial and venous endothelium), the small intestinal epithelium, and arterial smooth muscle cells. sars-cov- is morphologically spherical and is characterized by presence of a spike protein, lower pathogenicity and higher transmissibility between humans. some of the primary measures taken to reduce the number of infections and prevent community transmission are to avoid crowds and gatherings and to practice good hygiene. interestingly, countries with the highest reported prevalence and mortality such as the united states, spain, italy, the united kingdom, russia, germany, brazil, france, turkey, iran and china, are more concerned with flattening the curve through early case detection, isolation, and development of therapeutic drugs and vaccines. because of the novel nature of this disease, there is limited information regarding risk factors for severe outcomes. specific factors such as the serial interval, viral lifespan, incubation period, pathogenic mechanisms, clinical features and optimal disease management remain unclear. therefore, this review aimed to summarize the epidemiology and pathophysiology of sars-cov- as well as the use of repurposed food and drug administration (fda) approved drugs for therapy. the entry of this virus into host cells and possible downstream complications deserve closer attention. covs are members of the subfamily othocoronavirinae of the family coronaviridae. the subfamily consist of four genera: alpha, beta, gamma and delta covs. both alpha-and beta-covs can infect mammals, including humans, while the gamma-and delta-covs only infect birds. about seven covs have been isolated from humans ( figure ). these include two alpha-covs, human coronavirus e (hcov- e) and human coronavirus nl (hcov-nl ), and five beta-covs: human coronavirus oc (hcov-oc ), human coronavirus hku (hcov-hku ), sars-cov- , mers-cov, and sars-cov- . sars-cov- , mers-cov, and sars-cov- are pathogenic and cause severe infections in humans following contact with the respective intermediate hosts (bats) (figure ). however, hcov- e, hcov-nl , hcov-oc , and hcov-hku do not appear to cause severe infections in humans. covs are enveloped viruses with þssrna genomes. they have the largest genomes (approximately - kb) among rna viruses. all covs possess nonsegmented genomes with similar organization. generally, about two-thirds of the genome consists of two large and overlapping open reading frames (orf a and orf b), which are translated into polyproteins pp a and pp ab and subsequently processed to yield non-structural proteins (nsp to nsp ). the remaining one-third of the genome consists of orfs encoding structural proteins including the spike (s) glycoprotein embedded in the envelope and the envelope (e), matrix (m), and nucleoproteins (n). there are short untranslated regions at both the and ends. the s protein plays a role in receptor-binding and entry of virus into host cells and is thus considered a major therapeutic target. the m and e proteins are important for viral assembly, while the n protein is necessary for synthesis of rna. overview of the sars-cov family sars-covs belongs to a global family of viruses causing respiratory disease and influenza-like symptoms such as fever, muscle pain, sore throat, headache, and cough. figure highlights the onset and progression of sars-cov- , mers-cov, and sars-cov- infection. the first case of sars-cov- , reported in china, resulted in an outbreak that caused hundreds of deaths and thousands of infected cases in the early s. a pneumonia-like syndrome (mers) was first discovered in saudi arabia and then spread to several countries, where it incurred a mortality rate of about % to %. marra et al ( ) observed that the mers mortality rate increased with age and was as high as % to % in people older than years. in december , sars-cov- , caused an outbreak in china and then spread worldwide. the resulting disease (covid- ) is a serious threat mostly in people with compromised immune systems or underlying conditions such as lung disease, diabetes mellitus, and human immunodeficiency virus infection. sars-cov- . sars-cov- causes a viral respiratory disease and belongs to lineage b of the beta-covs. of uncooked meat, milk or urine, as shown in figure . human-to-human infection also occurred through nosocomial transmission. symptoms of human sars-cov- infections include headache, fever and respiratory complications such as cough, dyspnea, and pneumonia. the sars-cov- genome is , nucleotides in length. the end of the genome contains orf a and orf b. the polyproteins encoded by these orf are auto-catalytically processed to yield a number of viral proteases as well as the rna-dependent rna polymerase (rdrp). the remainder of the genome encodes the viral structural proteins (s, e, m and n) as well as several accessory proteins. the receptor for sars-covs is ace- , a surface molecule found on cells of the respiratory tract, the small intestinal epithelium, and smooth muscle. in the respiratory tract, ace- is expressed on epithelial cells of the alveoli, bronchi, trachea, and bronchial serous glands, as well as on alveolar monocytes and macrophages. the ace- enzyme plays an important role in protection against lung failure. mers-cov. mers-cov causes a viral respiratory disease and belongs to lineage c of the beta-covs. the first cases of human infection by mers-cov were reported in saudi arabia in . cases were subsequently reported in other countries including qatar, egypt, and the republic of korea following contact with infected camels (figure b ). cases of mers-cov were identified in about countries between and . mers-cov rna in camels showed more than % genomic sequence similarity to human mers-cov. bats are the natural hosts of mers-cov (figure ) , and a high prevalence of mers-cov infections in dromedary camels (intermediate hosts) was confirmed in the middle east, spain, and africa. mers-cov infections were transmitted to humans following contact with camels infected with the virus. the mers-cov genome is about , nucleotides in length and has a terminal cap structure and a poly (a) tail at the end. the genome encodes non-structural proteins (nsp -nsp ) at the end, four structural proteins (s, e, m, and n) at the end, and five accessory proteins in orf , orf a, orf b, orf , and orf . risk factors for severe mers-cov include age and the presence of underlying conditions such as diabetes, obesity, hypertension, chronic renal disease, and lung diseases. the receptor for mers-cov is dipeptidyl peptidase (dpp or cd ). dpp is a multifunctional cell surface protein and is expressed on the epithelial cells of the respiratory tract, liver, kidney, small intestine, and prostate, as well as on activated white blood cells. dpp also plays a vital role in activation of t cells and providing co-stimulatory signals for immune responses of t cells. , consequently, mers-cov causes acute pneumonia and renal dysfunction with associated clinical symptoms such as cough, chest pain, sore throat, fever, diarrhea, vomiting, and abdominal pain. mers-cov can infect human dendritic cells and macrophages in vitro, thereby contributing to dysregulation of the immune system. sars-cov- . sars-cov- , a newly discovered coronavirus, has a þssrna genome and a spherical morphology when observed under the electron microscope. , sars-cov- encodes a richly glycosylated spike protein responsible for binding to the ace- receptor. the virion's shape and the ability of spike proteins to form a crownlike structure gave coronaviruses their name. , the sars-cov- genetic material is surrounded by a lipid-bilayer envelope. other structural components include the nucleocapsids, membrane, envelope, and hemagglutinin. unlike the envelope, the membrane exists in higher quantities within the virions. among other functions, the envelope serves to release viral particles from the host cells. the nucleocapsid assist in rna packaging during virion assembly. , hemagglutinin enhances the entry and pathogenesis of coronaviruses. some of the characteristics of sars-cov- are summarized in table . many of these features are shared with sars-cov- . more information on the epidemiology and general characteristics of sars-cov- can be found later in the review. other important human covs include alpha-covs (hcov- e and hcov-nl ) and two beta-covs (hcov-oc and hcov-hku ). the receptor for hcov- e is human aminopeptidase n (cd ), a cell-surface metalloprotease present on cells of the kidney and lung, as well as on epithelial and intestinal cells. the receptor for hcov-nl is also ace- . the receptor for hcov-oc is -o-acetylated sialic acid, while no receptor has been identified for hcov-hku . , generally, the most common diagnostic tools for human covs are molecular detection techniques such as reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (rt-pcr) using rna extracted from respiratory tract samples as template. other methods include serological tests and viral cultures. although several agents against covs, including antibodies, antiviral peptides, and cell or viral protease inhibitors, have been shown to be effective both in vitro and/or in vivo, clinical trial outcomes have not been reported. therefore, clinical treatments for covs are still lacking. nevertheless, supportive and symptomatic therapy are used for at present, countries and territories are affected by the sars-cov- outbreak, including the united states, italy, germany, south africa, and nigeria. the distribution of sars-cov- confirmed cases, including mortality and recovery, is shown in figure . the united states, china, and some european countries have high case numbers and mortality rates. recovery rates are increasing worldwide with higher numbers reported in china. the cfr is defined as the percentage of deaths recorded among confirmed cases. as of april , the number of deaths among confirmed cases was estimated at , to , , , resulting in a cfr of . %. this differs from the cfr of . % calculated on march . however, several factors can prevent the accurate determination of the cfr. we compared the global cfr to the african cfr. the highest cfr was observed in italy, followed by spain and the netherlands (figure a ). in africa, countries such as egypt, algeria, burkina faso, and morocco had cfrs above % (figure b) . a major challenge in the accurate calculation of the cfr is the denominator (the number of confirmed cases). asymptomatic cases of covid- , patients with mild symptoms, or individuals who are misdiagnosed may be left out of the denominator, leading to underestimation or overestimation of the cfr. high cfrs reflect limited access to health care for the most vulnerable patients and limitations in health-care systems, including limited capacity of surveillance systems to trigger a timely response (who, ). to date, over million cases of covid- have been reported globally. it is important to estimate the reproductive number for this virus to enable accurate predictions. two primary factors, the reproductive ratio (r o ) and the serial interval (s i ), are essential to estimate the rate of transmission of this disease. serial interval (s i ). to understand the case turnover and transmissibility of covid- , the serial interval (s i ) from the onset of illness in a primary case to the onset of illness in a secondary case is important. recent studies estimated the average s i for covid- as . ( . - . ) days. - a shorter s i makes covid- harder to contain and more likely to rapidly transmit within populations ( figure ). taking the r and s i of covid- into consideration, it can be inferred that approximately days are required for an infected person to transmit covid- . it is highly likely that the individual can infect approximately two or three other persons, making the spread of covid- extremely rapid and dangerous ( figure a ). the extent of spread is totally dependent on the r o value (figure b ). if r < , each existing infection causes less than one new infection. in this case, the disease will decline and eventually die out. if r o ¼ , each existing infection causes one new infection. the disease will remain stable in the population, but will not result in epidemic spread. if r > , each existing infection causes more than one new infection. the disease will spread between individuals and eventually lead to an outbreak. covid- was regarded as an outbreak ( january ) with a r > (figure b) . importantly, the r value of a disease only applies when everyone in a population is completely susceptible. this means that no one has been vaccinated or had the disease previously, and there is no way to control the spread of the disease using interventions such as drugs or vaccines. there are currently two known modes of covid- transmission: the fecal-oral route and respiratory droplets. , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] droplets have potential to come into contact and infect a healthy person within to feet ( meter). droplets that stick to surfaces can survive for more than hours, remaining infectious. the virus can remain airborne for about hours, long enough to permit transmission. upon infection with sars-cov- , the virus infects type ii pneumocytes of the alveoli. these pneumocytes are responsible for surfactant production. surfactant decreases the surface tension within alveoli and reduces the collapsing pressure. the spike protein of the virus binds to ace- on the pneumocytes (figure ) permitting virion entry into the host cell. the virus hijacks the host cell's machinery (ribosomes) to enable translation of its þ ssrna genome into different protein molecules. the virus can also use its rdrp to produce additional copies of its þ ssrna genome (figure ). the translated polyproteins are further processed into different individual components within the host cell. these processes give rise to multiple virions, which are then released upon pneumocyte damage. in response to this process, type ii pneumocytes releases specific inflammatory mediators that instruct macrophages to secrete interleukins and (il- and il- ) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha. these cytokines cause the endothelial cells lining blood vessels to dilate, leading to increased capillary permeability. in response, fluids accumulate in the alveoli leading to edema. as surface tension increases, the collapsing pressure of the alveoli increases. a decrease in gas exchange is also observed through this process, which in turn leads to hypoxia and difficulty breathing (dyspnea). this can progress to a critical condition such as acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards). inflammatory mediators further stimulate neutrophils, which release reactive oxygen species and proteases. this process damages the alveoli (both type and ), leading to consolidation and alveolar collapse. high levels of il- and il- travel through the blood to the central nervous system, instructing the hypothalamus to release prostaglandins and causing fever. severe lung inflammation leads to systemic inflammatory respiratory syndrome. progression can lead to increased capillary permeability. the overall blood volume decreases, and through a series of processes involving hypotension and decreased perfusion of multiple different organs, multiple system organ failure (msof) can occur. during msof, elevated levels of blood urea, nitrogen, and creatinine accrue in the kidney. the liver also releases specific inflammatory and acute phase response biomolecules (aspartate transaminase, alanine transaminase, bilirubin, c-reactive protein [crp], fibrinogen and il- ) that can serve as biomarkers for patients with covid- . there is continued research by multiple groups into the mechanism of transmission of sars-cov- through the eyes. investigations were necessary because health care providers, including a perking university physician, may have contracted the virus while not wearing eye protection when treating patients. some researchers have asserted that avoidance of touching the eyes, nose or mouth with unwashed or unsterilized hands can reduce covid- transmission. the mucous membranes that line various cavities in the body are generally most susceptible to viral transmission. ocular symptoms such as viral conjunctivitis can result from sars-cov- upper respiratory tract infections. this was confirmed in of , patients in china. other research also found that of patients hospitalized with covid- were diagnosed with conjunctivitis. in a study conducted by the american optometric association, covid- was linked to ocular signs and symptoms including photophobia, irritation, conjunctival infection and ocular discharge. thus, the superficial blood vessels of the conjunctiva are an alleged route of exposure and transmission of sars-cov- . the clinical manifestations of sars-cov- are uncertain and change frequently. some infections are asymptomatic. symptoms can include respiratory distress syndrome, pneumonia of different levels of severity, and sometimes death. according to the who, the most common symptoms of covid- are fever, fatigue, dry continuous cough, and shortness of breath. , some patients may have a runny nose, sore throat, nasal congestion, aches and pains, and diarrhea. some patients report a loss of sense of smell and taste. in some cases, symptoms are mild and similar to those of the common cold; in such patients, recovery can occur without any treatment. the least commonly observed symptoms include nausea or vomiting, coughing up blood or bloody mucus, and viral conjunctivitis causing red eyes, watery discharge from the eyes, swollen eyelids and light sensitivity. occasional upper respiratory and gastrointestinal symptoms, accompanied by changes vital signs such as increased respiration (heart rate) and low blood pressure may also be observed, especially in the elderly and among individuals suffering from heart disease, chronic respiratory conditions and diabetes. additionally, patients critically ill with covid- may present with increased venous thromboembolism including thrombocytopenia, elevated d-dimer, prolonged prothrombin time and disseminated intravascular coagulation (dic). these coagulation abnormalities are associated with a systemic inflammatory response and an imbalance between pro-coagulant and anticoagulants homeostasis mechanisms. and increase the risk of mortality. some of these clinical features are also observed in cases of dic observed in septic patients. these features are very distinct in covid- patients as their levels are higher than the standards for sepsis. , diagnosis, prognosis, treatment, and management of sars-cov- sars-cov- causes various complications ranging from fever, dry cough, and pneumonia to decreased organ perfusion leading to msof. early symptoms are similar to those of influenza, and the first step to differentiate covid- from flu and pneumonia is a nasopharyngeal swab test (viral testing for influenza a/b). quantitative polymerase chain reaction-based (qpcr) methods are the major diagnostic tests for sars-cov- using nasal swab, aspirate, sputum, or blood as samples. these method have some limitations as they are time consuming and have variable sensitivity ( %- %). [ ] [ ] [ ] another diagnostic method is the newly approved nucleic acid test, which is carried out based on the principle of fluorescence pcr. the main goal of sars-cov- diagnosis is to accurately detect the virus and to minimize further transmissions by timely isolation and treatment of infected patients. other tests (not specific for sars-cov- ) used in conjunction with the methods above are based on clinical manifestations. these include blood tests such as complete blood count, comprehensive metabolic panels, basic metabolic panels, and assessment of liver/kidney markers and procalcitonin levels (for bacterial infections). inflammatory markers may also be assessed including crp, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, il- , lactate dehydrogenase, d-dimer, ferritin, troponin and creatine kinase-mb. imaging investigations are typically computed tomography scans: in covid- patients these often show glass opacities, areas of consolidation, and paving patterns in cases of severe and progressive disease. ground glass opacities can also be observed on chest x-ray. finally, ultrasound can show b-lines, pleural line thickening, and lung consolidation. air bronchograms can also be used for assessment. these tests are non-specific but helpful to determine patients' health status. covid- patients with severe ards could potentially present with pneumonia. pneumonia may be severe, leading to ards and msof. it is therefore imperative to mechanically ventilate the lungs to avoid ards and msof. although the risk factors for covid- remain unclear, some risk factors put patients at a significantly higher risk of mortality, especially in individuals with underlying conditions. , , , some medical disorders are correlated with higher risk of mortality in covid- patients. these include, cardiovascular diseases mortality risk . %), lung disease (mortality risk . %), type and diabetes (mortality risk . %), immunosuppression (e.g., cancer patients; mortality risk . %), [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] and age ( figure ). covid- mortality rates increase with advancing age, and are especially high in those aged > years. elevated inflammatory markers in response to tissue damage (elevated levels of d-dimer, ferritin, creatine kinase-mb, and troponin) have been associated with higher mortality rates. the first line of treatment for patients presented with the symptoms of covid- (fever, dry cough, and shortness of breath) is self-quarantine for at least days. cases are monitored for progression of symptoms such as increased fever (> c), significant difficulty breathing or shortness of breath, mouth breaks, constant coughing, and dehydration. if there is no significant improvement in symptoms, it is advisable to consult a clinician for confirmation of the diagnosis and to avoid further spread of the virus. the main treatment currently available is supportive care. although there is limited information on covid- , it has been linked to ards. for patients with high fevers that could potentially lead to dehydration, intravenous fluids such as normal saline or lactated ringer's fluid can be administered sparingly to prevent lung overload. to reduce fever, antipyretic drugs such as paracetamol or acetaminophen can be administered. drugs such as remdesivir, chloroquine, ritonavir, tocilizumab, corticosteroids have been repurposed for the treatment of covid- (figure ), although their clinical effectiveness has not yet been confirmed. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] unfortunately, the use of chloroquine and derivatives such as hydroxychloroquine, alone or in combination with other drugs, resulted in cardiac toxicity. investigations of these drugs were recently suspended by the who. mechanism of action of selected repurposed drugs for treatment of covid- . the elucidation of potential targets could lead to covid- specific treatments (figure ). approaches to anti-sars-cov- drug development include (a) inhibition of sars-cov- entry, (b) disruption of sars-cov- þ ssrna synthesis after entry, (c) inflammatory response suppression, and (d) disruption of sars-cov- translation. an fda-approved immunosuppressive and anti-malarial parasite drug (chloroquine) can inhibit the entry of covid- into the endosome after binding to ace- receptors, thereby preventing the release of þ ssrna for translation. , , , studies also showed that hydroxychloroquine, an analog of chloroquine, was more potent and could be used in place of chloroquine. remdesivir, a novel antiviral drug and nucleotide analog used to treat ebola virus infection, is currently under clinical development. the mechanism of the drug is reported to be at the post viral entry stage. its mode of action is to inhibit the rdrp, preventing synthesis of the viral þ ssrna (figure ( )). this drug is currently in phase clinical trials. the protein inhibitor ritonavir has also been proposed for the treatment of covid- . this drug interferes with the protease enzymes (proteinases) by inhibiting the conversion of polyproteins into the mature components (spike proteins, nucleocapsids) needed by the virus for multiplication (figure ( )). another immunosuppressive drug, tocilizumab, has also been repurposed for covid- because of its ability to block il- and inhibit inflammatory responses. corticosteroids can also decrease inflammation by inhibiting phospholipases such as phospholipase a , and thus suppress the excessive production of prostaglandins (figure ( ) ). sars-cov- appears unfamiliar to the human innate immune system. coupled with its emergence and its spread globally via human-to-human transmission, the development of vaccines for prevention is no longer a debate but a necessity. several vaccine platforms are being developed and some have entered clinical trials. however, approval by regulatory agencies such as the fda and manufacturing may take to months. studies of the antiviral activity of host-directed drugs and compounds have identified two classes of molecules (protein biogenesis inhibitors and ligands of the sigma and sigma receptors) as effective inhibitors of viral infectivity. molecules that target the sigma and sigma receptors perturb the virus through different mechanisms from translation inhibitors, potentially including modulation of cellular stress responses. the ligands haloperidol, pb , pd- , and hydroxychloroquine are currently undergoing clinical trials in covid- patients. these molecules exert their antiviral effects during viral replication by inhibiting nucleoprotein expression after viral entry has occurred. the lack of selectivity of chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine, including off-target effects on the human ether-a`-go-go-related gene (herg) and other molecules, may be related to the adverse cardiac reactions that have limited their use. a recent study by gordon et al identified highconfidence sars-cov- -human protein interactions connected to multiple biological processes, including protein trafficking, translation, transcription and ubiquitination regulation. the study identified ligands, including fda approved drugs, compounds in clinical trials, and preclinical compounds that might theoretically have therapeutic effects as host-directed interventions against covid- . to date, no known antiviral drugs nor vaccines against sars-cov- with proven clinical efficacy have been identified. part of the reason for the absence of such agents is limited information regarding the molecular details of the infection. to develop therapeutic interventions against covid- , it is crucial to understand how the virus interactions with the host during infection. ace- , a potential target for covid- treatment. ace- has been identified as the functional receptor for sars-cov- . it is an outer membrane enzyme expressed in vascular endothelial cells, the renal tubular epithelium, and leydig's cells of the testes, lungs, heart, kidney, and gastrointestinal tract. , it is a type-ii transmembrane metallocarboxypeptidase with its enzymatically active domain exposed at the cell surface. ace- is a key player in the renin-angiotensin system (ras) and a target for treatment of hypertension. ace- catalyzes the cleavage of angiotensin ii, a vasoconstrictor, into angiotensin - , a vasodilator, thereby lowering blood pressure by negatively regulating ras. ace- is a promising drug target for treating cov infection as well as other cardiovascular diseases. ace- confers a protective effect against lung injury induced by viruses by increasing the production of angiotensin - . the virus presumably causes lung damage by reducing ace- levels on cells through the process of degradation and internalization. , because studies have shown that ace inhibitors and angiotensin ii receptor blockers could be used to up-regulate the expression and activity of ace- in hypertensive patients, similar strategies might reduce the severity of covid- . , recent studies have shown that the expression of human ace- is associated with sars-cov infection and that genetic variations of this receptor may contribute to susceptibility and/or resistance against infection. for instance, a single-cell rna sequencing analysis of ace- revealed that type ii alveolar cells had higher expression of ace- in eight individual lung tissues obtained from normal donors. ace- expression was higher in the two male samples compared with the six female samples. additionally, ace- expression was higher in the only asian male in the study compared with caucasian and black americans, which might explain why the four german cases showed mild clinical symptoms with no severe illness. this implies that variation in ace- expression in covid- patients is likely to affect susceptibility, symptoms and intervention outcomes following sars-cov- infection. the degree of spread of covid- is currently about . % and could potentially increase if precautionary measures are not considered. global prevention of the spread of covid- is therefore a crucial and urgent goal. to prevent further spread of this disease, detection and isolation of individuals with covid- is of the utmost priority. examples of measures to curb spread include self-quarantine, isolation of infected individuals, social distancing, good personal hygiene (frequent hand washing with soap and water/alcohol-based sanitizers and avoiding touching the eyes, nose and the mouth), and use of personal protective equipment. certain classes of compounds, called surfactants, are contained in soap and have the ability to neutralize microbes such as sars cov- . this is because soap can assemble into bubblelike structures called micelles that trap viral matter and other biomaterials. surfactants in soap lather have their hydrophilic parts pointing outwards and interacting with solvent and their hydrophobic heads pointing inwards. this opens the coronavirus outer membrane and encapsulates viral molecules within micelles, thus making insoluble viral molecules easily soluble in water and effectively removing them from hands, surfaces or other areas after about s. therefore surfactants in soap can disrupt and sequester viruses and other contaminants while sanitizer and disinfectants are designed to kill sars-cov- . the outbreak of sars-cov- has become a global threat. however, information regarding this virus remains limited. the available information is inconsistent and there are constant data updates, which may contribute to variation between study results. for more consistent and accurate results, well-annotated data from clinical patients and subclinical subjects in normal populations could help to better understand the pandemic. the information provided in this review is based on data provided by the center for systems science and engineering (csse) at johns hopkins university during specific date ranges. key insights into the prevalence, pathophysiology, diagnosis, and potential treatment of sars-cov- are herein summarized. research efforts are being intensified to address the current challenges in the quest for adequate treatments, diagnostics, and vaccines. clinical studies into the genetic variation of receptors such as ace- in tissues and across populations will remain an active area of research until relevant targets and therapies are found. while the development of adequate treatments and vaccines for covid- is underway, it is advisable that good hygiene practices including washing of hands and social distancing should 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electrical stimulation system compensation of ace function for possible clinical management of -ncov-induced acute lung injury potent neutralization of novel coronavirus by recombinant ace -ig evolution of the novel coronavirus from the ongoing wuhan outbreak and modeling of its spike protein for risk of human transmission receptor recognition by the novel coronavirus from wuhan: an analysis based on decade-long structural studies of sars coronavirus sars-cov- cell entry depends on ace and tmprss and is blocked by a clinically proven protease inhibitor angiotensin receptor blockers as tentative sars-cov- therapeutics structural variations in human ace may influence its binding with sars-cov- spike protein comparative genetic analysis of the novel coronavirus ( -ncov/sars-cov- ) receptor ace in different populations cationic gemini-surfactants based on waste cooking oil as new 'green' inhibitors for n -steel corrosion in sulphuric acid: a combined empirical and theoretical approaches the effect of surfactant concentration, salinity, temperature, and ph on surfactant adsorption for chemical enhanced oil recovery: a review the micelle thermodynamics and mixed properties of sulfobetaine-type zwitterionic gemini surfactant with nonionic and anionic surfactants managing neonates with respiratory failure due to sars-cov- -authors' reply the authors declare that there is no conflict of interest. this research received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors. adewale oluwaseun fadaka https://orcid. org/ - - - nicole remaliah samantha sibuyi https:// orcid.org/ - - - ashwil klein https://orcid.org/ - - - x key: cord- - kuh njb authors: elkholy, amgad a.; grant, rebecca; assiri, abdullah; elhakim, mohamed; malik, mamunur r.; van kerkhove, maria d. title: mers-cov infection among healthcare workers and risk factors for death: retrospective analysis of all laboratory-confirmed cases reported to who from to june date: - - journal: j infect public health doi: . /j.jiph. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: kuh njb background: approximately half of the reported laboratory-confirmed infections of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) have occurred in healthcare settings, and healthcare workers constitute over one third of all secondary infections. this study aimed to describe secondary cases of mers-cov infection among healthcare workers and to identify risk factors for death. methods: a retrospective analysis was conducted on epidemiological data of laboratory-confirmed mers-cov cases reported to the world health organization from september to june . we compared all secondary cases among healthcare workers with secondary cases among non-healthcare workers. multivariable logistic regression identified risk factors for death. results: of the laboratory-confirmed mers-cov cases reported to who, were healthcare workers and were non-healthcare workers. compared with non-healthcare workers cases, healthcare workers cases were younger (p < . ), more likely to be female (p < . ), non-nationals (p < . ) and asymptomatic (p < . ), and have fewer comorbidities (p < . ) and higher rates of survival (p < . ). year of infection ( – ) and having no comorbidities were independent protective factors against death among secondary healthcare workers cases. conclusion: being able to protect healthcare workers from high threat respiratory pathogens, such as mers-cov is important for being able to reduce secondary transmission of mers-cov in healthcare-associated outbreaks. by extension, reducing infection in healthcare workers improves continuity of care for all patients within healthcare facilities. middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) was first detected in a patient living in saudi arabia in september of [ ] . subsequent cases have included human infections across the arabian peninsula, occasional importation of cases outside the arabian peninsula and associated clusters in other regions of the world. outbreaks of non-sustained, human-to-human transmission have occurred primarily in healthcare settings [ ] . while mers-cov appears to be inefficient at transmitting between humans in the general community, about half of the reported mers-cov infections have occurred in healthcare settings [ ] . healthcare-associated transmission of mers-cov has been reported in france, jordan, saudi arabia, united arab emirates, republic of korea and the united kingdom and has on occasion resulted in large outbreaks [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . secondary transmission has occurred between patients, from patients to healthcare workers, and from patients to visitors of the hospital. to date, there has been limited evidence of transmission documented between healthcare workers in saudi arabia [ ] and anecdotal evidence from healthcare workers to patients in saudi arabia [ ] . because hcw have not been consistently tested for mers-cov infection, nor has detailed outbreak investigations occurred within all hospital outbreaks, the role of healthcare workers in onward transmission remains unclear. given the large number of hcws infected to date, it is possible that hcw can propagate an outbreak within a healthcare facility. among reported secondary mers cases in such outbreaks, a substantial proportion have been healthcare workers [ , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the clinical spectrum of mers-cov infection ranges from asymptomatic infection to severe pneumonia with acute respiratory distress syndrome and other life-threatening complications [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . mild symptoms are non-specific and can include headache, tiredness, fever, mild cough, sore throat and runny nose. some patients may present with gastrointestinal symptoms, including diarrhoea. the non-specificity of mers signs and symptoms poses several challenges, not only for the timely identification and isolation of infected patients, but also for reducing secondary transmission within the healthcare facility, particularly to healthcare workers and between patients. preventing mers-cov infection in healthcare workers is critical because of their role in the clinical management of patients and in ensuring adequate infection prevention and control measures are implemented in healthcare facilities. unnecessarily exposing healthcare workers to mers-cov affects the safety of both the healthcare workers and other patients in the healthcare facility, potentially propagating secondary transmission in healthcare-associated outbreaks. understanding mers-cov infection in healthcare workers to date and the risk factors for adverse outcomes is important for preventing future infection of healthcare workers, for informing and updating infection prevention and control measures in healthcare facilities and for reducing secondary mers-cov transmission within healthcare settings. the international health regulations [ ] require all laboratoryconfirmed cases of mers-cov to be reported to the world health organization (who) within h of laboratory confirmation [ ] . in this study, we use the epidemiological data of all mers cases reported to date to who to describe secondary cases of mers-cov infection among healthcare workers and to identify the risk factors for death among healthcare workers with secondary infection. a retrospective analysis was conducted on epidemiological data of laboratory-confirmed mers-cov cases reported to who [ ] from september to june . we looked specifically at healthcare workers involved in the delivery of health care to patients within the same healthcare facility as a confirmed or suspected mers-cov case. primary cases were defined as cases with laboratory confirmation of mers-cov infection with no epidemiological link to a suspected or confirmed human mers case. secondary cases were defined as those with laboratory confirmation of mers-cov infection and with a direct epidemiological link with a confirmed or probable mers-cov case. prior to , data from individual cases including occupation, signs/symptoms, exposures and risk factors for infection, etc. was not collected systematically. following the large mers outbreak in jeddah and riyadh in , case report forms and policies related to the investigation of cases and contacts became more systematic from onwards. given the inconsistencies in the collection and reporting of epidemiologic data from mers-cov cases to who prior to , we performed a secondary analysis with data reported only from january to june . descriptive analysis was performed for all mers-cov cases reported to who from to . for all statistical analyses, p < . was considered statistically significant and all analyses were performed using the epidemiological data display package in r, version . . . (https://cran.r-project.org/ package=epidisplay). we compared all secondary cases in healthcare workers with all secondary cases among non-healthcare workers, using the student t-tests for continuous variables and chi-squared tests for categorical variables. we also aggregated survival outcomes of healthcare workers with mers-cov infection by year of infection. to identify risk factors for adverse outcomes in healthcare workers with secondary infection, we performed multivariable logistic regression analysis on all healthcare worker secondary cases. variables considered were dichotomous (sex, residency, symptomatic clinical presentation, presence of any comorbidities), categorical (year of infection) or continuous (age). the final multivariable model, constructed using the backward, stepwise elimination method, included all variables with an adjusted p < . . our analysis considered all cases of mers-cov reported to who up to june . among these cases, were primary cases, secondary cases, cases for which the information reported was insufficient to be able to determine whether it was a primary or secondary case, and cases with missing case information. among all cases, ( . %) deaths occurred. of the cases, were reported as healthcare workers. the mean age of healthcare workers was . (interquartile range . - . ) years and . % were women. five were primary cases, were secondary cases, cases had insufficient information to be able to determine whether it was a primary or secondary case and cases had missing case information. fig. shows the epidemic curve of cases of mers-cov among healthcare workers and non-healthcare workers reported from to june . table provides further description of the healthcare worker cases, as well as the healthcare worker cases reported to who from january to . table compares all secondary healthcare worker cases and all secondary non-healthcare worker cases. compared with secondary non-healthcare worker cases, secondary healthcare worker cases were younger (p < . ), had a higher proportion of women (p < . ), were non-national residents (p < . ), and had asymptomatic infection (p < . ), fewer comorbidities (p < . ) and higher survival (p < . ). further comparison between laboratory-confirmed mers-cov cases in healthcare workers and non-healthcare workers are shown in the supplementary material. tables a and b shows the survival outcomes of all infections by year of infection. tables a shows outcomes of all infections by year of infection for healthcare workers, while table b shows outcomes of all infections by year of infection for non-healthcare workers. there have been no fatal mers infections among healthcare workers since . table shows the regression coefficients and adjusted odds ratios ( % confidence interval) for the two variables retained in the final multivariable risk model for death in secondary cases among healthcare worker. year of infection and having no comorbid conditions were found to be independent protective factors against death in healthcare workers with secondary mers-cov infection. healthcare workers include, but are not restricted to: doctors, nurses, pharmacists, physiotherapists, radiologists, rehabilitation staff, infection prevention and control staff, intensive care staff, ambulance staff, respiratory therapists, auxiliary healthcare workers, attendants, laboratory, x-ray and ultrasound technicians, and healthcare administrators. a lack of consistency in reporting specific job titles prohibited subgroup analysis by different roles of healthcare worker. healthcare workers continue to constitute a substantial proportion of secondary mers-cov infections. that is, among all cases of mers-cov reported to who as of june , healthcare workers accounted for . % of all mers-cov cases and . % of secondary mers-cov cases. this is similar to other respiratory pathogens: in the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome, % of cases in hong kong, % in canada and % in singapore were healthcare workers [ ] . protecting health care workers from infectious hazards is paramount to ensuring their safety in delivering health care. in addition, being able to protect healthcare workers, constituting the front line response against high-threat respiratory pathogens, such as mers-cov, is important for reducing secondary transmission in healthcare-associated outbreaks. reducing infection in healthcare workers, even if their infection does not cause morbidity or mortality, will improve the continuity of care for all patients in the same healthcare facility. we also found that the demographic and clinical profile of secondary infections in healthcare workers was different from secondary infections among non-healthcare workers. healthcare workers infected with mers-cov were younger, more were female and non-national residents, and had fewer comorbidities, more asymptomatic infections and higher survival. importantly, no deaths have occurred among healthcare workers with secondary mers infection since the end of . these results are similar to the findings in individual outbreaks reports [ , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] ] . the highest burden of mers cases to date is in saudi arabia where healthcare workers are more likely to be female, a large proportion of whom are expatriates. the younger age and fewer comorbidities may partly explain the higher survival observed among healthcare workers, as well as the possibility of earlier identification or suspicion of mers among healthcare workers. indeed, the case fatality rate among all healthcare workers was . % compared with . % among all non-healthcare workers. this is the first study to perform multivariable logistic regression to identify risk factors for death among healthcare workers with secondary infections reported to date. the analysis showed that year of infection ( - ) and having no comorbidities were independent protective factors against death. the decline in risk of death since may reflect the substantial improvements in surveillance and the infection prevention and control measures that have been introduced in affected countries in recent years. in saudi arabia, for example, the ministry of health regularly review and update national infection prevention and control guidelines, according to which, healthcare workers who had unprotected "high-risk exposure" (within . m of the patient) or have suggestive symptoms regardless of exposure type are required to stop performing their duties immediately; to have a nasopharyngeal swab tested for mers-cov; to not resume their duties until cleared by the infection control team and to delay travel until cleared by infection control team [ ] . any healthcare worker who tests positive for mers, any healthcare worker who develops mers suggestive symptoms and any healthcare worker who had unprotected high-risk exposure are considered clear and able to resume work if they meet all of the following criteria: asymptomatic for at least h, and the -day observation period is over, and they have at least one negative rt-pcr [ ] . the enhanced infection prevention and control (ipc) efforts which have been introduced since include regular training of healthcare workers on ipc, auditing of ipc in healthcare facilities, improved case notification and isolation within emergency departments, and comprehensive contact-tracing and testing of all contacts, including healthcare workers, regardless of the development of symptoms. guidelines on contact tracing were revised after to include the testing of all contacts of confirmed mers cases (including healthcare workers) for mers-cov. prior to , contacts were only tested if they developed symptoms. this has increased the detection of asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic cases, which in turn, may have decreased the case fatality rate. specific ipc measures which may have contributed to the decreased case fatality rate include more systematic use of appropriate personal protective equipment and increased testing of asymptomatic personnel which effectively increases the detection of asymptomatic healthcare workers who are less likely to die, therefore increasing the denominator of healthcare worker cases and decreasing the case fatality rate. in addition, earlier detection of cases, and more efficient contact tracing have likely identified mers-cov infections in healthcare workers at an earlier stage of infection, enabling more timely treatment and clinical management, and, as a result, a reduction in the case fatality rate. further efforts to prevent and manage emerging respiratory disease infections, including mers among healthcare workers, still need to be made. these include improving identification and rapid diagnosis of mers, further understanding of the mecha- nisms of transmission in healthcare settings, optimizing the layout of emergency departments for better triage of patients with respiratory symptoms, standardization of infection prevention and control practices and (re)training at facilities with high hospital staff turnover, and auditing of healthcare facilities for adherence to infection prevention and control measures. these will be critical to minimizing transmission in healthcare facilities, particularly until interventions are introduced to stop the virus entering the human population from the dromedary camel reservoir. the role of environmental contamination was evaluated in a number of hospitals following the mers outbreak in the republic of korea and collaborative, experimental studies were conducted to evaluate the viability and persistence of mers-cov on surfaces and in the air [ ] [ ] [ ] . the role of mild or asymptomatic cases in transmission chains, however, remains unclear [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . further epidemiologi- outcomes cal and environmental studies to determine route(s) of secondary transmission will also be critical. the results of our study are strengthened by the size of the study, which included all cases reported to who since the first case was notified in . our database has cases from all countries reporting cases globally. however, since , some inconsistencies have occurred in the way data have been collected and reported to who, for example in the use of a systematic data collection tool and in reporting the outcome of all cases. challenges also exist in classifying cases based on the available information at the time of reporting. for example, thorough outbreak investigations, which include full genome sequencing to clarify the transmission chains within the outbreak or separate introductions from outside, may find that cases that were initially classified as secondary case are in fact primary cases [ , ] , but this information is not systematically relayed to who. efforts are currently being made to retrospectively review and update the epidemiological data for all cases reported to who to date, particularly before . healthcare workers still make up a significant proportion of secondary mers-cov infections. understanding transmission to healthcare workers, preventing infection and improving clinical management of infected healthcare workers will all be critical to further reducing the incidence of secondary infections in healthcare settings. isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia world health organization. who mers-cov global summary and assessment of risk epidemiological findings from a retrospective investigation hospital outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus hospital-associated outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: a serologic, epidemiologic, and clinical description an observational, laboratory-based study of outbreaks of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in jeddah and riyadh, kingdom of saudi arabia response to emergence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus mers outbreak in korea: hospital-to-hospital transmission epidemiological investigation of mers-cov spread in a single hospital in south korea middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus transmission among health care workers: implication for infection control molecular epidemiology of hospital outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome clinical features and viral diagnosis of two cases of infection with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: a report of nosocomial transmission state of knowledge and data gaps of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in humans critically ill patients with the middle east respiratory syndrome: a multicenter retrospective cohort study middle east respiratory syndrome a cohort study of patients suspected for mers-cov in a referral hospital in saudi arabia geneva: world health organization middle east respiratory syndrome case definition for reporting to who: interim case definition severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) and healthcare workers middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: guidelines for healthcare professionals -version . environmental contamination and viral shedding in mers patients during mers-cov outbreak in south korea extensive viable middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) coronavirus contamination in air and surrounding environment in mers outbreak units stability of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) under different environmental conditions a family cluster of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections related to a likely unrecognized asymptomatic or mild case middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) viral shedding in the respiratory tract: an observational analysis with infection control implications a case of long-term excretion and subclinical infection with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in a healthcare worker infectivity of an asymptomatic patient with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection the authors would like to thank the many individuals involved in the collection of individual case data and in the care of mers-cov infected patients in the affected countries. the opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the institutions or organizations with which they are affiliated. supplementary material related to this article can be found, in the online version, at doi:https://doi.org/ . /j.jiph. . . . all authors contributed to the study design, and reviewed and edited the manuscript. aae, rg and me performed the statistical analysis. all authors were involved in the interpretation of the findings. no funding sources. none declared. the case-patient data reported to who is anonymized, thus neither informed consent, nor approval from an institutional review board were required by who or countries providing this data to who under the international health regulations ( ). key: cord- -m q roay authors: agostini, maria l.; pruijssers, andrea j.; chappell, james d.; gribble, jennifer; lu, xiaotao; andres, erica l.; bluemling, gregory r.; lockwood, mark a.; sheahan, timothy p.; sims, amy c.; natchus, michael g.; saindane, manohar; kolykhalov, alexander a.; painter, george r.; baric, ralph s.; denison, mark r. title: small-molecule antiviral β-d-n( )-hydroxycytidine inhibits a proofreading-intact coronavirus with a high genetic barrier to resistance date: - - journal: j virol doi: . /jvi. - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: m q roay coronaviruses (covs) have emerged from animal reservoirs to cause severe and lethal disease in humans, but there are currently no fda-approved antivirals to treat the infections. one class of antiviral compounds, nucleoside analogues, mimics naturally occurring nucleosides to inhibit viral replication. while these compounds have been successful therapeutics for several viral infections, mutagenic nucleoside analogues, such as ribavirin and -fluorouracil, have been ineffective at inhibiting covs. this has been attributed to the proofreading activity of the viral ′- ′ exoribonuclease (exon). β-d-n( )-hydroxycytidine (nhc) (eidd- ; emory institute for drug development) has recently been reported to inhibit multiple viruses. here, we demonstrate that nhc inhibits both murine hepatitis virus (mhv) ( % effective concentration [ec( )] = . μm) and middle east respiratory syndrome cov (mers-cov) (ec( ) = . μm) with minimal cytotoxicity. nhc inhibited mhv lacking exon proofreading activity similarly to wild-type (wt) mhv, suggesting an ability to evade or overcome exon activity. nhc inhibited mhv only when added early during infection, decreased viral specific infectivity, and increased the number and proportion of g:a and c:u transition mutations present after a single infection. low-level nhc resistance was difficult to achieve and was associated with multiple transition mutations across the genome in both mhv and mers-cov. these results point to a virus-mutagenic mechanism of nhc inhibition in covs and indicate a high genetic barrier to nhc resistance. together, the data support further development of nhc for treatment of covs and suggest a novel mechanism of nhc interaction with the cov replication complex that may shed light on critical aspects of replication. importance the emergence of coronaviruses (covs) into human populations from animal reservoirs has demonstrated their epidemic capability, pandemic potential, and ability to cause severe disease. however, no antivirals have been approved to treat these infections. here, we demonstrate the potent antiviral activity of a broad-spectrum ribonucleoside analogue, β-d-n( )-hydroxycytidine (nhc), against two divergent covs. viral proofreading activity does not markedly impact sensitivity to nhc inhibition, suggesting a novel interaction between a nucleoside analogue inhibitor and the cov replicase. further, passage in the presence of nhc generates only low-level resistance, likely due to the accumulation of multiple potentially deleterious transition mutations. together, these data support a mutagenic mechanism of inhibition by nhc and further support the development of nhc for treatment of cov infections. keywords coronavirus, nucleoside analogue, rdrp, rna-dependent rna polymerase, sars-cov, mers-cov, pandemic, antiviral resistance t he emergence of severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) in and middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) in has underscored the ability of coronaviruses (covs) to cause lethal disease in humans ( , ) . mers-cov continues to infect humans in the middle east, and four additional human covs (hcovs), hcov- e, hcov-nl , hcov-oc , and hcov-hku , continue to circulate globally and cause respiratory disease ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . the continued circulation in bat populations of sars-and mers-like covs that can replicate efficiently in primary human airway cells further demonstrates the potential for covs to emerge and cause severe disease in the future ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . while sars-cov and mers-cov outbreaks have been controlled, largely through public health measures ( ) ( ) ( ) , the potential for future outbreaks highlights the need for safe and effective therapeutics to combat cov infections. there are currently no approved therapeutics or vaccines for any human cov infection. previous efforts to treat cov infections with existing antivirals did not conclusively benefit clinical outcomes; thus, the current standard of care remains mostly supportive ( ) ( ) ( ) . several targets for direct-acting antivirals are being investigated to treat cov infections ( ) ( ) ( ) . because the viral replication machinery performs an essential role in genome replication, therapeutics approved to treat multiple different viral infections are aimed at this target ( ) . many approved antivirals are classified as nucleoside analogues, compounds that mimic natural nucleosides to inhibit viral replication ( ) . inhibition by nucleoside analogues can be accomplished through a variety of mechanisms. common mechanisms of action include incorporation of the analogue by the viral polymerase to induce premature termination of strand synthesis and loss of essential genetic information through mutagenesis ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . a previous study reported that the nucleoside analogues ribavirin (rbv) and -fluorouracil ( -fu) did not potently inhibit covs, and this finding was attributed to the proofreading capabilities of the viral =- = exoribonuclease (exon) ( ) . recent reports have demonstrated the inhibition of wild-type (wt) covs by nucleoside analogues such as galidesivir (bcx ) and remdesivir (gs- ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . while these compounds have shown efficacy against covs, administration of multiple compounds simultaneously may be required to effectively treat cov infections and control the emergence of drug resistance, as has been demonstrated for other viral infections ( ) . ␤-d-n -hydroxycytidine (nhc) (eidd- ; emory institute for drug development), a cytidine analogue, has recently been shown to inhibit multiple viruses, including chikungunya virus, venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (veev), respiratory syncytial virus (rsv), hepatitis c virus, norovirus, influenza a (iav) and b viruses, and ebola virus ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . previous reports have demonstrated increased introduction of transition mutations in viral genomes after treatment, as well as a high genetic barrier to resistance ( , ) . antiviral activity of nhc has also been reported against the human ␣-cov hcov-nl , as well as the ␤-cov sars-cov ( , ) . neither the nhc mechanism of action nor nhc resistance has been described for any cov to date. in this study, we investigated nhc inhibition and resistance in two divergent ␤-covs, murine hepatitis virus (mhv) and mers-cov. we show that nhc potently inhibits wt mhv and mers-cov with minimal cytotoxicity. we also demonstrate that mhv exon proofreading activity has a limited but measurable effect on sensitivity to nhc. we observed an nhc inhibition profile consistent with a mutagenic mechanism of action featuring an accumulation of transition mutations, indicative of a high genetic barrier to resistance. experiment with two divergent ␤-covs: the model cov mhv and the epidemically circulating zoonotic cov mers-cov. nhc treatment resulted in a dose-dependent reduction in viral titers for mhv ( fig. a ) and mers-cov (fig. b ). this inhibition resulted in % effective concentrations (ec s) of . m for mhv (fig. c ) and . m for mers-cov (fig. d) . we detected negligible changes in dbt- cell viability out to m (fig. e ) and % cytotoxic concentration (cc ) values above m in vero cells (fig. f ). the antiviral activity was not due to cytotoxicity, as the selectivity indexes were Ͼ , for mhv and Ͼ for mers-cov. together, these results confirm potent inhibition of ␤-covs by nhc. the nhc inhibition profile in covs is consistent with mutagenesis. to better understand the mechanism through which nhc inhibits cov replication, we performed a time of drug addition assay to determine at what point in the viral replication cycle nhc acts ( ) . we added m (ϳ times the ec ) nhc at the indicated times preor postinfection (p.i.) of cells with wt mhv at a multiplicity of infection (moi) of pfu/cell and quantified viral replication after a single infectious cycle. compared to the vehicle (dimethyl sulfoxide [dmso]) control, nhc significantly inhibited mhv replication when added at or before h postinfection (fig. a) , suggesting that nhc acts at early stages of the viral replication cycle. we next determined the effect of nhc on mhv rna levels and compared it to the effect on the infectious-virus titer. rna levels were reduced by approximately -fold at the highest tested concentration of nhc in both mhv-infected cell monolayers (fig. b ) and supernatants (fig. c ). in contrast, the viral titer was reduced up to , -fold at this concentration. we therefore calculated the ratio of infectious virus per viral rna genome copy number normalized to the untreated control (specific infectivity) after nhc treatment and found that the specific infectivity of wt mhv was reduced in a dose-dependent manner after treatment with increasing concentrations of nhc (fig. d ). together, these data are consistent with a mutagenic mechanism of nhc anti-cov activity. nhc treatment increases transition mutations present across the mhv genome. to directly test the effect of nhc treatment on the mutational burden, we treated wt mhv with increasing concentrations of nhc and performed full-genome next-generation sequencing (ngs) on viral populations released after a single round of infection. our data demonstrated a dose-dependent increase in mutations present at low frequencies (Ͻ % of the viral population) across the genome after treatment with increasing concentrations of nhc ( fig. a to c). further analysis of the types of mutations introduced by nhc revealed an increase in the total number of transition mutations with increasing nhc concentrations ( fig. d to f). the relative proportions of g:a and c:u transitions among all observed mutations were increased by to % in the presence of m nhc and to % in the presence of m nhc compared to the vehicle control ( fig. g and h) . conversely, the relative proportions of a:g and u:c transitions decreased with increasing nhc concentrations compared to the vehicle control ( fig. g and h) . together, these results demonstrate that nhc treatment during a single round of wt mhv infection causes predominantly g:a and c:u transition mutations that are detectable at low frequencies across the genome. these data further support a mutagenic mechanism of action for nhc inhibition of wt mhv. nhc inhibition is modestly enhanced in the absence of exon proofreading. mutagenic nucleoside analogues, such as rbv and -fu, have been ineffective at potently inhibiting wt covs due to the exon proofreading activity ( ) . a proofreadingdeficient [exon(Ϫ)] mhv mutant displays increased sensitivity to previously tested nucleoside analogues, indicating that proofreading dampens inhibition by these compounds ( , , ) . therefore, we tested the sensitivity of exon(Ϫ) mhv to nhc inhibition. our results indicate that nhc decreases the titers of both wt and exon(Ϫ) mhv in a dose-dependent manner but that exon(Ϫ) mhv demonstrates a statistically passage in the presence of nhc yields low-level resistance associated with multiple transition mutations. to better understand the development and impact of nhc resistance in covs, we passaged two lineages of wt mhv times in the presence of increasing concentrations of nhc and tested the sensitivity of passage (p ) mhv populations to nhc inhibition. we found that the lineage (mhv p . ) viral population showed no change in sensitivity to nhc compared to wt mhv (fig. a ). however, lineage (mhv p . ) showed a decrease in sensitivity to nhc inhibition in a titer reduction assay, especially at higher concentrations of compound. we observed a modest (approximately -fold) increase in ec values for mhv nhc passage viruses (wt mhv, ec ϭ . m; mhv p . , ec ϭ . m; mhv p . , ec ϭ . m) (fig. b ). this suggests that mhv passage resulted in minimal resistance to nhc. we next sought to determine if passaging wt mhv in the presence of nhc altered the replication capacities of these viruses. we found that both lineages showed a delay in replication but ultimately reached peak titers similar to that of wt mhv (fig. c ). this delay in replication suggests that mhv p is less fit than wt mhv. to identify mutations associated with these phenotypes after passage, we sequenced complete genomes of mhv p . and mhv p . . both lineages passaged in the presence nhc had accumulated over consensus mutations distributed across the genomes ( fig. d and e; see table s in the supplemental material). in comparison, a previous study reported that wt mhv accumulated only total mutations after passages in the absence of drug ( ) . further analysis of the p mhv mutational profile demonstrated that slightly more of the total mutations in both lineages were synonymous changes that did not result in an amino acid change as opposed to nonsynonymous changes, which did alter the amino acid sequence ( fig. f ; see table s ). additionally, the vast majority of mutations in both lineages were transition mutations resulting in a purine-to-purine or pyrimidine-to-pyrimidine change (fig. g ). both lineages contained only two transversion mutations resulting in a purine-topyrimidine or pyrimidine-to-purine change. though all possible transition mutation types were detected in both viral-lineage populations, the majority in both passage lineages were g:a transitions (fig. h) , which is consistent with the mhv ngs data (fig. ) . to determine if the mutational profile at p was consistent with an earlier passage, we analyzed the whole genomes of both lineages and at p . both lineages demonstrated fewer mutations at p than at p , but the profiles of synonymous versus nonsynonymous changes and the transition mutations were similar (see fig. s and table s in the supplemental material). to determine whether the lack of robust resistance to nhc was broadly applicable across ␤-covs, we assessed the capacity of mers-cov to evolve resistance to nhc. as (fig. b ), corresponding to approximately -fold resistance. similar to mhv, we observed no substantial shift in the dose-response curve for mers-cov, indicating minimal acquired resistance. nhc p viruses replicated similarly to wt p mers-cov (fig. c) . we sequenced both lineages of the mers-cov p population and detected consensus mutations in mers-cov nhc p . (fig. d ; see table s in the supplemental material) and consensus mutations in mers-cov nhc p . ( fig. e ; see table s ) that were randomly distributed across the genome. both mers-cov nhc p . and mers-cov nhc p . accumulated nonsynonymous and synonymous mu- tations in roughly equal proportions (fig. f) . as in mhv, the mutations detected in mers-cov p lineages were predominantly transition mutations (fig. g ). further analysis of these mutations revealed that the predominant type of transition was lineage dependent. the majority of transition mutations in mers-cov nhc p . were g:a transitions, as was observed in both p mhv lineages, whereas mers-cov nhc p . contained similar numbers of each type (fig. h) . these results indicate that mers-cov can achieve low-level resistance to nhc and that development of resistance is associated with the accumulation of multiple transition mutations. together, our data suggest nhc acts as a mutagen and that it poses a high genetic barrier to resistance for ␤-covs. in this study, we demonstrate that nhc potently inhibits the divergent ␤-covs mhv and mers-cov. our data are consistent with a virus-mutagenic mechanism of action, as evidenced by a decrease in specific infectivity and an increase in g:a and c:u transition mutations present at low frequencies across the genome after treatment with nhc. we also demonstrate that robust resistance to nhc is difficult to achieve in both mhv and mers-cov. both wt mhv and exon(Ϫ) mhv are sensitive to nhc inhibition, suggesting that nhc is able to overcome exon-mediated proofreading to inhibit wt covs and that it interacts with covs differently than other previously tested nucleoside analogues. utility of the broad-spectrum antiviral nhc as a pan-cov therapeutic. early work with nhc focused on the mutagenic effects of the compound in multiple bacterial systems ( , , ) . more recently, the antiviral properties of the compound have been reported for multiple rna viruses, including chikungunya virus, venezuelan equine encephalitis virus, respiratory syncytial virus, hepatitis c virus, norovirus, influenza a and b viruses, and ebola virus ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . nhc has also been shown to potently inhibit sars-cov and hcov-nl ( , ) , suggesting potential utility in treating cov infections ( ) . based on previous studies, nhc appears to primarily inhibit viral replication by mutagenesis ( , ) . serial passaging in the presence of nhc led to low-level resistance for veev, but no detectable resistance for rsv, iav, or bovine viral diarrhea virus, indicating a high barrier to resistance ( , , ) . consistent with the previous studies, we demonstrated that nhc is mutagenic in covs and that serial passaging yields low-level, approximately -fold resistance. low-level resistance has also been observed for remdesivir, another nucleoside analogue that potently inhibits covs. approximately -fold resistance to remdesivir is conferred by two mutations in the cov rna-dependent rna polymerase (rdrp) ( ) . this study further expands the known antiviral spectrum of nhc to include mhv and mers-cov, two genetically divergent ␤-covs, and supports nhc development as a broad-spectrum cov antiviral. nhc inhibition may circumvent exon-mediated proofreading. nhc is the first mutagenic nucleoside analogue demonstrated to potently inhibit proofreading-intact covs. previous studies have demonstrated that viruses lacking exon proofreading activity [exon(Ϫ) viruses] are more sensitive to inhibition by nucleoside analogues, especially rbv and -fu ( , , , ) . this increased sensitivity has been attributed to the inability of exon(Ϫ) viruses to efficiently remove incorrect nucleosides ( ) . however, we observed a minimal change in nhc sensitivity between wt mhv and exon(Ϫ) mhv, especially by ec . this suggests that nhc interacts with the cov replicase differently than other previously tested nucleoside analogues. one explanation is that nhc may evade removal by the proofreading exon. studies investigating nucleosides that inhibit dna viruses have suggested an inability of the viral exonuclease to efficiently excise some nucleoside analogues ( , ) . further, a previous study suggested that the t dna exonuclease activity was incapable of removing nhc ( ) . while the sars-cov exon efficiently removes =-terminal mismatches regardless of type ( , ) , the effect of nhc on this activity has not been investigated. interestingly, mismatches readily observed during single-nucleotide elongation by the sars-cov polymerase in the absence of drugs correspond to mismatches that would lead to the g:a and c:u transitions observed after nhc treatment ( ) . this suggests that the cov polymerase could be naturally more prone to make these types of errors, which are then magnified by nhc. this could lead to a scenario where exon cannot prevent dipping below the error threshold, ultimately resulting in lethal mutagenesis and similar inhibition of both wt mhv and exon(Ϫ) mhv ( ) . several nucleosides, including the mutagenic rbv, have multiple demonstrated mechanisms other than direct incorporation into the genome ( , ) . thus, another explanation for the unique potency of nhc in the presence of an active proofreading exon is that it may inhibit viral replication by additional mechanisms beyond mutagenesis. indeed, previous reports have suggested that nhc may also interfere with the rna secondary structure or virion release to cause inhibition ( , ) . further, exogenous c or u in the presence of nhc could rescue viral replication in hcv, chikungunya virus, rsv, and influenza a virus ( , , ) , indicating that nhc competes with exogenous nucleosides at some stage prior to viral inhibition. these results raise the possibility that nhc could inhibit a process that results in similar inhibition of these viruses by a mechanism unrelated to exon. thus, future studies will be important to investigate the role of proofreading in nhc inhibition of covs to shed light on the intricacies of nhc inhibition of the cov replication complex. nhc mutagenesis may hinder emergence of robust resistance to nhc. the decrease in specific infectivity, along with the accumulation of transitions across the cov genome, supports a mutagenic mechanism of action for nhc in covs. nhc resistance in covs was modest and difficult to achieve, as we obtained approximately -fold resistance after passages. resistance was associated with multiple mutations. interestingly, mers-cov accumulated fewer mutations over passages than mhv. while differences in viral mutation rates could be the driver of this difference, previous studies have suggested that mhv does not have a higher mutation rate than mers-cov ( ) ( ) ( ) . the differences in mutation accumulation between mhv and mers-cov may be a product of different passage conditions. while mhv was passaged with a consistent transfer volume, mers-cov passage volumes were adjusted over time to sustain viral replication under escalating selection for drug resistance. the constant-volume passaging conditions may have more severely bottlenecked mhv populations and fixed more mutations in the genome than the variable-volume passaging conditions applied to mers-cov ( ) . alternatively, this difference could also reflect a difference in mutational robustness of the mhv and mers-cov genomes, though this proposition needs to be investigated further ( , ) . while a portion of the mutations that accumulated during passage likely contribute to nhc resistance, mutations in proteins dispensable for viral replication in cell culture, such as ns and nsp , may be merely tolerated because of their limited effect on viral fitness in the context of our passage conditions ( ) ( ) ( ) . few common mutations arose in both mhv and mers-cov passage series (see tables s to s ), suggesting that multiple pathways to low-level nhc resistance exist in covs. interestingly, for both mhv and mers-cov, the p lineage that demonstrated a greater change in sensitivity to nhc was the lineage that had fewer overall mutations (fig. and ) . both mhv passage lineages replicated less well than wt mhv, suggesting that the accumulation of mutations during passage may negatively impact viral fitness and the ability of mhv to evolve robust resistance to nhc. further, the mhv lineage that did not result in changed sensitivity to nhc by p (mhv p . ) had fewer mutations present at consensus by p than the other lineage (see fig. s ). thus, it is possible that the accumulation of deleterious mutations counteracts the potential benefits of resistance mutations ( ) . if this is the case, mutations promoting nhc resistance would need to arise early during passage to help mitigate the accumulation of excess deleterious mutations. alternatively, the inability to evade inhibition by nhc may lead to the accumulation of a greater number of nhc-associated transitions and ultimately a higher mutational burden that may impact viral fitness ( , ) . together, our results support the hypothesis that establishment of resistance to nhc in covs requires a delicate balance of resistance-promoting mutations, viral fitness, and accumulation of deleterious mutations. thus, defining the roles of individ-ual nhc resistance-associated mutations will be an important goal for future studies. overall, our results support further development of nhc as a broad-spectrum antiviral for treatment of cov infections and contribute new insights into important aspects of cov replication. cell culture. murine astrocytoma delayed brain tumor (dbt) ( ) and vero (atcc ccl- ) cells were maintained at °c in dulbecco's modified eagle medium (dmem) (gibco) supplemented with % fetal bovine serum (fbs) (invitrogen), % penicillin and streptomycin (gibco), and . % amphotericin b (corning). viruses. all work with mhv was performed using the recombinant wt strain mhv-a (genbank accession number ay [ ] ). mers-cov stocks were generated from cdna clones (genbank accession number jx [ ] ). compounds and cell viability studies. nhc was synthesized at the emory institute for drug development and prepared as a mm stock solution in dmso. cell viability was assessed using celltiter-glo (promega) in -well plates according to the manufacturer's instructions. dbt and vero cells were incubated with the indicated concentrations of compound at °c for h (dbt) or h (vero). cell viability was determined using a veritas microplate luminometer (promega) or glomax (promega), with values normalized to those of vehicle-treated cells. nucleoside analogue sensitivity studies and generation of ec curves. subconfluent monolayers of dbt cells were infected with mhv at an moi of . pfu per cell for h at °c. the inoculum was removed and replaced with medium containing the indicated compound concentration. cell supernatants were harvested h postinfection. titers were determined by plaque assay as described previously ( ) . subconfluent monolayers of vero cells were infected at an moi of . pfu/cell of mers-cov. after virus adsorption for min at °c, the inoculum was removed. the cells were washed with pbs and incubated with medium containing the indicated concentrations of nhc or dmso (vehicle control). after h, the supernatant was collected and titers were determined by plaque assay as described previously ( ) . ec and ec values and curves were generated using the nonlinear regression curve fit in graphpad (la jolla, ca) prism software. time of drug addition assay. subconfluent monolayers of dbt cells were treated with medium containing dmso or m nhc (ϳ times the ec ) at the indicated times pre-or postinfection. the cells were infected with wt mhv at an moi of pfu/cell for h at °c. the virus inoculum was removed and replaced with fresh medium. culture supernatant was harvested h postinfection, and the viral titer was determined by plaque assay. quantification of viral genomic rna. subconfluent dbt cells were infected with wt mhv at an moi of . pfu/cell. the inoculum was removed after h of incubation at °c, and medium containing the indicated concentration of nhc was added. total rna from cells and supernatant rna were harvested using trizol reagent (invitrogen) after h. both total rna and supernatant rna were extracted by phase separation. total rna was purified by ethanol precipitation, and supernatant rna was purified using a purelink rna minikit (invitrogen) according to the manufacturer's protocol. total rna was reverse transcribed using superscript iii (invitrogen) to generate cdna, which was quantified by quantitative pcr (qpcr) as previously described ( ) . data are presented as ϪΔΔct , where ΔΔc t denotes the change in the threshold cycle for the viral target (nsp ) normalized to the control (glyceraldehyde- -phosphate dehydrogenase [gapdh]) before and after drug treatment. the supernatant rna was quantified using one-step quantitative reverse transcriptase pcr (qrt-pcr) as previously described ( ) . the data are presented as the fold change in genome rna copies normalized to vehicle control. determination of specific infectivity. subconfluent dbt cells were infected with wt mhv at an moi of . pfu/cell. the inoculum was removed after h of incubation at °c, and medium containing the indicated concentration of nhc was added. supernatant rna was harvested using the trizol reagent (invitrogen) after h, followed by extraction and quantification as described above. the viral titer was determined by plaque assay. the specific infectivity was calculated as the number of pfu divided by the supernatant genome rna copy number. this ratio was then normalized to that of the vehicle control. ngs studies. subconfluent dbt cells were infected with wt mhv at an moi of . pfu/cell and treated with the indicated concentrations of nhc. the supernatant was collected h postinfection. purified viral rna was submitted to genewiz (south plainfield, nj) for library preparation and sequencing. briefly, after quality controls, viral rnas were randomly fragmented using heat. libraries were prepared and sequenced on the illumina hiseq platform. genewiz performed base calling and read demultiplexing. trimmomatic was used to trim adapter contaminants and reads shorter than bp and to filter low-quality bases (q score Ͻ ) ( ). the paired-end fastq reads were then aligned with the mhv genome using bowtie to generate a sam file ( ) . samtools was used to process the resultant alignment file and to calculate the coverage depth at each nucleotide, generating a sorted and indexed bam file. lofreq was used to call substitution variants, including low-frequency variants, and to generate a variant file ( ) . the bash shell and excel were used to further process and analyze the resultant vcf file. a frequency of . was used as a cutoff for variants, consistent with previous reports ( ) . absolute numbers of mutations are reported for each nhc treatment. the percentage of the total mutations for each specific mutation type was calculated using these numbers. the difference in percentage for each class of mutation after treatment compared with vehicle control is referred to as the relative proportion of these mutations. mhv population passage in the presence of nhc. wt mhv was passaged in triplicate in increasing concentrations of nhc from m to a maximum of m. infection was initiated for passage at an moi of . pfu/cell. viral supernatants were harvested from each viral lineage and frozen when the cell monolayer demonstrated % cytopathic effect (cpe) or after h. a constant volume of l was used to initiate subsequent passages. all three lineages were maintained until passage , when lineage demonstrated no visible cpe upon multiple attempts at varying concentrations. lineages and were maintained until passage . after each passage, total rna was harvested from infected cell monolayers using the trizol reagent. viral rna was extracted from passage and passage samples and reverse transcribed using superscript iii, followed by generation of pcr amplicons to cover the whole genome. dideoxy amplicon sequencing was performed by genewiz and analyzed to identify mutations present at greater than % of the total using macvector. viral mutation maps depicting the identified mutations were generated using macvector. mers-cov population passage in the presence of nhc. three parallel independent passage series of wt mers-cov were performed on vero cells in the presence of gradually increasing concentrations of nhc up to a maximum concentration of . m to select for drug-resistant mutant viruses. virus adaptation to nhc-supplemented complete culture medium was assessed by monitoring the progression of characteristic mers-cov cpe. the volumes of transferred culture supernatants were adjusted empirically to balance continuous selective pressure against culture extinction. each of triplicate lineages in the mers-cov passage experiment was sustained through passage . however, the third lineage was severely impaired in replication and was excluded from further analysis. total infected-cell mers-cov rna purified from monolayers infected with terminal-passage (p ) culture supernatant was used to generate rt-pcr products for consensus sanger sequencing of the complete viral genome (genewiz). changes in passaged virus nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences were identified via alignment with the wt parental virus genomic sequence using macvector. virus replication assays. subconfluent monolayers of dbt (mhv) or vero (mers-cov) cells were infected with wt or nhc-passaged viral populations at an moi of . pfu/cell for h (mhv) or min (mers-cov). inocula were removed, and the cells were washed with pbs before addition of prewarmed medium. supernatants were harvested at the indicated times postinfection, and titers were determined by plaque assay. statistics. statistical tests were performed using graphpad (la jolla, ca) prism software as described in the respective figure legends. supplemental material for this article may be found at https://doi. a novel coronavirus 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circulation, and evolution of the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus viral quasispecies evolution evolution favors protein mutational robustness in sufficiently large populations the origins of mutational robustness murine coronavirus nonstructural protein ns is not essential for virus replication in transformed cells cell-typespecific type i interferon antagonism influences organ tropism of murine coronavirus the nsp replicase proteins of murine hepatitis virus and severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus are dispensable for viral replication pathways to extinction: beyond the error threshold the contribution of epistasis to the architecture of fitness in an rna virus mutation and epistasis in influenza virus evolution molecular anatomy of mouse hepatitis virus persistence: coevolution of increased host cell resistance and virus virulence systematic assembly of a full-length infectious cdna of mouse hepatitis virus strain a engineering infectious cdnas of coronavirus as bacterial artificial chromosomes high fidelity of murine hepatitis virus replication is decreased in nsp exoribonuclease mutants growth and quantification of mers-cov infection trimmomatic: a flexible trimmer for illumina sequence data scaling read aligners to hundreds of threads on general-purpose processors lofreq: a sequence-quality aware, ultra-sensitive variant caller for uncovering cell-population heterogeneity from high-throughput sequencing datasets sequence-specific error profile of illumina sequencers we thank members of the denison laboratory for thoughtful discussions regarding this work. key: cord- - s akmdp authors: mubareka, samira; groulx, nicolas; savory, eric; cutts, todd; theriault, steven; scott, james a.; roy, chad j.; turgeon, nathalie; bryce, elizabeth; astrakianakis, george; kirychuk, shelley; girard, matthieu; kobinger, gary; zhang, chao; duchaine, caroline title: bioaerosols and transmission, a diverse and growing community of practice date: - - journal: front public health doi: . /fpubh. . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: s akmdp the transmission of infectious microbes via bioaerosols is of significant concern for both human and animal health. however, gaps in our understanding of respiratory pathogen transmission and methodological heterogeneity persist. new developments have enabled progress in this domain, and one of the major turning points has been the recognition that cross-disciplinary collaborations across spheres of human and animal health, microbiology, biophysics, engineering, aerobiology, infection control, public health, occupational health, and industrial hygiene are essential. collaborative initiatives support advances in topics such as bioaerosol behavior, dispersion models, risk assessment, risk/exposure effects, and mitigation strategies in clinical, experimental, agricultural, and other field settings. there is a need to enhance the knowledge translation for researchers, stakeholders, and private partners to support a growing network of individuals and agencies to achieve common goals to mitigate inter- and intra-species pathogen transmission via bioaerosols. the transmission of infectious microbes via bioaerosols is of significant concern for both human and animal health. however, gaps in our understanding of respiratory pathogen transmission and methodological heterogeneity persist. new developments have enabled progress in this domain, and one of the major turning points has been the recognition that cross-disciplinary collaborations across spheres of human and animal health, microbiology, biophysics, engineering, aerobiology, infection control, public health, occupational health, and industrial hygiene are essential. collaborative initiatives support advances in topics such as bioaerosol behavior, dispersion models, risk assessment, risk/exposure effects, and mitigation strategies in clinical, experimental, agricultural, and other field settings. there is a need to enhance the knowledge translation for researchers, stakeholders, and private partners to support a growing network of individuals and agencies to achieve common goals to mitigate inter-and intra-species pathogen transmission via bioaerosols. keywords: bioaerosols, microbes, virus, infections, viral dissemination, network, caniban, collaborations the importance of infectious bioaerosols in disease transmission has been long-acknowledged, yet poorly understood. paltry data and methodological heterogeneity limit many related studies. effective ventilation and infection prevention and control (ip & c) measures in the form of droplet and airborne isolation in healthcare institutions underscore the contribution of these modes of pathogen dispersion. moreover, recent outbreaks such as the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov) and middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) outbreaks highlight major gaps in our ability to assess and determine risk and to mitigate patient and healthcare worker (hcw) exposure alike ( , ) . the sars outbreak was eventually controlled in the absence of an effective vaccine or antiviral, strictly through public health interventions and ip & c measures aimed at controlling, among other things, bioaerosols emitted by infected patients ( ) . a decade on from this experience, mers-cov has caused community and healthcare-associated severe acute respiratory infections in the middle east and south korea, spreading by similar mechanism(s) ( ) ( ) ( ) . from an animal health perspective, pathogens such as porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus may be transmitted through the air for significant distances and have significant economic impact on the agricultural sector ( ) . efforts to characterize this and other relevant organisms have been undertaken previously, specifically looking at the burden of inoculum related to transmission ( ) and the prevention of spread of aerosols through various adequate ventilation strategies ( ) ( ) ( ) . emission of african swine fever virus into the air by infected pigs raises the possibility for droplet and/or airborne transmission of this virus, which has recently produced significant alarm after documented spread in china ( ) ( ) ( ) . this hemorrhagic virus is associated with high mortality and significant loss for producers through depopulation and trade restrictions ( , ) . in recent years, new developments have enabled progress in bioaerosol research, thus establishing a community of practice in the field. although many developments have been technical, one of the major catalysts has been the recognition that crossdisciplinary collaborations across the various spheres of human and animal health, microbiology, engineering, aerobiology, infection control, public health, occupational health, and industrial hygiene are essential. a network approach has proven successful in other cross-disciplinary fields, including one health and eco-health whereby wildlife, computational and evolutionary biologists, microbiologists, virologists, epidemiologists, ecologists, environmental scientists, climatologists, and human, animal, and public health practitioners are collaborating to address challenges in zoonotic diseases research and control ( , ) . this has enhanced surveillance efforts and launched ambitious, large scale projects such as the global virome project, though gaps remain in stakeholder engagement and monitoring activities ( , ) . translation of bioaerosol research stands to benefit in a similar fashion, provided coordinated and committed efforts. potentially infectious bioaerosols are pertinent to a wide range of pathogens, some of which may be endemic and cause sporadic infections and outbreaks (e.g., mycobacterium tuberculosis and legionella pneumophila, the causative agents of tuberculosis and legionnaires' disease, respectively) and/or have potential to cause epidemics or pandemics (e.g., influenza virus a) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . in addition, the importance of potentially infectious bioaerosols across different settings is underscored. these include, but are not limited to, agriculture (both crop and livestock), wastewater treatment plants, environmental reservoirs (soil and water), acute and long-term healthcare institutions, and shared public spaces (transportation hubs, recreational areas, etc.). here, we discuss the state of the science for this nascent field and identify gaps requiring urgent attention. progress in the field has been stimulated by advances in other areas which have been applied to the study of infectious bioaerosols. these include: (a) enhanced detection by molecular methods, principally real-time and quantitative pcr, nextgeneration sequencing, metagenomics, and biosensors ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) , and (b) establishment of both conventional and novel infrastructure, such as small and large-scale wind tunnels, biocontained rotating drums for aging aerosols, and field-ready aerosol samplers ( ) ( ) ( ) . ongoing research has also facilitated the development and dissemination of procedures and protocols for experimental work, including artificial aerosols, as well as animal models of transmission including the ferret model for influenza virus transmission and macaque model for ebola virus transmission ( , ) . whilst aerosols can be used as a means of delivery of therapeutic agents directly to the respiratory tract, they may also be used for the nefarious dispersion of human or animal pathogens. scientists focused on bioaerosol generation, pathogen survival in air and aerobiological fitness must be acutely cognizant of any potential for dual use and routinely re-assess projects and proposed experiments with this perspective in mind. oversight by institutional biosafety officers and committees may also consider this aspect of bioaerosol research during risk assessments and other internal approval processes. given the role of potentially infectious bioaerosols to transmit infectious agents to human and animal populations, it stands to reason that their detection and characterization will ultimately contribute to mitigating the spread of disease. this is possible through efforts focused on the following themes: unresolved fundamental questions may be answered by studying infectious bioaerosols. areas meriting attention are numerous and a few are briefly discussed here. in the case of agents for which airborne transmission is well-recognized (i.e., m. tuberculosis), associations between particle size and generation, pathogen content and virulence, as well as the deposition within the respiratory tract may be determined. the physical and chemical aspects of aerosols including the effects of relative humidity can affect pathogen viability and understanding these aspects of bioaerosol behavior may be beneficial to understanding conditions for controlling bioaerosol dispersion ( ) ( ) ( ) . moreover, pathogens such as viruses may vary with respect to isoelectric points, possibly imparting different charges to infectious bioaerosols which may affect their behavior ( , ) . finally, although climate change and pollution have been major issues within our biosphere, little is known about the impact of pollution particulates and gases, such as ozone, on the biology and physical properties of bioaerosols ( ) . our understanding of bioaerosol production from expulsion events such as breathing, talking, sneezing, and coughing have generally been extrapolated from models, though more recent empiric evidence has become available, significantly enhancing our understanding of the transmission potential of bioaerosol emissions from naturallyinfected hosts ( , ) . awareness of factors contributing to particle velocity and penetration into space enables modeling strategies that inform engineering controls in a multitude of settings. for example, in healthcare, understanding the dispersion of potential pathogens in the environment can inform infection prevention and control practices ( ) . there is also potential benefit to determining pathogen characteristics. if enhanced infectious bioaerosol survival in air is associated with certain strains, genotypes or mutations, this provides possibilities for follow-on work to (a) determine the mechanism and (b) enhance surveillance. the latter would have implications for public and animal health. studying these factors individually or in combination can optimize air handling and other mechanical, environmental or chemical means of neutralizing bioaerosols prior to host exposure, thus alleviating dependence on personal protective equipment, which is the last means of protection prior to exposure. new understanding of the role of bioaerosols in the propagation of human and animal pathogens could lead to new practices. as it stands, it remains uncertain which bioaerosol particles are predominantly responsible for personto-person transmission. there may also be differences between pathogen populations in the infected host vs. what is emitted into the air. this poses an excellent opportunity to leverage advances in metagenomics with developments in aerobiology to extract more sophisticated data from aerosol samples and, potentially, determine genetic bottlenecks for transmission. this would feed back into more fundamental work on bacterial or viral determinants of transmission, as well as lead to novel means for surveillance and mitigation. similarly, translational studies enhance our understanding of risk and determinants of exposure. for many settings and situations, several components of risk assessments are based on limited evidence. this is of particular concern from an occupational health perspective, in healthcare (e.g., purported aerosol-generating procedures), agricultural, or specific settings such as wastewater treatment plants ( ) ( ) ( ) . developing the capacity to generate empiric data on pathogen content and biology from bioaerosols can lead to tools for outbreak investigation, surveillance, and development of risk assessment strategies and policies. as the technology for biosensors accelerates, the possibilities for rapid point-of-care testing and even remote sampling are highlighted. integration of biosensors with bioaerosol sampling ( ) has significant potential for early warning and public safety. as advances are made, capacity is built to optimize and evaluate known and novel means to control the dispersion of infectious bioaerosols. these include the use of germicidal and pulsed ultraviolet light, mechanical air filtration and respiratory protection which have both mechanical and electrostatic filtering systems ( , ) . in addition, the potential to use ozone to control indoor bioaerosols in urban and rural settings is being examined. ozone is a strong oxidizing agent having high redox potential and a short half-life, dependent on temperature. it has been used extensively in the food industry (specifically water treatment, washing of produce, and food preparation), as well as in domestic restoration to remediate odors and smoke damage. its historical use and proven efficacy demonstrate its potential to remediate contaminated indoor air ( , ) . this would present a novel application of a known treatment modality. a number of important gaps have been identified ( ) and these can be prioritized based on potential benefit: biocontainment of infectious particles is the first consideration when aerosolizing human and/or animal pathogens in an experimental setting. these systems are generally customdesigned and constructed, with few facilities capable of conducting aerosol work with risk group pathogens, and fewer still with the capacity to work with risk group or agents. as challenges in infrastructure are overcome, opportunities to optimize and improve methods and techniques in bioaerosol research must be taken. a limitation of many studies focused on viral bioaerosols is the pervasive use of nucleic acid detection, rather than infectious virus isolation. the latter is a much more accurate indicator of the infectious potential of a bioaerosol but is infrequently performed due to poor sensitivity and other technical issues ( ) . the development of sampling devices and techniques optimized to preserve pathogen viability would considerably advance the utility of studying bioaerosols for risk assessment and management. for other applications, a more rapid, field-ready point of care test would be useful and would offer remote sampling possibilities. biosensors have the potential to fill this gap and integration into aerosol sampling devices is under development ( ) . finally, the collection of nucleic acid may be leveraged to obtain more sophisticated information than is available by pcr and sanger sequencing. metagenomics on environmental samples has been well-described in other spheres and is currently being explored for air samples ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . to advance bioaerosol-related data interpretation, an effort must be made to standardize and share protocols and reagents to reduce the degree of data heterogeneity to enable meaningful analyses across studies. this may apply to animal models, artificial aerosolizations, collection strategies in the field and clinical settings, processing of samples, and detection methods. developing or adopting a standardized approach to aerosol sampling is challenging and requires substantial efforts to select the best sampling strategy to minimize sampling biases, optimize sample concentration and organism retrieval whilst preserving integrity ( ) . establishing standard approaches also enables training and implementation and eases knowledge translation amongst different groups (figure ) . multiple investigators have published small studies on the recovery of viral rna emitted by naturally infected humans using different approaches for recruitment, sampling, processing, and detection. unfortunately, the results are difficult to compare and, standing alone, are of limited statistical significance ( , ( ) ( ) ( ) . by standardizing approaches, a more feasible method can be used to compare separate studies allowing for larger multi-center studies that are substantially more conclusive and impactful. additional educational and operational needs, such as training of research personnel, proper use of personal protective equipment and developing decontamination protocols must be addressed. as more highly qualified personnel are properly trained, the greater the capacity for designing and utilizing experimental systems and for completing meaningful clinical and field studies. the need for cross-disciplinary experience is underscored, since robust knowledge of physics, mechanical engineering, and microbiology are required. fostering this expertise requires a collaborative effort as each discipline offers unique insight. currently, there are a limited number of workshops or accredited courses available to cultivate both interest and baseline knowledge. although the profile of bioaerosol research is rising, few trainees are exposed to the field early in their careers. courses such as bioaérosols et aérobiologie (bioaerosols and aerobiology) developed at the université laval in québec may help close this gap further given the opportunity to expand reach. the relevance of bioaerosol data to occupational health and infection prevention and control requires attention. validation of bioaerosol data for risk assessments and risk management is needed. air sampling was conducted during both sars-cov and mers-cov outbreaks, accruing important insight into the environmental distribution and persistence of these coronaviruses ( , , ) . the absence of data for more common, lower consequence pathogens represents missed opportunities to build a contextual and impactful body of knowledge during inter-outbreak and inter-pandemic periods. to develop evidence-based policy and ensure the relevance of this work, early stakeholder engagement is needed. consultation with human and animal public health, infection prevention and control, industrial hygiene, and occupational health stakeholders will ensure that the work is germane to the challenges presented by bioaerosol exposures. this pull also increases the likelihood that there will be data generated for risk assessment, policy development and implementation. part of the chaos that characterized the sars epidemic can be attributed to a lack of knowledge regarding the route(s) of transmission. this remains true for high consequence coronaviruses, as well as for a range of other respiratory pathogens, both novel and established. we propose the following to address the challenges outlined above and to further develop the field of applied bioaerosol research: . an open network approach working in isolation, microbiologists, aerobiologists, engineers, and epidemiologists have made only incremental progress. a synergistic and pluralistic approach is required for action-driven research which effects change. as capacity grows, so will opportunities for training and response. a networked approach will lead to context-specific follow-on research to ultimately inform policy for the mitigation of respiratory pathogens spread in healthcare institutions, agricultural settings and public spaces. toward this end, the present authors have established the canadian infectious bioaerosols network (caniban) that brings together members of each of these disciplines with the primary objectives of understanding transmission of pathogens. a network would form a hub around which key resources such as infrastructure, equipment, and operational procedures could be shared, thus also enabling training and underscoring best practices in biosafety and biosecurity. shared resources may encompass wind tunnels, cough chambers and mannequins, animal exposure and other biosafety enclosures, and rotating drums to examine pathogen survival in air, together with instrumentation and analysis tools for fluid flow measurement and biochemical assays. limited awareness and understanding of infectious bioaerosols among potential knowledge users, coupled with equally limited outreach by bioaerosol researchers has restricted knowledge transfer and applications. knowledgeuser engagement in research planning from the outset and ongoing involvement through to dissemination is key for effective projects. potential knowledge users include infection prevention and control practitioners, infectious disease specialists, veterinarians and animal health epidemiologists, industrial hygienists, and public health agencies. increasingly, bioaerosol sampling has been proposed and implemented in outbreak investigations and pathogen surveillance using ad hoc approaches. the development of best practices in these areas is essential to generating valid and actionable data. in summary, a collective path for researchers, stakeholders, and private partners is needed to support a network of individuals and agencies to achieve common goals. as the field of bioaerosol studies grows, applications will diversify, along with novel technologies for remote sampling and point of care testing yielding results in real time. this stands to mitigate the spread of nefarious pathogens and contribute to early warning and response measures, thus ultimately benefiting human and animal health. sm framed the manuscript and contributed content. ng contributed content and generated the figure. es contributed content and supported manuscript organization. tc, st, js, cr, nt, eb, ga, sk, mg, gk, and cz contributed content and expertise and cd helped to frame and contributed content. transmission characteristics of mers and sars in the healthcare setting: a comparative study extensive viable middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) coronavirus contamination in air and surrounding environment in mers isolation wards research gaps in protecting healthcare workers from sars and other respiratory pathogens: an 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pathogens the metagenomics and metadesign of the subways and urban biomes (metasub) international consortium inaugural meeting report. microbiome whole metagenome profiles of particulates collected from the international space station a next generation sequencing approach with a suitable bioinformatics workflow to study fungal diversity in bioaerosols released from two different types of composting plants distribution of airborne influenza virus and respiratory syncytial virus in an urgent care medical clinic influenza virus emitted by naturally-infected hosts in a healthcare setting quantification of influenza virus rna in aerosols in patient rooms detection of airborne severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) coronavirus and environmental contamination in sars outbreak units airborne severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus concentrations in a negative-pressure isolation room we should like to thank the centre de recherche de l'institut universitaire de cardiologie et de pneumologie de québec (criucpq), assek technology, quebec frqs respiratory health network, the groupe de recherche en santé respiratoire (geser), and tsi for supporting the symposium on the transmission of respiratory pathogens in québec city, qc, canada, and symposium participants for their contributions during the course of this event. we are also grateful for support from the canadian institutes of health research, the natural sciences and engineering research council of canada and the ontario ministry of labor. key: cord- -uzzs w j authors: ma, xuezheng; liu, fang; liu, lijuan; zhang, liping; lu, mingzhu; abudukadeer, abuduzhayier; wang, lingbing; tian, feng; zhen, wei; yang, pengfei; hu, kongxin title: no mers-cov but positive influenza viruses in returning hajj pilgrims, china, – date: - - journal: bmc infect dis doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: uzzs w j background: there is global health concern that the mass movement of pilgrims to and from mecca annually could contribute to the international spread of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov). in china, about , muslim pilgrims participate in the hajj gathering in mecca annually. this is the first report of mers-cov and respiratory virus molecular screening of returning pilgrims at points of entry in china from to . methods and results: a total of returning hajj pilgrims participated in this study. the test results indicated that of the travelers, tested positive for influenza a virus, for influenza b virus, for metapneumo virus, for respiratory syncytial virus, and for human coronavirus. there was a significant difference in the rates of positive and negative influenza virus tests between hajj pilgrims with symptoms and those without. the detection rates of influenza virus were not significantly different among the three years studied, at . , . and . % for , and , respectively. discussion and conclusion: the mers-cov and respiratory viruses detection results at points of entry in china from to indicated that there were no mers-cov infection but a . % positive influenza viruses in returning chinese pilgrims. as of november , there had been laboratoryconfirmed cases of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infection reported to the world health organization, and at least cases had died [ , ] . most cases of mers-cov infection were reported from the kingdom of saudi arabia. annually, more than million muslim pilgrims from countries attend the hajj pilgrimage in mecca, saudi arabia [ ] . this mass gathering of pilgrims presents a global health risk due to the potential spread of infectious diseases, and respiratory infections are the most common infections transmitted between hajj pilgrims [ , ] . the viruses most commonly isolated from symptomatic patients during the hajj pilgrimage were influenza virus and coronaviruses [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . there is global concern that travelers returning from pilgrimage could contribute to the international spread of mers-cov. the international health regulations (ihr) emergency committee suggested that all countries perform surveillance for mers-cov among pilgrims during and after hajj [ ] . in china, about , muslim pilgrims participate in the hajj gathering in mecca annually [ ] . this is the first report of the molecular screening for mers-cov and respiratory viruses among returning pilgrims at points of entry in china, carried out from to . the participants in this study were adult hajj pilgrims who traveled in groups to mecca, saudi arabia, and stayed there for - days from september to october, - . in china, the government arranged charter flights for hajj pilgrims to visit mecca. infectious disease monitoring and surveillance of foreigners travelers coming from other countries is the responsibility of aqsiq (general administration quality supervision inspection and quarantine of the people's republic of china). aqsiq supervises entry-exit ports in china, and operates on behalf of the national government. for all chinese hajj pilgrims, personal and flight information was recorded and a medical examination was conducted, including vaccination by a local aqsiq office, before the trip to mecca. xinjiang and gansu province have the highest number of hajj pilgrims visiting mecca each year. in this study, our institute, the chinese academy of inspection and quarantine, cooperated with the xinjiang and gansu entry-exit inspection and quarantine bureau. we randomly selected returning pilgrims arriving at xinjiang and gansu airports, and asked for their consent to participate in this study. in china, every entry-exit airport has an infrared radiation thermometer, installed by aqsiq, to screen travelers' body temperatures. among returning pilgrims, returning pilgrims triggered the alarm on passing through the infrared radiation thermometer installed at the airport to monitor travelers' body temperature. sixteen of these travelers were confirmed by using a clinical thermometer to have the onset of fever (> . °c), and also reported a sore throat or cough on the returning flight. the remaining returning pilgrims did not have a fever or other symptoms. the numbers of travelers with fever in each year were ( ), ( ), and ( ). the mean age of all participants was . years old (sd = . ). in this study, were females and were males, and they were all moslem. all pilgrims were asked to undergo a health examination and were vaccinated against influenza a and b in a local travel health center a week prior to departure. all participants included in this study were voluntary and signed consent forms. for the detection of viral infection, samples included lower respiratory tract sputum, washes, and upper respiratory tract oropharyngeal swab specimens. lower respiratory tract sputum samples were used to test for respiratory viruses during this -year period. all pilgrims were tested for influenza and mers, but only those with fever were tested for the other viruses. all specimens were collected immediately when returning pilgrims arrived at each point of entry, and nucleic acid was isolated and immediately screened by real time rt-pcr for the upe and orf a genes of mers-cov provided by the world health organization [ , ] . all real time pcr protocols for influenza a and b followed those used by a previous study [ ] . samples from travelers displaying a fever were also tested by real time rt-pcr for human metapneumo virus (hmpv), human respiratory syncytial virus (hrsv), and human coronaviruses hku , e, and oc [ ] . according to the infection control and health quarantine rules at airports, the time taken between specimen collection and the reporting of results was within h. all real time rt-pcr results for mers-cov were negative. a total of influenza a and influenza b virus positive samples were detected from to (table ) . of these, the test results from participants with a fever indicated that samples were positive for influenza a, were hmpv positive, were hrsv positive, and participant was positive for each of hku , e, and oc . in addition, influenza a and influenza b positive samples were detected from nonsymptomatic travelers. no dual infections were detected. two hypotheses were tested: ( ) there is a significant difference in the positive and negative rates of influenza virus detection between hajj pilgrims with symptoms and those without. pearson's chi-square analysis indicated that there was a significant difference in the influenza virus detection rates between travelers with fever and those without symptoms (χ = . , p = . ). it is of interest, although of unclear significance, that none of the influenza b positive subjects were symptomatic. ( ) there is a significant difference in the rates of influenza (a and b) virus detection among the years , , and . the rates of influenza virus detection for the years , , and were . , . , and . %, respectively, and statistical analysis revealed that there was no significant difference in the rates of influenza virus detection among these three years (χ = . , p = . ). all participants with fever were followed up, and none of these individuals were admitted to hospital after days. in this study, we did not detect any cases of mers-cov infection but respiratory virus infections including influenza a and b, hmpv, hrsv, and human coronavirus were detected among hajj pilgrims returning to china. this result was consistent with the outcomes of similar studies of respiratory virus detection in hajj pilgrims in france, north india, egypt, ghana, saudi arabia, and the uk [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . regarding the detection of influenza viruses, these studies reported detection rates of . % in france (no vaccination) [ ] , % in north india ( % vaccination rate) [ ] , % in egypt ( % vaccination rate) [ ] , . % in ghana (vaccination rate unknown) [ ] , and % in the uk ( % vaccination rate) [ ] . in our study, all participants had been vaccinated against influenza virus, but . % tested positive for influenza virus infection. we are unable to measure the direct impact of influenza vaccination on the resistance of hajj pilgrims to influenza infection and further studies are required to understand the efficacy of the influenza vaccine among this population. however, increasing the rate of vaccination will help protect individuals, particularly those travelers that are most vulnerable to infection such as older adults and those that may be immunocompromised. a combination of vaccination and rapid antiviral treatment of symptomatic individuals currently offer the best strategy for the prevention and treatment of infections among hajj pilgrims. in this study, mers-cov was not detected in any of the upper respiratory swabs or sputum specimens tested. however, limiting the time taken for sample collection, the type of samples collected and the selection of participants can all affect the rates of positive detection. in previous studies, most samples were nasal swabs collected from strongly suspected symptomatic participants after they were under investigation in hospital [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . however, in our study, swabs were collected from both suspected and asymptomatic returning pilgrims immediately after their arrival at airports. our sampling design would therefore include some healthy pilgrims, thereby decreasing the rate of detection of respiratory virus infections. in addition, upper respiratory samples (nasopharyngeal swabs and sputum) have been demonstrated to have a lower mers-cov genome load than lower respiratory specimens such as tracheal aspirates and bronchoalveolar lavage specimens [ ] . this may also have limited the detection of mers-cov in our study. the findings from our study demonstrate the risk of influenza infection among travelers during mass gatherings, and confirming the need for effective surveillance of imported infectious diseases at entry points into china. the hajj pilgrimage provides a unique opportunity to test the effectiveness of different infectious disease preventive and detective measures that require a large sample size. continued annual monitoring of mers-cov, influenza viruses, and other respiratory viruses (such as human rhinovirus), is needed to increase our understanding of the epidemic patterns of respiratory virus infections among hajj pilgrims in china. world health organization. global alert and response (gar) middle east respiratory syndrome middle east respiratory syndrome hajj-associated viral respiratory infections: a systematic review high prevalence of common respiratory viruses and no evidence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in hajj pilgrims returning to ghana prevention of influenza at hajj: applications for mass gatherings the impact of co-infection of influenza a virus on the severity of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus world health organization statement on the tenth meeting of the ihr emergency committee concerning mers-cov characteristics of traveler with middle east respiratory syndrome assays for laboratory confirmation of noval human coronavirus (hcov-emc) infection detection of a novel human coronavirus by real-time reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction epidemiology of respiratory rna viruses in a cohort of hospitalized children in riyadh, saudi arabia cross-sectional survey and surveillance for influenza viruses and mers-cov among egyptian pilgrims returning from hajj during - . influenza other respir viruses influenza not mers cov among returning hajj and umrah pilgrims with respiratory illness lack of nasal carriage of novel corona virus (hcov-emc) in french hajj pilgrims returning from the hajj , despite a high rate of respiratory symptoms lack of mers coronavirus but prevalence of influenza virus in french pilgrims after viral respiratory infections at the hajj: comparison between uk and saudi pilgrims respiratory tract samples, viral load, and genome fraction yield in patients with middle east respiratory syndrome we wish to thank dr. dexin li for his extensive support and assistance with the study. all data generated or analyzed during this study are included in this published article.authors' contributions xm and fl carried out sample collection and drafted the manuscript. ll, lz, and lm extracted rna and collected clinical samples. aa, lw, wz, and py recorded the experimental data and collated the results tables. kh designed the study, edited the manuscript, and supervised the experiments. all authors read and approved the final manuscript. the study was conducted according to the protocol approved by the human research ethics committee, chinese academy of inspection and quarantine, in compliance with the provisions for human research in the helsinki declaration (es- / / hq). written informed consent was obtained from all participants. not applicable. the authors declare that they have no competing interests. springer nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. submit your next manuscript to biomed central and we will help you at every step: key: cord- -nvgz su authors: li, kun; mccray, paul b. title: development of a mouse-adapted mers coronavirus date: - - journal: mers coronavirus doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: nvgz su first identified in , middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) is a novel virus that can cause acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards), multiorgan failure, and death, with a case fatality rate of ~ %. an animal model that supports mers-cov infection and causes severe lung disease is useful to study pathogenesis and evaluate therapies and vaccines. the murine dipeptidyl peptidase (dpp ) protein is not a functional receptor for mers-cov; thus, mice are resistant to mers-cov infection. we generated human dpp knock-in (hdpp ki) mice by replacing exons – at the mouse dpp locus with exons – from the human dpp gene. the resultant human dpp ki mice are permissive to mers-cov (hcov-emc/ strain) infection but develop no disease. to generate a mouse model with associated morbidity and mortality from respiratory disease, we serially passaged hcov-emc/ strain in the lungs of young hdpp ki mice. after in vivo passages, an adapted virus clone was isolated and designated mers(ma) . . . this virus clone produced significantly higher titers than the parental clone in the lungs of hdpp ki mice and caused diffuse lung injury and a fatal respiratory infection. in this chapter, we will describe in detail the procedures used to mouse adapt mers-cov by serial passage of the virus in lungs. we also describe the methods used to isolate virus clones and characterize virus infection. middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) is a fatal respiratory illness that first appeared on the saudi arabian peninsula in mid- . it is caused by a novel betacoronavirus, mers coronavirus (mers-cov) [ ] . shortly after the identification of the virus, its receptor dipeptidyl peptidase (dpp ) was discovered [ ] . as of september , the world health organization (who) has reported laboratory-confirmed cases of mers in countries, including associated deaths (fatality rate: %). mers-cov does not currently have pandemic potential [ ] [ ] [ ] . however, mers-cov is still epidemic in the middle east and remains a cause for significant concern due to the potential spread by global travel as demonstrated by the outbreak in south korea in [ ] [ ] [ ] . to date, there are only two published reports on autopsy findings from subjects who died from mers [ , ] and our understanding of mers-cov pathogenesis in humans is still limited. animal models are useful for the study of viral diseases and play an important role in the investigation of pathogenesis and evaluation of antiviral therapies and vaccines. an ideal animal model should be permissive to the viral infection and develop disease and pathology with similarities to that observed in humans. mers-cov infection has been evaluated in two nonhuman primate (nhp) models, the rhesus macaque and common marmoset [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . both species are susceptible to mers-cov infection. however, mers-cov caused only a transient lower respiratory tract infection without mortality in rhesus macaques [ ] [ ] [ ] . in common marmosets, the consequences of mers-cov infection are controversial. falzarano et al. reported the common marmoset reproduced several features of mers-cov infection in humans including progressive severe pneumonia [ ] , while another group observed only mild to moderate nonlethal respiratory disease following mers-cov infection [ ] . thus, the common marmoset is potentially a model to study pathogenesis and evaluate antiviral therapies and vaccines. however, nhps are expensive, their availability limited, and their use may raise ethical concerns. in contrast, small animal models provide advantages over nhps, including reduced cost, availability in large numbers, ease of handling, and species-specific reagents, especially for the studies of highly pathogenic viruses like mers-cov in the biosafety level (bsl- ) laboratory. unfortunately, common small laboratory animals like mice [ , ] , ferrets [ ] , guinea pigs [ ] , and hamsters [ ] are not susceptible to mers-cov infection because their homologous dpp cannot be bound and utilized by mers-cov as a host receptor for entry [ , ] . haagmans et al. detected mers-cov rna in the respiratory tract of new zealand white rabbits following inoculation but found no clinical signs of disease [ ] . several strategies have been used to overcome this receptor incompatibility and develop mouse models of mers-cov infection. in , we developed the first mouse model of mers-cov infection [ ] . we delivered a recombinant adenovirus encoding human dpp (hdpp ) to the lungs of mice. transient expression of hdpp by adenovirus transduction made the mice temporarily permissive for mers-cov infection, but animals developed only mild lung disease. generation of transgenic mice expressing a virus receptor is a common strategy to make mice permissive to infection. several groups in addition to ours developed mice with transgenic expression of hdpp using different promoters [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the disease severity following mers-cov infection in transgenic mice correlated with the cellular distribution and expression level of hdpp . in transgenic mice expressing hdpp driven by the cytokeratin promoter [ ] or a ubiquitous promoter [ , , ] , mers-cov replicates and causes respiratory disease and mortality. however, the lethality was found to be secondary to overwhelming central nervous system (cns) disease or multiorgan damage. this was also observed in mice transgenic for human ace driven by the cytokeratin promoter and infected with sars-cov [ ] . in transgenic mice expressing hdpp under the human surfactant protein c (spc) promoter, which restricts expression to bronchiolar and alveolar epithelia, mers-cov infection caused only mild disease [ ] . thus, these transgenic mice do not reproduce a severe lung disease phenotype that resembles mers. alternative strategies for the creation of mouse models of mers-cov infection are generation of dpp humanized mice and adaptation of the virus to the animals. pascal et al. reported a model in which all of the mouse dpp exons had been humanized and also generated humanized monoclonal antibodies against the mers-cov s protein using a novel strategy [ ] . mers-cov infection in this model caused pulmonary edema, vascular cuffing, and alveolar septal thickening with an associated~ % weight loss, necessitating euthanasia [ ] . another mers mouse model was engineered by changing two amino acids in the mouse dpp locus using crispr-cas technology [ ] . this model supported mers-cov replication without severe disease. similarly, our human dpp knock-in mouse model supported mers-cov replication but did not lead to a severe lung disease phenotype [ ] . two mouse-adapted (ma) strains of mers-cov were subsequently developed independently by serial passage of the hcov-emc/ strain [ ] in the lungs of the two humanized mouse models [ , ] . the resultant mers- and mers ma . . mouse-adapted mers-cov strains replicated to high titers in the lungs of the crispr-cas genetically engineered mouse model and the hdpp knock-in mouse model, respectively. the respiratory disease that developed in both mouse models and the associated mortality shared similarities with severe cases of mers [ , ] . mouse adaptation was also successfully used to generate several sars-cov strains capable of modeling severe sars-cov lung disease in mice [ ] [ ] [ ] . thus, the adaption of the virus to enhance virulence in the mouse is a very useful approach to generate mouse models for coronavirus-associated lung disease. these materials can be altered to fit the requirements for other viruses of interest. . hcov-emc/ strain. . hdpp knock-in mouse (c bl/ strain with mouse dpp exons - replaced with the human codons). all procedures are performed under bsl- laboratory conditions and must follow the standard operating protocol of a bsl- facility and regulatory agencies. all manipulations of infectious specimens, samples, and mice must be performed within a biosafety cabinet or within a contained device such as a centrifuge. all tissue culture media and waste must be bleached and autoclaved prior to disposal. all instruments must be disinfected with virex plus or % bleach. . insert surgical scissors under the sternum and cut the diaphragm following the costal arch. remove the rib cage using scissors and forceps, exposing the lungs and heart. . fill a ml syringe with cold sterile dpbs using a g  / inch needle. insert the needle into the apex of the left ventricle and make a small incision in the right atrium. slowly perfuse ! ml cold sterile dpbs into the left ventricle. next, insert the needle into the apex of the right ventricle and perfuse ! ml cold sterile dpbs (see note ). . remove the lungs and heart from the thoracic cavity. remove the liver, kidney, spleen, and small intestine. place organs in a small polystyrene weighing dish. remove remaining connective tissue. . to harvest the brain, turn the mouse over and wet the fur of the head with % ethanol. grasp the ears with forceps and cut off the skin and fur to expose the skull. remove remaining skin at the base of the neck to further expose the skull. immobilize the mouse and make an incision along the sagittal suture of the skull using a single edge razor blade (see note ) . wedge one prong of the curved serrated forceps into the now opened sagittal suture. slowly pry up the skull, grasp the piece of skull with forceps and peel outward to remove. repeat on the other side. use curved forceps to lift the brain from the skull. place brain tissue in the small polystyrene weighing dish. . carefully place each organ into a ml disposable tissue grinder filled with ml sterile cold dpbs for homogenization or into ml of trizol for rna extraction (see note ). . grind the lung tissue and transfer the homogenates or rna samples into . ml sterile screw-top tubes with o-ring cap (see note ) . store samples at À c. thaw and spin down the cell debris in lung homogenates before use. the virulence of the virus should be evaluated in groups of mice by weight loss and survival after every - in vivo passages. after the virulence of the virus has been significantly enhanced, single plaques of the adapted virus should be purified and evaluated. . plate vero cells in d media in -well plates one day before infection. . rapidly thaw lung homogenates from the selected passage. mix the lung homogenates from two mice in a . ml sterile screwtop tube with o-ring cap on ice. . serially dilute the mixed lung homogenates tenfold in . ml sterile screw-top tubes with o-ring caps, using ice-cold serumfree dmem (see note ) . keep the dilutions on ice. . remove the medium from each well and add diluted samples (in a volume of μl) to each well. . place the plates in the c incubator for h and rotate gently every min. . melt % low melting point agarose and maintain in a c water bath. . mix overlay media and % low melting point agarose at a volume ratio of : . rotate the tube several times to fully mix. overlay cells with . ml of mixed media using ml stripettes. . let the plates sit in the hood for~ min at rt or until the agarose overlay turns solid. add . ml d medium on the top of solidified agarose. . place the plates in the c incubator. . after days, plaques should be visible. remove the liquid on the top of the agarose. circle the visible plaques on the underside of the plates using a permanent marker (see note ). . vertically penetrate the agarose and pipette the circled plaque several times with a ml graduated transfer pipette. the agarose above the plaque will be pulled into the pipette. . transfer the agarose above the plaque into a ml conical tube filled with μl dmem by pipetting up and down several times. . transfer the μl dmem containing the agarose into a . ml sterile screw-top tube with o-ring cap. . repeat the procedure and pick six single plaques. store the tubes at À c. . animal euthanasia should follow the institution's animal care and use guidelines. there may be differences in institutional requirements regarding when euthanasia is required based on weight loss. . use the lid of an insulated foam shipping box. cut absorbent bench underpad (  cm) into small pieces that fit the lid. . carefully keep the tip of the needle in the lumen of the ventricle. be sure to puncture the right atrium as this will help to drain blood during the perfusion. the lung will turn white after perfusion. . make sure that the incision does not exceed the thickness of the skull; avoid cutting into the brain tissue. . the individual organs can be divided into pieces and transferred to grinders with pbs or trizol separately. . lung homogenates are immediately transferred to tubes on ice. rna samples are transferred to a tube and incubated for at least min at room temperature per our bsl- specific standard operating procedures. . at days post infection with pfu/mouse, hcov-emc/ strain replicates in the lung of the hdpp ki mice to a titer of around  pfu/ml, which equals  pfu in μl. we chose the pfu/mouse inoculum to begin because we wanted to use a similar dose range during in vivo serial passage while skipping the titration step. . titrate the homogenates of the passage of interest and select a virus dilution that produces plaques in a well. this allows identification of individual clear single plaques. . only circle the unambiguous clear single plaques. . compared to vero cells, we found that the mers-cov rna genome is more stable when propagated in huh cells (less likely to introduce genomic deletions, insertions, or point mutations). isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia dipeptidyl peptidase is a functional receptor for the emerging human coronavirus-emc interhuman transmissibility of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: estimation of pandemic risk person-toperson spread of the mers coronavirus-an evolving picture the role of superspreading in middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) transmission spread of mers to south korea and china infectious diseases epidemic threats and mass gatherings: refocusing global attention on the continuing spread of the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) comparative epidemiology of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in saudi arabia and south korea clinicopathologic, immunohistochemical, and 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syndrome-coronavirus a human dpp -knockin mouse's susceptibility to infection by authentic and pseudotyped mers-cov lethal infection of k -hace mice infected with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus pre-and postexposure efficacy of fully human antibodies against spike protein in a novel humanized mouse model of mers-cov infection cd + t cells and macrophages regulate pathogenesis in a mouse model of middle east respiratory syndrome a mouse model for mers coronavirus-induced acute respiratory distress syndrome mouse-adapted mers coronavirus causes lethal lung disease in human dpp knockin mice a mouse-adapted sars-coronavirus causes disease and mortality in balb/c mice a new mouse-adapted strain of sars-cov as a lethal model for evaluating antiviral agents in vitro and in vivo molecular determinants of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus pathogenesis and virulence in young and aged mouse models of human disease we thank chris wohlford-lenane and jennifer bartlett for careful review of the manuscript. this work is supported by the national institutes of health p ai . we also acknowledge the support of the cell morphology core and pathology core, partially supported by the center for gene therapy for cystic fibrosis (national institutes of health p dk- ) and the cystic fibrosis foundation. p.b.m. is supported by the roy j. carver charitable trust. key: cord- - m psxri authors: park, hye yoon; park, wan beom; lee, so hee; kim, jeong lan; lee, jung jae; lee, haewoo; shin, hyoung-shik title: posttraumatic stress disorder and depression of survivors months after the outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome in south korea date: - - journal: bmc public health doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: m psxri background: the outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) in the republic of korea is a recent and representative occurrence of nationwide outbreaks of emerging infectious diseases (eids). in addition to physical symptoms, posttraumatic stress disorder (ptsd) and depression are common following outbreaks of eid. methods: the present study investigated the long-term mental health outcomes and related risk factors in survivors of mers. a prospective nationwide cohort study was conducted months after the mers outbreak at multi-centers throughout korea. ptsd and depression as the main mental health outcomes were assessed with the impact of event scale-revised korean version (ies-r-k) and the patient health questionnaire- (phq- ) respectively. results: . % of survivors reported ptsd (ies-r-k ≥ ) and . % reported depression (phq- ≥ ) at months post-mers. a multivariate analysis revealed that anxiety (adjusted odds ratio [aor], . ; %ci, . – . ; p = . ), and a greater recognition of stigma (aor, . , %ci, . – . ; p = . ) during the mers-affected period were independent predictors of ptsd at months after the mers outbreak. having a family member who died from mers predicted the development of depression (aor, . , %ci, . – . ; p = . ). conclusion: this finding implies that psychosocial factors, particularly during the outbreak phase, influenced the mental health of patients over a long-term period. mental health support among the infected subjects and efforts to reduce stigma may improve recovery from psychological distress in an eid outbreak. the outbreak of the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in the republic of korea had an enormous impact on medical, psychological, and social issues nationwide [ ] . the outbreak lasted from may to dec. and resulted in infected patients within the initial months, , officially isolated individuals, and an overall mortality of patients in a total of million population [ ] . acute infectious outbreaks of emerging infectious diseases (eids) are known to influence the physical as well as the mental health of affected patients, as observed during similar events such as the severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) outbreak [ ] , which was associated with such issues during the acute phase [ ] and the long-term follow-up phase [ , ] . % of survivors expressed anxiety or depressive symptoms at -month post-sars in hong kong where citizens were infected, and its fatality was . % [ ] . in ninety survivors' cohort study for months in hong kong, post-sars cumulative incidence of psychiatric disorders was . %. the most common diagnoses were ptsd ( . %) and depression ( . %) [ ] . few studies have investigated the psychological impact of the korean mers-cov outbreak, but a survey conducted during this period found that % of the general public reported worrying about being infected by mers-cov and that % of this population experienced psychological distress [ ] . another study reported that . % of isolated individuals exhibited anxiety symptoms and that . % of this group reported feelings of anger during the isolation period [ ] . in contrast, anxiety was present in . % of mers patients [ ] , which was more prevalent than the rate of anxiety in isolated people without the mers-cov infection. compared to patients with other diseases, those with eids may experience greater suffering in terms of the physical and psychiatric symptoms of the infectious illness itself [ ] ; extreme fear and anxiety due to their unfamiliarity with the disease, which may be lifethreatening [ ] ; abrupt isolation from family and society during the illness [ ] ; stigma due to the infectious disease [ ] ; the unexpected death of a family member; and/or social impairments [ ] . given that some factors, such as grief or stigma, may be persistent following the mers illness, the suffering of afflicted individuals may negatively influence recovery in their daily lives during the acute outbreak period as well as the post-mers period. studies of sars survivors in hong kong and china reported persistent psychological burdens, including post-traumatic stress disorder (ptsd), in over % of the survivors after years [ ] . however, no studies have investigated the mental health status of mers survivors. thus, the present study explored mental health issues and related factors in mers survivors months after the outbreak to determine the long-term psychological outcomes of this population. the present study was part of a prospective nationwide cohort study of mers survivors conducted at multicenters in the republic of korea. for purposes of this study, a mers survivor was defined as a patient who was diagnosed with the mers-cov infection and then completely recovered, as confirmed by the korean government during the outbreak. of mers survivors who were eligible, consented to participate in the study initially when they were contacted by phone and mail at months post-mers (fig. ). of these participants, survivors completed the -month assessment that consisted of medical tests between june and august . among them, participants provided consent to participate in the psychological assessments in five tertiary hospitals: national medical center, seoul national university hospital, chungnam national university hospital, seoul medical center, and dankook university hospital. all subjects were older than years of age at enrollment, voluntarily participated in the study, and answered the questionnaires independently. written informed consent was obtained from all subjects, and the study was approved by the institutional review board of each study hospital. all subjects responded to self-report questionnaires assessing sociodemographic characteristics, previous history of medical illness or psychiatric visit, illness experiences during the mers-cov infection period, and psychological features. questions about mers-related illness experiences solicited information regarding status during infection, duration of hospitalization, presence of pneumonia, whether a ventilator or extracorporeal membrane oxygenation was applied, and whether a family member died from mers. to determine psychological outcomes, ptsd was assessed with the impact of event scale-revised korean version (ies-r-k) [ , ] , and depression was evaluated with the patient health questionnaire- (phq- ) [ , ] . the ies-r-k is a -item scale that assesses symptoms of intrusion, avoidance and numbing, and hyperarousal related to a particular life-threatening event (i.e., mers-cov infection in the present study). each item is rated on a scale ranging from to , and a total score ≥ is considered to be clinically significant [ ] . the phq- is a nine-item scale that assesses depression based on the symptoms of major depressive disorder included in the diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders-fourth edition (dsm-iv) [ ] . significant depression is considered to be present when the total score is > [ ] . current suicidality was assessed with the suicidality module of the mini-international neuropsychiatric interview (k-mini) [ , ] , which is composed of six weighted items rated as 'yes' or 'no': wish for death (weight of ), wish for self-harm (weight of ), suicidal thoughts (weight of ), suicide plan (weight of ), suicide attempt in the past month (weight of ), and lifetime suicide attempt (weight of ). the suicidality score is the sum of the weighted score of the six items, and a total score ≥ is considered to be above moderate degree of risk. anxiety was assessed with the generalized anxiety disorder- (gad- ) scale, which consists of seven items rated using a four-point likert scoring system [ ] . a total score ≥ is considered to be significant. the phq- and the gad- were administered additionally at two points, before and during infection with mers-cov, based on participant recall. insomnia was evaluated with the korean version of the insomnia severity index (isi-k) [ ] , a five-item measure relying on a five-point scale that assesses current sleep problems and interference with daily functioning; clinical insomnia was considered to be present if the total score was ≥ . mers stigma was assessed with an adjusted version of the -item berger human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) stigma scale [ ] and the -item short version of the hiv stigma scale [ ] . this questionnaire contains eight items rated on a four-point likert-type scale that ranges from "strongly disagree" to "strongly agree" and assesses the four domains of stigma: personalized stigma, disclosure concerns, negative selfimage, and concerns with public attitudes; the cronbach's α in the present study was . . the present study also included the brief cope, which is a -item questionnaire that uses a four-point likert scale to measure three distinctive coping strategies: emotionfocused, problem-focused, and dysfunctional [ ] . the social support systems of participants were assessed with the medical outcome study social support survey (mos-sss) [ ] , which includes items that are scored on a scale from to and assesses emotional/information support, tangible support, positive social interactions, and affectionate support. to examine the impact of social support on mental health in a regression analysis, poor social support was defined as a mos-sss score lower than that of the th percentile for all participants. the sociodemographic characteristics, mers-related clinical characteristics, and mental health status of the participants are presented as both numerical values and percentages. the present study placed a particular focus on ptsd and depression, which were the two most prevalent problems months post-mers in the descriptive analysis. accordingly, the subjects were divided into two groups based on the presence of significant ptsd or depression. independent t-tests were conducted to compare the mental health status between the two groups (p < . , adjusted for multiple comparisons), a stepwise regression analysis was performed to identify independent risk factors for ptsd and depression at months after the mers outbreak, and a univariate analysis was used to identify potential mediating factors associated with ptsd/depression (p < . ). subsequently, a backward multivariate logistic regression analysis was performed using variables identified as significant in the univariate analysis (p < . ). although depression during mers and current mers stigma were significant in the univariate analysis, these variables were not entered into the multivariate regression analysis due to multicollinearity with anxiety during mers (r = . , p < . ) and mers stigma during mers (r = . , p < . ), respectively. all data were analyzed with spss for windows version . (ibm corp.; armonk, ny, usa) except for the multivariate logistic regression analysis, which was performed with stata version . (stata; college station, tx, usa). the demographic characteristics of the subjects are presented in table . although more male (n = , . %) than female subjects were included in the study, the age distribution was relatively even (mean age: . years, standard deviation [sd]: . ). of the subjects, . % had a history of a visit to a psychiatric clinic prior to the mers outbreak. the distribution of respondents at the point of mers-cov infection was as follows: patients, . %; healthcare providers, . %; caregivers, . %; and those visiting the patients in hospitals, . % ( table ). the median length of hospitalization was overall, % of the subjects had at least one symptom of ptsd, depression, suicidality, or insomnia that was significantly above the clinical threshold. the mean total score on the ies-r was . (sd = . ), and . % of the subjects had significant ptsd ( table ). the mean score on the phq- was . (sd = . ) before infection with mers-cov, . (sd = . ) during the infection, and . (sd = . ) at months after the initial infection. moreover, % of the subjects had depression at months post-mers. most subjects had a minimum risk of suicidality, but . % showed at least a moderate degree of suicidal risk. of the survivors, % reported significant insomnia at months after the mers outbreak. during mers and months post-mers, all domains of ptsd, anxiety, and depression were more severe, and the quality of life was worse in survivors with current ptsd or depression compared to those without ptsd or depression (p < . ) (table s ). however, anxiety and depression prior to mers did not significantly differ in either comparison. survivors with ptsd reported higher scores for negative coping strategies compared to those without ptsd (p = . ). univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses were performed to identify risk factors associated with ptsd or depression at months post-mers. the univariate analysis revealed that several factors were significantly associated with ptsd, including previous psychiatry history, having a family member who died from mers, depression and anxiety during the mersaffected period, greater perceived stigma currently and during the illness, and negative coping strategies (table s ) . depression was associated with gender, previous psychiatry history, anxiety before mers, having a family member who died from mers, and depression, anxiety, and greater stigma during the affected phase. neither the severity of mers nor complications, such as the development of pneumonia, use of a ventilator, or extracorporeal membrane oxygenation was associated with ptsd or depression. likewise, not having a spouse, living with a child, and poor social support were not associated with these outcomes. the multivariate logistic regression analysis revealed that previous psychiatric history (adjusted odds ratio [aor]: . , % confidence interval [ci]: . - . ; p = . ), anxiety (aor: . , % ci: . - . ; p = . ), and greater recognition of stigma (aor: . , % ci: . - . ; p = . ) during the mersaffected period were independent predictors of ptsd at months after mers (table ) . additionally, previous psychiatric history (aor: . , % ci: . - . ; p = . ) and having a family member who died from mers (aor: . , % ci: . - . ; p = . ) predicted the development of depression at this timepoint. the mers outbreak in is a noteworthy example of a national disaster that impacted most korean people. its early and rapid dissemination via hospitals concentrated in metropolitan areas [ ] , high fatality rate of nearly % [ ] , and unfamiliarity as a novel infectious disease [ ] may have led to high levels of anxiety and fear about being infected among the public and about death among affected people [ ] . the present findings confirmed high prevalence of mental health problems in survivors at the recovery phase after the outbreak. the prevalence of ptsd in survivors at months post-mers in the present study was comparable to the rate of . % observed in a study of sars survivors at months post-discharge from a hospital in singapore [ ] and higher or comparable to the rates of ptsd in patients with hiv ( - %), adult survivors of a human-made disaster ( - %) [ ] , and survivors of a stay in an intensive care unit ( - %) [ , ] . this indicates that an eid is not only a serious medical illness but also a psychologically traumatic experience for patients that can result in long-term psychological burdens. additionally, the result suggests that mental health adjusting for gender, presence of previous visit to psychiatric clinic, presence of a family member who died from mers, anxiety prior to mers (gad> = ), anxiety during mers (gad> = ), mers stigma during mers problems caused by an eid outbreak can continue for a long period. for example, another study showed that . % of sars survivors in hong kong still showed active psychiatric illnesses at years post-sars infection [ ] . furthermore, a second study demonstrated that % of chinese sars survivors still experienced ptsd at years post-sars [ ] . assuming that the experiences of the patients in the mers outbreak are similar in terms of eids, the mental health problems of the mers survivors in the present study may persist for longer than months. therefore, a study on mental health outcomes after months post-mers will be required. of the premorbid characteristics of the subjects, only a history of a visit to a psychiatric clinic was independently related to ptsd and depression at months post-mers, whereas demographic factors, such as gender, age, and level of education were not. on the other hand, high anxiety levels, perceived stigma about mers, and having a family member who died from mers predicted the development of ptsd or depression. these findings indicate that the psychological outcomes associated with an eid are mainly affected by factors during the outbreak period. furthermore, the presence of a physical illness prior to the mers-cov infection and the severity of mers were not associated with ptsd or depression. thus, psychosocial factors, rather than medical factors, may play an important role during mers-cov infection in terms of mental health status. these findings differ from those of a study investigating sars survivors at months post-infection, which found that the risk factors of ptsd included being female, the pre-sars presence of chronic medical illness, and the presence of complications caused by sars treatment [ ] . it is possible that the relatively small sample size of the present study was insufficient to statistically identify the influences of demographic characteristics and medical severity on adverse psychological outcomes. however, psychological burdens, such as widespread and extreme fear or feelings of isolation caused by mers [ ] , may have outweighed the possible contributions of these other factors. a previous report showing that only a history of mental disease and financial burden are related to anxiety in mers patients [ ] supports this assumption. the present findings suggest a need for appropriate psychosocial support during infectious outbreaks to reduce psychological distress in patients [ ] . therefore, healthcare professionals who treat these patients should be aware of the risk of developing adverse psychological outcomes during the acute stage of the illness as well as during the follow-up period. in particular, patients with a prior psychiatric history, high levels of psychological distress during the illness, or a negative perception about mers should be given more attention. interestingly, on our univariate analysis, we can assume that negative coping strategy such as denial, substance use, and selfblame may affect the development of ptsd. this relationship between negative coping style and ptsd is consistent with the previous findings in natural disaster and infectious disease [ , ] . it suggests that providing what is a useful coping strategy should be included in psychosocial support for survivors from eid. similarly, the governmental strategy for the management of eids should include psychosocial support based on group characteristics, risk factors, and severity of distress. the white paper, 'mers ,' issued by the korean government proposed that the national policy for eids should include content for "improving ethical problems and strengthening psychological support in eid control." [ ] the present findings suggest several considerations in this regard. in general, during the early outbreak phase, it is important that effective risk communication is incorporated into the overall strategy to reduce fear among the general public and quarantined people [ ] ; when developing such a strategy for this phase, it is also important to consider the ethical issues related to patients and quarantined people to minimize stigma [ ] . more specifically, due to the high prevalence of mental health problems, routine care for eid patients should include effective psychological support that reflects individual risk factors and the current level of distress. in fact, the central and local korean governments provided psychological support for quarantined people, patients, and families who had a member die from mers using designated public mental health care centers and telephone counseling during the outbreak [ ] . the core value associated with this program was adequate public accessibility; indeed, rather than rely on the passive provision of information, the program was implemented in a proactive manner [ ] . in addition, we should pay attention to stigma as a risk factor amenable to change rather than other psychosocial variables for ptsd in the study. in eid outbreak, the perspective is easily made that an infected patient is regarded as a dangerous vector or perpetrator to spread virus who should be isolated from the society [ ] . it can be maintained even after the outbreak [ ] . the stigma may produce discrimination and exclusion from a community regardless of medical indications. it would significantly threaten a patient's mental health and social relationship. consequently, their life could be influenced in a variety of domains such as residence, occupation and the use of healthcare for a long time [ ] . this study showed that reducing stigma can be an effective strategy to ameliorate psychological consequence after an eid. media and government should respect a patient or quarantined people as a citizen who are suffering and be sensitive to words or actions that might stigmatize a specific person or group. a community and healthcare service need to provide active support for an isolated patient to relieve their burden from the stigma [ ] . the present study has several limitations that should be noted. because this study assessed only % of the overall mers survivors, the results may not reflect the status of all survivors. however, the distributions of the demographic data on age, gender, and area of residence in the present study were similar to those in the official reports for all mers patients [ ] . second, psychological distress and stigma during the pre-mers period and during the mers-cov infection were evaluated based on participant recall and may not accurately represent the actual status of the subjects. additionally, the relatively small sample size may have limited the ability to identify risk factors due to low statistical power. however, given that . % of patients reported anxiety using the same scale in a previous study conducted during the isolation period [ ] , it can be assumed that the subjects in the present study were not likely to overestimate their symptoms during recall. finally, we assessed only with self-questionnaire that could be considered less accurate than the ratings of a clinician. our study showed that nearly half the assessed mers survivors experienced significant mental health problems, including ptsd and depression, at months post-mers. mers-specific psychosocial distress may influence long-term psychological sequelae. thus, efforts to control eids should include all levels of government and involve the implementation of effective strategies to reduce fear and stigma among the public; they should also enable the provision of adequate psychological support and hospital care for infected people. supplementary information accompanies this paper at https://doi.org/ . /s - 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amoy gardens stress and health: major findings and policy implications publisher's note springer nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations we would like to acknowledge all the participants and researchers in the cohort study for mers survivors.authors' contributions shl and hss coordinated the overall study. hyp, shl, jlk, jjl, hl, and hss were involved in the concept and the design of the study. hyp and shl undertook the statistical analysis and drafted the manuscript. hyp, wbp, shl, jlk, jjl, hl, and hss contributed to the acquisition and the interpretation of the data, revised the manuscript and approved the article of its final version. the study was supported by a grant of the korea health technology r&d project through the korea health industry development institute (khidi), funded by the ministry of health and welfare, republic of korea (hi c ) and a grant from the korean mental health technology r&d project, ministry of health & welfare, republic of korea (hl c ). the funding bodies were not involved in the design of the study and collection, analysis, and interpretation of data and in writing the manuscript. the data obtained from the current study are not publicly available due to the sensitive nature of the study. not applicable. the authors declare that they have no competing interests. key: cord- - ub j x authors: bleibtreu, a.; bertine, m.; bertin, c.; houhou-fidouh, n.; visseaux, b. title: focus on middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) date: - - journal: med mal infect doi: . /j.medmal. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ub j x since the first case of human infection by the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in saudi arabia in june , more than cases of confirmed mers-cov infection and related deaths have been reported since the th of october . the vast majority of these cases ( %) were reported in saudi arabia but the epidemic has now spread to countries and has not ceased years later, unlike sars-cov that disappeared a little less than years after emerging. due to the high fatality rate observed in mers-cov infected patients ( %), much effort has been put into understanding the origin and pathophysiology of this novel coronavirus to prevent it from becoming endemic in humans. this review focuses in particular on the origin, epidemiology and clinical manifestations of mers-cov, as well as the diagnosis and treatment of infected patients. the experience gained over recent years on how to manage the different risks related to this kind of epidemic will be key to being prepared for future outbreaks of communicable disease. the first case of infection attributed to middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) was detected in saudi arabia in june [ ] . mers-cov then spread to several neighboring countries, mainly jordan and qatar (see fig. ), and imported cases of the disease were reported throughout the world in asia, africa, europe and the americas [ ] . by the th of october , con- the first two coronaviruses demonstrated to cause respiratory infections in humans, the coronaviruses e and oc , were identified in the s. they were held responsible for respiratory infections of moderate severity in humans. despite these viruses being identified in several reports as causing lower respiratory tract infections, it was generally accepted that coronaviruses were of low pathogenicity until the emergence of sars-cov (severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus) in , a virus with a fatality rate estimated at %. the sars outbreak that resulted in more than cases was finally contained two years later, in , and the virus has not been detected again since [ ] . there was renewed interest in coronavirus research following the sars epidemic, and two novel endemic human coronaviruses were identified, nl and hku respectively in and , but could not be replicated in cell culture. both of these new viruses were responsible for respira-tory infections of moderate seriousness like the coronaviruses e and oc . great effort has been made to identify coronaviruses in animal populations, both before and after the sars outbreak, in order to better understand and control the risk of animal-to-human transmission. this resulted in the discovery of coronaviruses in numerous animal species, with a few exceptions such as sheep and goats, fish and non-human primates [ ] . the first case of mers-cov infection was reported in jeddah, saudi arabia, in june [ ] . the patient, a -year-old man, died from lung and kidney failure days after being admitted to hospital. very shortly afterwards, in september , a second patient was admitted to hospital in the united kingdom for severe respiratory infection related to a novel coronavirus following travel to the middle east. the new virus was found to replicate in a tissue culture model and was rapidly isolated and identified for both cases [ , ] . retrospectively, other cases of the disease were found to have occurred before the aforementioned cases: in april , an outbreak at zarqa hospital in jordan affected the staff of the intensive care unit, with two fatal cases. the respiratory samples collected were later confirmed to be positive for mers-cov [ ] . these initial cases were rapidly followed by a series of outbreaks in all saudi arabian provinces that were characterized by the infection of health professionals in direct contact with the patients. other similar outbreaks were observed in several neighboring countries: qatar, bahrain, kuwait, jordan and tunisia. health authorities reacted quickly to the reports of these epidemics and the strong resemblance with observed clinical features of sars-cov infections. indeed, although a few patients developed mild infections, the fatality rate for patients infected with mers-cov was over % [ ] . following the identification of mers-cov, great effort was put into finding which animal species it originated from in order to stop the further spread of the disease to humans. mers-cov was very rapidly determined to be genotypically closely related to the betacoronavirus lineage c viruses identified in bats [ ] . based on these findings, and the major role of bats in the genetic diversity and spread of coronaviruses, much of the initial work aiming at finding the natural reservoir of mers-cov focused on bats. however, no conclusive evidence demonstrating that bats were the natural reservoir of mers-cov in the arabian peninsula were found, despite the identification of closely related viruses in bats in sub-saharan africa [ ] , far from the existing outbreaks. very strong epidemiological links were identified between the human cases and camels and resulted in the isolation in camels of viruses that were directly related to mers-cov and that could replicate in cultured human cells [ ] . the investigation of dromedary camel serum collections, some of which collected as early as , demonstrated that the virus was already widespread (seropositivity rate > %) in the east african countries (somalia, sudan and egypt). these countries export dromedary camels to arabian countries, but also in kenya, nigeria, tunisia, ethiopia, burkina faso and morocco [ ] [ ] [ ] . phylogenetic analysis revealed distinct coronavirus lineages in dromedary camels, including one recombinant lineage that led to the mers-cov epidemic in humans [ ] . mers-cov is a betacoronavirus belonging to lineage c. it is an enveloped virus with a positive-sense single-stranded rna genome of about kb. under electron microscopy, virions are generally spherical with surface projections (spikes) formed by the surface protein s creating an image reminiscent of a crown or solar corona. the positive-sense single-stranded rna genome acts as messenger rna (mrna) with a cap and a polyadenylated tail. it plays three roles during the host cell cycle: (i) it acts as the initial rna molecule for the infection cycle; (ii) it is the template for replication and transcription; (iii) it is the substrate that is packaged into the newly assembled viral particles [ ] . the mers-cov genome is organized in the same way as other coronavirus species. the first two thirds of the mers-cov genome contain two overlapping reading frames (orf a and orf b) that translate into the replication-transcription complex including non-structural proteins. the remaining third of the genome encodes the four structural proteins, the spike (s), envelop (e), membrane (m) and nucleocapsid (n) proteins, as well as five accessory proteins (orf , orf a, orf b, orf and orf b) that are not required for genome replication but are probably involved in virulence. the flanking sequences, on both ends of the genome, contain untranslated and regions (utr) (fig. ) [ ] . the viral particle can enter the cell in two ways, which probably contribute to the broad tissue tropism of this virus that replicates mainly in respiratory epithelial cells but can also infect many other cell types. via the endosomal pathway, the s domain of the mers-cov spike protein (s) binds its receptor, dipeptidyl peptidase (dpp ) [ ] , induces endocytosis of the viral particle and a change in the conformation of the s subunit of the s protein that then mediates virus-host membrane fusion and uncoating of virus rna. mers-cov can also enter host cells via a non-endosomal mechanism by direct fusion of the virus with the plasma membrane following s protein cleavage by human proteases [ ] . following entry into the cytoplasm and uncoating of the virus nucleocapsid, the viral genomic rna is translated to produce two polypeptides, pp a and pp b, that form the replicase-transcriptase complex. this initial replicase-transcriptase complex uses the genomic rna to produce non-structural proteins that assemble into the replication complex. the replication complex then replicates the genomic rna and produces other subgenomic rnas that ensure the translation of the structural proteins. virions are assembled at the endoplasmic reticulum membrane as viral proteins and genomic rna are grouped together and then bud into the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum. the virions are then exported via the secretory pathway of the endoplasmic reticulum into the golgi intermediate compartment and then into the extracellular environment. the m protein drives the packaging process by selecting and organizing the viral envelop components at the assembly sites and interacting with the nucleocapsid to allow budding [ ] . several large serology studies suggest that cases of asymptomatic or mild mers-cov infection occur regularly, although infrequently. the importance of such cases is difficult to assess [ ] . it is therefore difficult to determine whether these cases are due to or take part in human-to-human transmission. several studies suggest that less than % of infected patients transmit the virus to individuals they come into contact with, even at the beginning of an outbreak [ ] . the disease therefore seems to spread due to frequent animal-to-human transmission, from camels to humans, with limited subsequent human-to-human transmissions [ ] . there are unfortunately exceptions to this observation and local outbreaks caused by human-to-human transmission have been observed on a regular basis, mostly in hospitals. to date, the most poignant example is the outbreak that occurred in south korea in which the index case caused secondary cases, among whom were care providers, leading to fatalities [ ] . this outbreak was characterized by the key role of a few "super spreaders", delayed diagnosis, high doctor shopping behavior and the importance of confined spaces (waiting room, hospital room, ambulance). in this example, the resemblance with sars-cov's spreading mechanisms is striking, despite lower degrees of transmission to care providers for mers-cov [ ] . these regular cases of imported-mers, the most recent was reported in england in august [ ] , represent a real threat of local epidemics outside saudi arabia and special screening and isolation procedures need to be implemented in units likely to receive patients suspected of mers-cov infections. when possible, the first measure to be taken is to delay departure, in particular for individuals over or with chronic disease, and for pregnant women or children. such measures are nevertheless challenging to maintain today as that the virus is still present years after its apparition. all other preventive measures aim at preventing both animalto-human transmission and human-to-human transmission. it is therefore recommended to avoid any contact with domestic animals (firstly dromedary camels), their secretions, raw milk and insufficiently cooked meat. it is also advised to avoid eating fruit and vegetables that might have been in contact with animal secretions if not washed and peeled by oneself. to avoid human-to-human transmission, the usual recommendations for preventing the spread of any respiratory virus should be applied: hand washing with soapy water or an alcohol-based solution, covering one's nose and mouth when sneezing, refraining from shaking hands and touching one's mouth and nose with one's hands, avoiding contact with people with respiratory symptoms. finally, a last series of recommendations focus on how to behave in case of suspicious symptoms: (i) consult a doctor as soon as symptoms occur during travel and delay the return until symptoms disappear; (ii) if symptoms occur with days of returning home, consult a doctor and tell him/her about the recent travel [ ] . pcr-based detection methods are currently the preferred option for detecting the virus in respiratory samples and making a diagnosis of mers-cov infection. serology tests can also be performed and are often used for second-line diagnostic investigation in patients with a high suspicion of mers-cov but negative results by direct pcr testing. various respiratory matrices can be used: nasopharyngeal swabs, nasopharyngeal or tracheal aspirates, bronchoalveolar lavage (bal), and even in some cases, induced sputum. the deepest samples, tracheal aspirates and bals, show the greatest sensitivity and significantly higher viral loads [ ] . the genome amplification and detection methods used (pcr) were initially mostly developed in situ and performed in biosafety level (bsl- ) reference facilities. the time to results is generally relatively long, - h, due to the usual time required for conventional pcr testing to which must be added the additional preparation and sample neutralization time needed to protect the laboratory staff against this virus. the pcr methods used are generally semi-quantitative and some studies suggest a correlation between the amount of virus detected and the severity of the symptoms [ ] . nevertheless, no consensus has been reached yet regarding a threshold level that could actually predicts clinical severity. targeting the envelop gene upe is recommended with confirmatory testing for orf a or b or the n gene. if results diverge, sequencing is sometimes required to obtain conclusive results [ ] . today, an increasing number of commercial tests are becoming available (altona diagnostics, fast track diagnostics, primerdesing ltd.) some even with a time to results of less than hour (biofire-biomérieux). some of these tests are point-of-care, or can be performed in bsl facilities or a standard laboratory following sample neutralization in a bsl facility. these commercial tests must always be validated before use to check their sensitivity and compare their performance with reference methods. as with any other acute viral infection, antibodies can only generally be detected about days after the onset of symptoms. in some patients, especially those with severe infections, the time interval to antibody detection may be even longer [ ] . serological testing is therefore of little help for the initial diagnosis of symptomatic patients, but can be useful for epidemiological investigations. the highly immunogenic s and n viral proteins are widely used targets for serological tests and are found on all coronaviruses. various approaches have been developed: serum neutralization assays [ ] , microarrays [ ] , or more recently elisa confirmed by a microneutralization test [ ] . all methods are technically complex and require a high level of expertise that restrict their use to a few highly specialized facilities. the first cases of infection with mers-cov were reported in [ ] . hospital-acquired mers-cov infections have been described worldwide and represented a third of all cases reported in saudi arabia in the early stages of the epidemic [ , , ] . clustered hospital-acquired infections were frequently observed during the first outbreaks and probably contributed to spreading the disease from the primary site of virus infection to the whole arabian peninsula, the most striking example of hospital-acquired outbreak being the korean outbreak in [ ] . care providers are often affected and represent - % of cases [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . most of the cases are described in middle east countries, in particular saudi arabia ( %), with a predominance of male patients ( - % in various studies) and a mean patient age ranging from to years [ , , ] . comorbidities are found in - . % of patients, in particular diabetes and high blood pressure, followed by other heart conditions and finally obesity [ , , , ] . the mean incubation time is to . days. the generation interval (time between the onset of symptoms of the first case and those of the second case) is . days, which is identical to that of the respiratory syncytial virus (rsv) but threefold more than the influenza virus [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] . the main challenge of mers-cov infection is the absence of specific clinical features for differential diagnosis with other viral respiratory diseases [ , ] . this difficulty, combined with precautionary action taken to avoid potential secondary contamination with mers-cov [ ] , can result in medical confusion and inappropriate patient management due to prolonged, difficult isolation that makes it impossible to perform the necessary complementary tests while waiting for pcr results [ ] . the clinical features of mers-cov infection are extremely variable, ranging from an absence of symptoms ( - % of cases) to a flu-like syndrome, pneumonia and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards) [ , ] . the three most frequent symptoms are: fever ( % [iqr: - ]), cough ( % [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] ), and dyspnea ( % ). many other secondary symptoms have been reported, such as sputum production ( %), odynophagia ( %), digestive system signs ( %), hemoptysis ( . %), myalgia ( %) and headache ( %) [ , , , ] . diarrhea is significantly more frequent in patients infected with mers-cov than in patients with another acute, febrile respiratory conditions [ ] . severe mers is characterized predominantly by ards, acute kidney failure, and in the most severe cases, by multiple organ failure that can be fatal [ , ] . one third of patients develop pneumonia and % develop ards [ ] . the median time to respiratory failure is days after the onset of symptoms. depending on studies, to % of hospitalized patients are admitted to an intensive care unit (icu) [ , ] . since the first mers outbreak, who had documented, in october , cases of mers-cov infection confirmed by laboratory testing and related deaths in different countries. the retrospective fatality rate varies between outbreaks, ranging from . to % [ , , , , ] . the mortality rate of . % observed for the korean outbreak is probably the most reliable epidemiologically due to the comprehensive investigations carried out [ ] . the death rate is highest among patients admitted to an icu, ranging from % to % [ , ] . in the only cohort study performed in saudi arabia, the fatality rate for mers-cov patients was of only % ( / ). however, the patients of this cohort were younger, had less symptoms, showed less radiological features and only % were admitted to an icu [ ] . the findings of the latter study diverge therefore with the situations observed in other hospitals, but are perhaps a better reflection of the infection profile in the general population in which younger subjects are less symptomatic and therefore less frequently admitted to hospital. the time interval between the onset of symptoms and death ranges from . to days [ , , ] . finally, co-infection with other respiratory viruses, in particular influenza, has been described although the impact of such combined infections have not been evaluated [ , ] . co-infections with bacteria have also been reported in the patients developing the most severe disease [ , ] . there are no specific laboratory findings related to mers-cov infection. nevertheless in patients with acute respiratory infection in mers-endemic areas, mers-cov infections have been associated with normal leukocyte and/or polymorphonuclear neutrophil counts but elevated transaminases [ , ] . moreover, hyperleukocytosis, lymphocytopenia, thrombocytopenia, hypoalbuminemia, elevated serum creatinine, ldh and crp levels, and hypoxemia (pao /fio < ) have been repeated reported in mers-cov infected patients and are associated with severity and death [ , ] . imaging (chest x-ray and sometimes chest ct) has revealed infection-related features in - % of cases. the lesions observed are uni-or multi-focal ground glass opacifications, of subpleural and lower lobe predominance, with sometimes bilateral bi-basal involvement or features of organizing pneumonia [ , , , ] . mortality is highest in elderly, male patients with comorbidities, especially diabetes [ , , ] . patients from saudi arabia and the middle east have an increased mortality rate compared with patients from korea or other countries [ , ] . in contrast, being a medical professional significantly reduces the risk of mortality [ , ] . other factors associated with a higher mortality risk have been described in various studies: digestive symptoms, prolonged delay between the onset of symptoms and admission to hospital, smoking, low blood pressure, impaired gas exchange, leukopenia, anemia, disturbance of liver or kidney function, use of mechanical ventilation and prolonged stay in the icu [ , ] . for the korean outbreak in , the independent risk factors for mortality were: age > years, dyspnea, diabetes, chronic lung disease, systolic blood pressure at admission < mmhg, hyperleukocytosis at admission (> , /mm ) and the use of mechanical ventilation [ ] . positive pcr results for mers-cov in blood at diagnosis are associated with an increased risk of requiring mechanical ventilation, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ecmo) or to lead to death [ , ] . the lack or delayed detection of mers antibodies (elisa igg and iga, or prnt) in the blood or airways is a poor prognostic factor [ , ] . it should however be noted that no seroconversion is observed in asymptomatic mers-infected patients [ ] . finally, the mers-cov viral loads in distal lung samples were higher among deceased patients [ ] . in a study including patients in a tertiary referral hospital in south korea: • the predictive factors for pneumonia in mers-cov patients were: age > years, body temperature > . • c on day , platelet counts < , /mm , lymphocytopenia (< /mm ), crp ≥ mg/l and high viral loads (ct value < . ); • the predictive factors for respiratory failure were male sex, high blood pressure, thrombocytopenia, lymphocytopenia, hypoalbuminemia < g/l and crp ≥ mg/l. the patients with at least two, one and none of the predictive pneumonia factors developed pneumonia in %, % and % of cases, respectively [ ] . several therapeutic options targeting various viral elements are currently available or under development (fig. ) [ ] . the different classes of available treatment are (i) immunotherapy with specific anti-mers-cov antibodies, (ii) molecules with antiviral activity, (iii) symptomatic treatment. few molecules have shown real curative action and the reports in the literature generally describe isolated cases or small series of cases. more studies have focused on associated treatment and supportive care. at this time, preventive therapies are still in preclinical stages. the efficacy and safety of plasma from convalescent patients have not been assessed. three separate reports concluded that such therapeutic approaches were inappropriate [ ] . one trial is listed on www.clinicaltrials.gov. two cases of therapy with intravenous polyclonal iggs have been reported. in one of them, the iggs originated from donors in regions negative for mers specific antibodies. several monoclonal antibodies were tested and seemed to show anti-mers-cov activity in vitro [ ] . no clinical trials are currently underway. recently, a phase i placebo-controlled, dose escalation study evaluated the efficacy of polyclonal iggs produced by transchromosomal cattle with human immunoglobulin genes immunized with the mers-cov spike (s) protein [ ] . the primary outcome of tolerance to a single dose was reached. the secondary pharmacodynamic endpoint (serum neutralization activity) showed efficacy with a dose of mg/kg. no phase ii trials are currently underway. a phase i study has been registered to assess the immunogenicity and tolerance of a combination of two monoclonal anti-mers-cov antibodies. the study has not yet started recruiting patients. infection with mers-cov reduces the host's interferon response. mers-cov is times more sensitive to ifn-␣. treatment with ifn-␣ has been reported for many clinical cases and several retrospective cohort studies have been performed, in combination with ribavirin, lopinavir or mycophenolate mofetil (mmf). none of these studies have demonstrated increased overall survival. one study reported increased survival at d but not at d for critically ill intubated and ventilated patients [ ] . a ifn/mmf combination trial is currently underway (see below). high doses of ribavirin have shown anti-mers-cov activity in vitro. ribavirin has been used to treat patients in saudi arabia as well as in france for the most severe cases managed in icus [ ] . no significant effects were demonstrated either on the mortality rate or the time spent in the icu. ritonavir-boosted lopinavir has shown efficacy against mers-cov in vitro. as a result, the fda has extended the indications of lopinavir to patients infected with mers-cov. two case reports (in greece and korea) have described improvement in patients treated with lopinavir, type interferon and ribavirin [ ] . a phase ii-iii clinical trial is registered on clinicaltrials.gov. the aim of this study is to evaluate the feasibility, efficacy and safety of the combination lopinavir/ritonavir/recombinant ifn␤- b vs. a placebo in patients with confirmed mers receiving optimal symptomatic care. chloroquine is among the molecules approved by the fda following in vitro studies. no clinical data or studies support its use in vivo at the present time. in vitro, anti-mers-cov activity has been demonstrated for doses of nitazoxamide that could be reached with two daily oral doses. no clinical data or studies support its use in vivo at the present time [ ] . in vitro, anti-mers-cov activity has been demonstrated for doses of mmf that are acceptable for use in humans. mmf seems to show a synergistic effect with ifn-␤ b in vitro [ ] . but in a non human primate common marmosets model, animals treated with mmf developed more severe lesions and showed a higher case fatality rate compared with untreated animals [ ] . in contrast with animal model, the combination ifn-␤ b/mmf was administered to patients in saudi arabia. all the patients survived but had lower apache ii scores that other patient groups [ ] . alisporivir has been shown to provide additive in vitro anti-mers-cov activity when used in combination with ribavirin. no clinical data or studies support its use in vivo at the present time [ ] . silvestrol is a molecule of the flavagline family found in plants. it binds to eif a and enhances the affinity of eif a for mrna. this blocks helicase activity and inhibits protein translation. a recent in vitro study demonstrated that silvestrol has anti-mers-cov activity [ ] . no clinical data or studies support its use in vivo at the present time. corticosteroid therapy is currently the most widely studied therapeutic option. in a retrospective study, arabi et al. [ ] compared the outcome of patients with confirmed mers-cov infection managed in an icu setting and treated with ( ) or without ( ) corticosteroid therapy. the overall fatality rate was %. univariate analysis showed that mortality in the icu, during the hospital stay or at days was higher in the corticosteroid group. then, following adjustment using a marginal structural model for causal inference, corticosteroid therapy was shown not to be associated with mortality, but delayed virus clearance. these findings, together with the absence of any description of the adverse effects caused by corticosteroid treatment, argue against the use of corticosteroids. a retrospective study was recently carried out in saudi arabia in mers-cov patients with refractory respiratory failure [ ] . the patients were included in the study from to in five icus. the study consisted of two patient groups: ecmo versus conventional treatment. the primary endpoint was inhospital mortality. secondary endpoints included the length of stay in the icu and in hospital. thirty-five patients were included: were treated with ecmo and received conventional care. both groups had similar baseline characteristics. inhospital mortality was lower in the ecmo group ( vs. %; p = . ) although they stayed longer in the icu (median stay of days vs. days; p < . ). the overall time in hospital was similar in both groups (median stay of vs. days; p = . ). in addition, patients in the ecmo group showed improved pao /fio values at and days after admission into the icu ( vs. , and vs. , respectively; p < . ), and lower levels of vasoactive amines at d and d ( vs. %, and vs. %, respectively; p < . ). the results of this study support the use of ecmo as salvage treatment for mers patients with respiratory failure, as is the case for other respiratory infections. two trials with candidate vaccines are currently registered at https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct /home. a phase-i clinical trial on healthy volunteers was set up to evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of a plasmid dna vaccine (gls- ) that expresses the s protein of mers-cov. this trial was planned to last one year and started in . no results are available yet. a second phase-i trial was started by oxford university in january . it uses a chimpanzee adenovirus vector containing the mers-cov s protein gene [ ] . patient inclusion is currently underway. many other candidate vaccines using various different technologies are at a less advanced stage of development. the mers epidemic started in . in contrast with sars-cov that disappeared years after it first appeared, mers-cov continues to persist in the middle east years later. although the disease has not become pandemic, outbreaks have occurred worldwide. today, it is impossible to predict with certainty whether mers-cov will disappear or continue to remain a threat for human populations. efficient vaccine development for host ani-mals and humans could play a key role in tilting the balance from potentially-pandemic to mers-cov elimination. furthermore, the epidemiological and viral determinants of the emergence of mers-cov in the middle east are difficult to comprehend, due to the high seropositivity rate of african dromedary camels but no similar disease in local human populations. the constant increase of transcontinental travel, in particular towards the main focal points of mers outbreaks with religious pilgrimages and mass tourism, raises the problem of the management of patients suspected of mers-cov infection and the absence of efficient treatment options to this date. the main problem in non-epidemic countries is to detect a mers-cov case among a great number of non-mers patients. in france, with the exception of the first cases, no further cases have been detected. the current strategy is to isolate any suspicious cases as rapidly as possible to contain the infection and prevent local outbreaks as seen in south korea. the ability to rapidly test patients 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study a review of treatment modalities for middle east respiratory syndrome corticosteroid therapy for critically ill patients with the middle east respiratory syndrome virological and serological analysis of a recent middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection case on a triple combination antiviral regimen nitazoxanide, a new drug candidate for the treatment of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus treatment with lopinavir/ritonavir or interferon-( b improves outcome of mers-cov infection in a nonhuman primate model of common marmoset treatment outcomes for patients with middle eastern respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers cov) infection at a coronavirus referral center in the kingdom of saudi arabia alisporivir inhibits mers-and sars-coronavirus replication in cell culture, but not sars-coronavirus infection in a mouse model broad-spectrum antiviral activity of the eif a inhibitor silvestrol against corona-and picornaviruses extracorporeal membrane oxygenation for severe middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus chadox and mva based vaccine candidates against mers-cov elicit neutralising antibodies and cellular immune responses in mice the chapters on the origin, emergence, structure, transmission mechanisms, prevention and diagnostic methods were mainly written mb, nh, and bv.bv produced the figures. the chapters on clinical presentation, prognosis and available treatment options were mainly written by ab and cb.all authors read, amended and agreed with the entire final manuscript. key: cord- -gxwk jq authors: wenling, yao; junchao, qiu; xiao, zhirong; ouyang, shi title: pregnancy and covid- : management and challenges date: - - journal: revista do instituto de medicina tropical de sao paulo doi: . /s - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: gxwk jq the consequences of covid- infecting pregnant women and the potential risks of vertical transmission have become a major issue. since little is currently known about covid- in pregnancy, the understanding of covid- in this particular group will be updated in time, and a comprehensive review will be useful to evaluate the impact of covid- in pregnancy. based on recently published literature and official documents, this review provides an introduction to the pathogenesis, pathology, and clinical features of covid- and has focused on the current researches on clinical features, pregnancy outcomes and placental histopathological analysis from pregnant women infected with sars-cov- in comparison with sars-cov and mers-cov. these viruses trigger a cytokine storm in the body, produce a series of immune responses, and cause changes in peripheral leukocytes and immune system cells leading to pregnancy complications that may be associated with viral infections. the expression of ace receptors in the vascular endothelium may explain the histological changes of placentas from pregnant women infected by sars-cov- . pregnant women with covid- pneumonia show similar clinical characteristics compared with non-pregnant counterparts. although there is no unequivocal evidence to support the fetal infection by intrauterine vertical transmission of sars, mers and sars-cov- so far, more and more articles began to report maternal deaths due to covid- . in particular, from february , (date of the first covid- case reported in brazil) until june , , brazil reported maternal deaths. therefore, pregnant women and neonates require special attention regarding the prevention, diagnosis and management of covid- . a series of a new coronavirus pneumonia (ncp), whose pathogen is the novel coronavirus ( -ncov) was officially recognized by the world health organization on february , and the disease was called covid- . meanwhile, the international committee on taxonomy of viruses named the novel coronavirus as sars-cov- . at : a.m. on march , , a total of , confirmed cases and , deaths had been reported in china, with a case fatality rate of . %, while there were , confirmed cases and , deaths worldwide, with a case fatality rate of about . % . furthermore, the epidemic had a tendency to spread around the world. therefore, the who has raised the global risk of the covid- epidemic to the highest level (very high). together with the other two highly pathogenic coronaviruses, the sars-cov and mers-cov, sars-cov- poses a global threat to public health. pregnant women are particularly vulnerable to respiratory pathogens and severe pneumonia due to physiological and immunological changes, such as altered t lymphocyte immunity, increased oxygen consumption, decreased functional residual capacity and decreased chest compliance, which may result in higher maternal and fetal morbidity and mortality . furthermore, pregnant women with pneumonia have a significantly higher risk of giving birth to low birth weight, as well as preterm and, small for gestational age infants, with low apgar scores, born by cesarean section, whose mothers presented with preeclampsia/ eclampsia more often than uninfected women . however, there is still insufficient data to evaluate the impact of covid- on pregnant women. considering that sars-cov- , sars-cov, and mers-cov are all β-coronaviruses, and their genomes, pathogenesis and clinical symptoms have certain similarities, this article draws lessons from previous studies on sars-cov and mers-cov infecting pregnant women to predict the impact of sars-cov- on pregnant women and fetuses and make some suggestions. the functional receptor for sars-cov is the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ace ) , which is abundantly present in lung alveolar epithelial cells and enterocytes of the small intestine, as well as in arterial and venous endothelial cells and arterial smooth muscle cells in virtually all of the organs . in contrast, mers-cov uses the dipeptidyl peptidase (dpp ) as its receptor . dpp is widely expressed on epithelial cells in the kidney, alveoli, small intestine, liver, prostate and activated leukocytes . sars-cov- is a novel β-coronavirus from the subgenus sarbecovirus, genetically similar to sars-cov (about %) and mers-cov (about %) . like in sars-cov infections, ace is the cell receptor for sars-cov- . the spike proteins of these viruses bind with cellular receptors of sensitive cells to mediate the infection of their target cells, after which viral replication begins in the cell cytoplasm. sars-cov and mers-cov were both found to be able to show extremely high and early replication rates, infecting dendritic cells, macrophages and t cells - , using several strategies to avoid the host innate immune response , , and resulting in a robust and sustained production of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines , , , . il (interleukin ) levels in patients with severe covid- were also significantly higher than in patients with milder infections . these results suggest that the cytokine storm may also play a relevant role in the development of covid- . the pathological features of covid- greatly resemble those seen in sars and mers coronavirus infections [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . diffuse alveolar damage is the predominant pulmonary histological pattern. other changes included hyaline membrane formation, alveolar hemorrhage, desquamation of pneumocytes, extensive infiltration of neutrophils and macrophages in the interstice and alveoli. an interesting report showed the pathological characteristics of a patient who died from a severe infection by sars-cov- and underwent postmortem biopsies . both lungs showed diffuse alveolar damage with cellular fibromyxoid exudates and interstitial mononuclear inflammatory infiltrates, with predominance of lymphocytes. the right lung showed evident desquamation of pneumocytes and hyaline membrane formation and the left lung showed a pulmonary edema with hyaline membrane formation, related to the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards). a recent study reported that the lung histopathology in the early phase of covid- pneumonia include edema, proteinaceous exudate, focal reactive hyperplasia of pneumocytes with patchy inflammatory cellular infiltration, and multinucleated giant cells . diffuse alveolar damage with hyaline membranes and pulmonary edema play important roles in ards. pregnant women with ards are more prone to hypoxia, their oxygen consumption is increased by % and their functional residual pulmonary capacity is decreased during pregnancy, rendering the woman intolerant to hypoxia. severe pneumonia is characterized by hypoxemia, which subsequently leads to placental hypoxia. the hypoxic placenta releases antiangiogenic and proinflammatory factors that converge to the maternal endothelium, inducing endothelial dysfunction, hypertension, and organ damage . women with pneumonia during pregnancy have a significantly higher risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes, such as preterm delivery, pre-eclampsia, low birth weight and small-for-gestational-age infants , , . therefore, severe maternal respiratory distress syndrome may affect the fetal oxygen supply and endanger the fetus. in a study of the placental histopathology of mothers with sars , a total of seven placentas were studied. two placentas from women recovering from sars in the first trimester were normal. three placentas from women that gave birth during the acute stage of sars showed an increase in intervillous and subchorionic fibrin, and these findings may be related to disturbances in maternal placental blood flow due to hypoxia. two placentas from women recovering from sars in the third trimester of pregnancy were found to have an extensive thrombotic vasculopathy on the fetal side (ftv). the etiology of ftv may be related to the tendency to thrombosis due to sars and/ or placental hypoxia. these two pregnancies were also accompanied by intrauterine growth restriction, oligohydramnios and small for gestation newborns. a recent study analyzed the placental histopathology of three pregnant women who were infected by sars-cov- in the third trimester of pregnancy, and all of them presented with mild disease . in one of the placentas a chorioangioma was evidenced, and another placenta showed multifocal infarctions. all three cases had varying degrees of increment of intervillous or subchorionic fibrin associated with increased syncytial nodules. no villitis or chorioamnionitis were found. whether these changes were caused by placental ischemia due to -ncov infection still needs to be further investigated by enlarging the sample size. in humans, maternal viral infections caused by ah n , dengue and hiv have been associated with impaired maternal and fetal hemodynamics and abnormal placental villous architecture. a healthy functioning placenta relies on a proper vascularization and perfusion of the placenta. early studies indicated that systemic maternal infection and consequent inflammation can disrupt the placental vasculogenesis and angiogenesis and the alterations in placental hemodynamics may contribute to adverse pregnancy outcomes including preeclampsia, preterm delivery, small-for-gestational-age, low birth weight infants and stillbirths. in addition, it is believed that placental ischemia/ hypoxia can trigger an increased production of inflammatory biomarkers, such as il and tnfα, which contribute to endothelial dysfunction in preeclampsia . the clinical features of sars-cov and mers-cov infections are similar but patients with mers have a higher incidence of acute respiratory distress syndrome, which may explain why the fatality rate of sars is about %, while in mers it is about %. the major clinical features of sars-cov infections include persistent fever, chills or rigor, myalgia, dry cough, headache, malaise and dyspnea. sore throat, rhinorrhea, sputum production, nausea, vomiting and dizziness were less common. in contrast, sars and mers-cov infections usually start with fever, cough, chills, sore throat, myalgia and arthralgia, progressing with dyspnea and a rapid development of pneumonia within the first week, usually requiring respiratory support and ventilation, as well as other supportive measures . in comparison with sars, patients with mers are older, with male predominance, a higher incidence of comorbidities and relatively lower human-to-human transmission potential . pregnant women infected with mers may develop severe disease with fatal consequences, including stillbirths [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the transmission route of covid- is similar to the ones of sars and mers, mainly spread by respiratory droplets and direct contact. it is unclear if covid- can be transmitted by the fecal-oral route, given that sars-cov- has been identified in stool specimens . sars-cov- can also infect the lower respiratory tract and cause pneumonia, but its symptoms seem to be milder than in sars and mers . among all covid- cases, severe manifestations accounted for . % . data suggest an incubation period of about days (range - days). fever, cough, myalgia, fatigue and dyspnea were the most common clinical manifestations, whereas diarrhea, hemoptysis, headache, sore throat and shock only occur in a small number of patients , - . bilateral ground-glass or patchy opacities were the most common signs of radiological abnormalities , - . lymphopenia and eosinopenia were observed in most patients , [ ] [ ] [ ] . the viral load of -ncov detected from the patients' respiratory tract was positively correlated with the lung disease severity . complications of covid- included the acute respiratory distress syndrome, anemia, acute cardiac injury, and exuberant secondary infections . the majority of patients were older than years - . sars-cov- is more likely to affect elderly men suffering from chronic comorbidities that may lead to serious and even fatal respiratory failure , . the case fatality rate of patients with -ncov infection is lower than those of sars and mers. twelve pregnant women were diagnosed with sars in hong kong between february and july , . all patients had high fever (> °c) and most presented with chills, rigor, malaise, myalgia and lymphopenia. only % of the pregnant patients presented with shortness of breathe. six ( %) were admitted to intensive care units because of hypoxemia. four ( %) required mechanical ventilation, three of whom, died from respiratory failure or nosocomial infection. among seven pregnant women in the first trimester, four had spontaneous miscarriages, two underwent termination of pregnancy due to social reasons and one had an uncomplicated ongoing pregnancy. all five newborns in the second and third trimester groups survived and four of them were delivered by cesarean section. four newborns ( %) were preterm and three of them were delivered by emergency cesarean sections due to the deterioration of maternal respiratory conditions. among the live newborn infants, none had clinical or laboratory evidence of sars-cov infection. zhang et al. reported five primigravidas with sars (including twin pregnancies) from guangzhou, china. two were infected in the nd trimester while the other three in the rd trimester. two presented with hospital-acquired infections and the other three had community-acquired infections. all five pregnant women had fever and abnormal chest x-ray. other symptoms included cough (n= ), hypoalbuminemia(n= ), chills or rigor (n= ), elevated alanine aminotransferase (n= ), decreased lymphocytes (n= ) and decreased platelet count (n= ). all five pregnant women were cured with one of them required intensive care hospitalization. in a twin-pregnancy, one of the fetuses evolved to intrauterine death. the five neonates were followed-up and none had evidence of sars. there were no cases of vertical transmission identified among pregnant women infected with sars - so far, but sars during pregnancy is associated with high incidences of spontaneous miscarriage, preterm delivery, intrauterine growth restriction, endotracheal intubation and admission to the neonatal intensive care unit [ ] [ ] [ ] . there are limited data on the clinical features of mers-cov during pregnancy. only cases of mers-cov in pregnancy have been documented [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , . the clinical presentations of pregnant women with mers were variable and ranged from asymptomatic presentations to shortness of breathe, fever, cough, myalgia and even fatal cases. seven ( . %) patients required icu hospitalization and three ( %) patients died during the hospital stay. regarding the infants, three ( %) infants died. only one case resulted in both maternal and fetal death: the infant died four hours after birth and the mother died of severe refractory hypoxia and cardiac arrest days after delivery. there were other two cases of intrauterine fetal demise, one maternal death for septic shock eight days after delivery, and one maternal death due to multiple organs failure days after delivery. few studies documented mers-cov testing in infants, except one report of an infant whose blood sample did not contain any igg, igm, or iga antibodies raised to mers-cov . although data are limited, they also indicate that mers infections may cause unfavorable clinical outcomes in pregnancy. chen et al. performed a retrospective review of medical records from nine pregnant women with covid- pneumonia in the zhongnan hospital, wuhan university, from january to , . none of the nine patients developed severe pneumonia requiring mechanical ventilation or died of covid- pneumonia (february , ). seven of the nine patients presented with fever but none had high fever (> °c). other symptoms, including cough (n= ), myalgia (n= ), sore throat (n= ), malaise (n= ), lymphopenia (n= ), and elevated crp (n= ) were also observed. all nine patients had cesarean sections during the third trimester and nine live births were recorded. one infant had a slightly increase in myocardial enzymes but without any clinical symptoms nine days after birth. none of the newborns needed special pediatric treatment. neonatal throat swabs, amniotic fluid, cord blood and breast milk from six patients were tested, all of them were negative for sars-cov- . zhu et al. retrospectively analyzed the clinical features and outcomes of neonates, including two twins, whose mothers had covid- and were hospitalized in five hospitals of hubei, from january to february , . among these nine pregnant women, the initial symptoms were fever and cough, one patient also had diarrhea. there were some prenatal complications including prematurity ( to hours before the onset of the true labor), intrauterine distress (n= ), abnormal amniotic fluid (n= ), rupture of membranes (n= ), abnormal umbilical cord (n= ), and abnormal placenta (placenta previa) (n= ). among these newborns only four were full-term infants and the other six were preterm infants; and one was a large-forgestational-age (lga) infant, while two were small-forgestational-age (sga). the newborns' symptoms were mainly short of breathe (n= ), digestive tract symptoms (n= ), fever (n= ), abnormal liver enzymes accompanied by thrombocytopenia (n= ), neonatal respiratory distress syndrome (nrds) (n= ), increased heart rate (n= ) and vomiting (n= ). until this article was published, five neonates had been cured and discharged from hospital, four neonates were still hospitalized in stable conditions and one died. pharyngeal swab specimens were collected - days after birth, from nine of the neonates, and none of them were positive to sras-cov- . on february , , one newborn whose mother had confirmed covid- , was admitted at the wuhan children's hospital of hubei province presenting with stable vital signs, no fever or cough, normal liver function, absence of respiratory symptoms and normal chest x-ray. throat swabs collected from the newborn hours after birth were positive to sars-cov- but there was no direct evidence of intrauterine-acquired infection. unfortunately, amniotic fluid, umbilical cord blood and placenta were not tested, thus one cannot conclude if this is a case of vertical transmission or a perinatal transmission by close contact with the infected mother. in the same hospital, another newborn had confirmed covid- infection days after birth and a history of close contact with two confirmed cases , the infant's mother and the maternity matron. in this case, there is no reliable evidence to support the vertical transmission of covid- . one mother tested positive for sars-cov- two days after delivery . she was admitted to the hospital due to elevation of her liver enzymes and had no fever or digestive tract symptoms when admitted to the hospital. covid- was confirmed after delivery, and the prenatal infection cannot be ruled out. no sars-cov- was detected in the blood, urine, breast milk and in the throat swab of the newborn. there was no neonatal asphyxia, but the cardiac myoglobin and ck-mb enzymes were increased in the newborn, suggesting that a myocardial injury might exist. liu et al. reported pregnant patients with laboratoryconfirmed sars-cov- infection admitted to hospitals outside of wuhan between december , , and february , . ten patients ( %) presented with fever (range . - . °c), mostly accompanied by fatigue. three patients ( %) complained of dyspnea and one patient ( . %) developed severe pneumonia with multiple organs dysfunction syndrome requiring icu hospitalization in the third trimester. three patients ( %) improved after treatment and were discharged with an ongoing pregnancy. the other patients ( %) underwent caesarean sections. five out of ( %) patients had pregnancy complications including fetal distress (n= ), premature rupture of the membranes (n= ) and a stillbirth (n= ) and six patients ( %) had preterm infants. no severe neonatal asphyxia was observed in the nine live births and no vertical transmission was found. yu et al. reported seven pregnant women with covid- admitted to tongji hospital in wuhan, china. six patients ( %) had fever, one patient ( %) had cough, one patient ( %) had shortness of breathe and one patient ( %) had diarrhea. chest tomography (ct) revealed that six patients ( %) had bilateral pneumonia and one patient ( %) had unilateral pneumonia. no one needed icu hospitalization and the outcomes of these pregnant women were favorable. among three infants tested for sars-cov- , one was positive to sars-cov- in a throat swab h after birth. this infant had a mild pulmonary infection and mild shortness of breathe, no fever or cough. in addition, the placenta and cord blood of this infant were negative for sars-cov- by rt-pcr so that intrauterine vertical transmission may not have occurred. since ahmed et al. reported the first maternal death of a -year-old pakistani woman was reported in the heart zone hospital in birmingham, uk on april , , more and more articles began to report maternal deaths due to covid- . in particular, from february , (date of the first covid- reported case in brazil) until june , , brazil had already reported maternal deaths, in the same period mexico had reported seven maternal deaths . brazil's elevated covid- mortality rate in pregnancy might have several explanations. firstly, a possible shortage of healthcare providers and lack of intensive care resources are some of the chronic challenges in brazilian health care. secondly, brazil has a higher cesarean section rate than most countries firstly hit by covid- . a comparison of pregnant women from the above described studies is shown in table . this is a review on pregnant women infected by sars-cov- , sars, and mers, including their pathogenesis, clinical manifestations and pregnancy outcomes. these viruses mainly spread through the respiratory mucosa and infect other target cells, triggering a cytokine storm in the body, producing a series of immune responses and causing changes in peripheral leukocytes and immune system cells such as lymphocytes, which might be an important pathological pathway that inhibits the body's cellular immune function, leading to the deterioration of the patient's condition. the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ace ) has been identified as the functional receptor for sars-cov- and sars-cov. the fact that ace is abundantly present in the epithelia of the lungs and small intestine, provides a possible explanation for the pathological lung and gastrointestinal symptoms. the abundant expression of ace in alveolar cells may cause a rapid viral expansion and destruction of the alveolar wall, resulting in a rapid progression of extensive pulmonary consolidations and diffuse alveolar damage with hyaline membrane formation. its presence in the vascular endothelium might also provide a step forward in understanding the histological changes of placentas from pregnant women infected by sars-cov- . the clinical manifestations of covid- infection also show great similarities with sars and mers. however, covid- has affected more people in a shorter period of time compared to sars and mers, although with a lower fatality rate than sars and mers. pregnant women with covid- pneumonia showed a similar pattern in comparison with non-pregnant counterparts, including fever, cough, myalgia, fatigue, shortness of breathe or asymptomatic presentation. it is worth noting that there is currently no evidence that pregnant women with covid- are at higher risk of severe illness. however, sars and mers were found to be greatly associated with severe maternal illness, spontaneous abortion and even maternal death and intrauterine fetal demise. some pregnancy complications have occurred in pregnant women with covid- , such as fetal distress, premature rupture of membranes, preterm deliveries and stillbirths. furthermore, these pregnancy complications might be closely related to the cytokine storm, lung injury and placental ischemia/ hypoxia caused by sars-cov- infections. although there is currently no evidence to support the fetal infection by intrauterine vertical transmission of sars, mers, and covid- , more and more articles began to report maternal deaths due to covid- . in particular, from february , (date of the first covid- case in brazil) until june , , brazil had already reported maternal deaths. thus, we should be alert that these diseases may follow the same trend of greater severity and poorer prognosis in pregnant women. therefore, pregnant women and newborns require special attention in the prevention, diagnosis and management of covid- . the maternal physiological and immune function changes in pregnancy make pregnant women more susceptible to covid- . furthermore, considering that pregnant women with covid- may not have typical symptoms such as fever, we suggest that pregnant women with any symptoms suggestive of covid- should undergo careful examination to prevent adverse pregnancy outcomes. covid- infection itself is not an indication for cesarean section deliveries. the timing and mode of delivery should be individualized based on the disease severity, pre-existing maternal comorbidities, obstetric history, gestational age and fetal conditions. newborns from women with suspected or confirmed covid- should undergo a careful examination, and have the body temperature, respiratory rate and heart rate closely monitored, as well as digestive tract symptoms. so far, breast milk samples were negative for sars-cov- and this virus is mainly transmitted by respiratory droplets and close contact. furthermore, the protective effect of breastfeeding on newborns is particularly strong. precautions should be taken to enable infected mothers to breastfeed, including respiratory hygiene, hand hygiene and disinfection, the use of n- masks by the mother while breastfeeding in cases in which mothers or newborns are suspected of or have confirmed covid- . personal protection must be taken in order to minimize the risk of contracting the virus. future researches should cover different pregnant stages of covid- as much as possible. it is recommended that the placenta and other tissues of pregnant women with -ncov infection should be evaluated by histopathological examinations, to provide more detailed pathological analyses. the epidemic situation of covid- is still spreading, and this review has limitations. thus, further investigation is needed to elucidate how covid- affects pregnant women and fetuses, as well as the exact impact of covid- on pregnant women themself and on pregnancy outcomes. yao w, qiu j and xiao z had the idea for the article and performed the literature search and data analysis. the first draft of the manuscript was written by yao w and all authors critically revised the previous versions of the manuscript. all authors read and approved the final manuscript. world health organization. coronavirus disease (covid- ): situation report - characteristics and pregnancy outcomes of patients with severe pneumonia complicating pregnancy: a retrospective study of cases and a literature review pneumonia and pregnancy outcomes: a nationwide 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neonates born to mothers with -ncov pneumonia neonatal coronavirus expert confirmed at hours of birth: vertical transmission from mother to infant perinatal covid- : a case report clinical manifestations and outcome of sars-cov- infection during pregnancy clinical features and obstetric and neonatal outcomes of pregnant patients with covid- in wuhan, china: a retrospective, single-centre, descriptive study first covid- maternal mortality in the uk associated with thrombotic complications in brazil: maternal deaths and counting we declare no conflict of interests. this work was supported by the national natural science foundation of china, grant nº key: cord- - sv dwbs authors: banik, gouri rani; alqahtani, amani salem; booy, robert; rashid, harunor title: risk factors for severity and mortality in patients with mers-cov: analysis of publicly available data from saudi arabia date: - - journal: virol sin doi: . /s - - -z sha: doc_id: cord_uid: sv dwbs [image: see text] however, these studies were relatively small and the risk factors for disease severity were rarely explored (majumdar et al., ; korea cdc, ; saad et al., ) . to this end, we have explored the key risk factors for mortality and severity of mers-cov from a larger dataset of saudi arabian patients. data for this analysis were obtained from the command and control center (ccc) of saudi arabian ministry of health (moh). this center has been publicly reporting the mers-cov cases in saudi arabia since may on their website (http://www.moh.gov.sa/en/ccc/ pressreleases/pages/default.aspx). the site contains data on > % of the saudi arabian mers cases. initially, only limited information such as patients' age, sex, nationality, address, date of diagnosis, presenting symptoms, and presence of any pre-existing condition were made publicly available; however, since th september , additional information on likely exposure to animals and other suspected mers cases were added, and it was recorded whether the exposure likely occurred at health care settings or in community settings. two authors (asa and grb) extracted the data from the saudi moh website and added it into a data extraction spread sheet; the first author (grb) double checked the entries, any disagreement was resolved through verifying and ensuring data integrity. the following data were abstracted in the extraction sheet: date of confirmation of the diagnosis, age and sex of the patient, nationality, city or region of the patient's residence, symptoms, whether the patient required intensive care unit (icu) admission, status of the patient at the time of data entry (recovered, being cared in the hospital or icu, or died) and whether the patient was a health care worker (hcw). it was also noted if the patient had any pre-existing medical condition and, if so, what those medical conditions were. additional information (e.g., history of exposure to animal or contact with suspected cases in health care and/or community settings) were collated in a separate column irrespective of whether or not the information was used in this analysis. the proportion of patients with a particular risk factor, such as pre-existing illness or age ≥ years, was calculated separately for those who died and for those who survived. for this analysis, a case of mers was considered 'severe' if he/she needed admission to icu at any time point during the course of the illness, all other cases were considered 'not severe', irrespective of whether they required hospitalization or not. the proportion of patients with a particular risk factor such as the presence of a named pre-existing medical condition was calculated separately for 'severe' and 'not severe' cases. odds ratios (ors) for mortality and severity in the presence of a potential risk factor were calculated with % confidence interval ( %ci) by using an authentic online calculator (http://vassarstats.net/odds x .html). a p value of < . was considered statistically significant. as of october , data on mers-cov cases aged months to years (median years) were published in the saudi moh website; % were male (m/f ratio: . ). among them, % ( / ) were saudi residents; the non-saudis ( %, / ) included expatriates and immigrants mainly from the philippines, palestine, pakistan, and egypt. riyadh had the highest number of cases ( . %, / ), followed by jeddah ( %, / ) ( figure ). one hundred and forty one ( %) of all mers cases were hcws. of patients for whom such data were available, ( %) had a history of exposure to health care settings, and of patients for whom such data were available, ( %) gave a history of exposure to suspected cases in the community. of patients for whom the data were available, % ( ) gave a history of exposure to anim-als: % to camels and % to other unspecified animals. the presence or absence of a co-morbidity was recorded in two-thirds of cases (n = ); of these, ( . %) were considered as being at risk, either because they were aged ≥ years or had one or more pre-existing medical conditions. of , ( . %) were aged years or older, and apart from seven ( %), all had preexisting medical conditions; in ( %) cases, the conditions were specified: diabetes mellitus ( %, / ), hypertension ( %, / ), and renal ( %, / ), cardiac ( %, / ), pulmonary ( %, / ), malignant ( %, / ), and neurological diseases ( %, / ). another % ( / ) had other chronic diseases in various combinations. over half ( %) of the patients had multiple comorbidities. of the total cases, ( %) died by the time the data were analyzed, of which ( %) were male. diabetes, hypertension, renal disease, malignancy, and several other conditions hitherto termed as miscellaneous conditions (e.g., anemia, obesity and congenital abnormalities, diseases of the liver and gall bladder, or steroid use) were significant risk factors for mortality from mers-cov (table ) . male sex was also a significant risk factor for mortality but the proportions of diabetes, hypertension, renal disease, malignancy, and miscellaneous conditions in men were not significantly different from that in women. of mers patients who survived, ( . %) required icu admission, therefore were considered to have a severe form of the disease. of those who survived, ( %) had pre-existing conditions, of which diabetes and neurological conditions were significant risk factors for severity (table ) . these results corroborate the findings of other smaller studies from saudi arabia and south korea that showed that older age and presence of co-morbid conditions were associated with higher mortality (saad et al., ; feikin et al., ; majumder et al., ; korea cdc, ) . our study has specifically identified that diabetes, hypertension, renal disease, malignancy, miscellaneous conditions, and male sex were the main risk factors for mortality. another small study also demonstrated that diabetes was significantly associated with mortality (or = . ; %ci . - . ) (shalhoub et al., ) . in contrast, among south korean patients, underlying respiratory disease and older age were the key risk factors for mortality (korea cdc, ) . in our study, presence of a respiratory disease was not a significant risk factor and we did not explore the association of older age with mortality, because essentially all patients aged ≥ years in our cohort had a pre-existing disease, but age itself could be an independent risk factor, as other studies from saudi arabia and south korea demonstrated that age > years (in some studies ≥ years) was significantly associated with mortality (feikin et al., ; majumder et al., ; saad et al., ) . additionally, majumder et al. ( ) demonstrated that for every one year of increase in age, the odds of fatality increased by % (or . , % ci . - . ). the risk factors might vary geographically; additionally, the relatively small sample sizes in other studies could have missed other significant risk factors. our study also demonstrates that men had higher odds of dying from mers-cov, which is unsurprising given the fact that the disease predominantly affects men. another saudi study also demonstrated that the case fatality rate was higher for men ( %) than for women ( %) (alghamdi et al., ) . in the south korean cohort, even though being male increased the odds of mortality, the association was not significant (majumder et al., ) , likely because of small size. in our cohort, % of the patients were men, while in some other series, % of the cases were men, which is explained by the fact that men more often come in close contact with camels than women in arabian countries (alraddadi et al., ) . mers-cov patients with diabetes and neurological conditions were more likely to require icu admission than those without these conditions, which are unique findings. in contrast, a study involving saudi arabian mers patients showed that concomitant infections (or . , % ci . - . , p = . ) and low albumin levels (or . , % ci . - . ; p = . ) were independent risk factors for icu admission (saad et al. ) . approximately % of the mers-cov patients in our cohort were hcws, and exposure to healthcare setting was an important ground for transmission of the virus (over %), which is supported by other available data (oboho et al., ; petersen et al., ; saad et al., ) , and mathematical modelling suggests that nosocomial transmission is over four times higher than community transmission (chowell et al., ) . considering that pre-existing conditions such as diabetes, hypertension, renal, malignant, neurological, and miscellaneous conditions are risk factors for severe outcomes of mers-cov, due attention should be paid to optimum control of these conditions. co-infection with mers-cov and influenza plus other bacterial and viral infections have been reported (zumla et al., ) , and co-infection is seen to increase the severity of the disease (saad et al., ) . therefore, vaccinations against influenza and pneumococcal disease should be considered for the high-risk individuals (those with pre-existing disease and/or aged ≥ years). these vaccines could prevent co-infections by influenza and streptococcus pneumoniae as well as the fatal outcomes of mers-cov. they may even reduce the need for hospital visits or even icu admission. the limitations of this study are: data could not be validated from the original source and multivariate analysis was not considered. despite these limitations, the study provides valuable information on risk factors for severity and mortality in mers patients from a relatively large dataset, and has actually ascertained some key risk factors. we hope this study would inspire further research based on even larger datasets. middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) -saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome key: cord- -rgdynmla authors: tomar, sakshi; johnston, melanie l.; st. john, sarah e.; osswald, heather l.; nyalapatla, prasanth r.; paul, lake n.; ghosh, arun k.; denison, mark r.; mesecar, andrew d. title: ligand-induced dimerization of middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) coronavirus nsp protease ( cl(pro)): implications for nsp regulation and the development of antivirals date: - - journal: journal of biological chemistry doi: . /jbc.m . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: rgdynmla all coronaviruses, including the recently emerged middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) from the β-cov subgroup, require the proteolytic activity of the nsp protease (also known as c-like protease, cl(pro)) during virus replication, making it a high value target for the development of anti-coronavirus therapeutics. kinetic studies indicate that in contrast to cl(pro) from other β-cov c members, including hku and hku , mers-cov cl(pro) is less efficient at processing a peptide substrate due to mers-cov cl(pro) being a weakly associated dimer. conversely, hku , hku , and sars-cov cl(pro) enzymes are tightly associated dimers. analytical ultracentrifugation studies support that mers-cov cl(pro) is a weakly associated dimer (k(d) ∼ μm) with a slow off-rate. peptidomimetic inhibitors of mers-cov cl(pro) were synthesized and utilized in analytical ultracentrifugation experiments and demonstrate that mers-cov cl(pro) undergoes significant ligand-induced dimerization. kinetic studies also revealed that designed reversible inhibitors act as activators at a low compound concentration as a result of induced dimerization. primary sequence comparisons and x-ray structural analyses of two mers-cov clpro and inhibitor complexes, determined to . Å, reveal remarkable structural similarity of the dimer interface with cl(pro) from hku -cov and hku -cov. despite this structural similarity, substantial differences in the dimerization ability suggest that long range interactions by the nonconserved amino acids distant from the dimer interface may control mers-cov cl(pro) dimerization. activation of mers-cov cl(pro) through ligand-induced dimerization appears to be unique within the genogroup c and may potentially increase the complexity in the development of mers-cov cl(pro) inhibitors as antiviral agents. states ( ) , there is an urgent need to study and characterize the properties of important drug targets of mers-cov for the development of effective therapeutics. coronaviruses express a Ͼ -kda replicase polyprotein, which is processed by viral cl pro protease (or nsp ) at distinct cleavage sites to yield intermediate and mature nonstructural proteins (nsp) responsible for many aspects of virus replication ( , - ) . because of its indispensable role in the virus life cycle, cl pro is an important target for therapeutic intervention against coronavirus infections ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . a number of kinetic, biophysical, and x-ray structural studies have demonstrated that sars-cov cl pro is only active in vitro as a tightly associated dimer with a dimer dissociation constant (k d ) in the low nanomolar range ( - ) . the addition or deletion of amino acids, e.g. his affinity tags, at either the n or c terminus drastically reduces the enzymatic rate and decreases the ability of sars-cov cl pro to dimerize ( ) . although cellular evidence for the auto-cleavage mechanism (cis versus trans) of cl pro is lacking, models for how cl pro cleaves itself from the polyprotein to form the mature dimer have been proposed based on in vitro studies using purified cl pro ( , , ) . a current model posits that two inactive cl pro molecules within two separate polyproteins recognize each other and form an immature dimer capable of cleaving the nsp nsp and nsp nsp sites in trans, followed by formation of an active and mature dimer that can then rapidly process other cleavage sites and multiple polyproteins. it has also been proposed that substrate-induced dimerization regulates the enzymatic activity of sars-cov cl pro during virus replication; however, no experimental evidence of this has ever been demonstrated in infected cells ( ) . although our knowledge of sars-cov cl pro is extensive, the dimerization properties of cl pro from mers-cov and other coronaviruses, as well as the factors regulating their enzymatic activity, remain largely unknown. to understand the properties of mers-cov cl pro , we conducted a series of kinetic, biophysical and x-ray structural studies. here, we report a detailed kinetic and biophysical analysis of mers-cov cl pro activity and dimerization. these kinetic and biophysical studies provide evidence for a weakly associated mers-cov cl pro dimer. in addition, we utilized our previous knowledge on the design of potent sars-cov cl pro peptidic inhibitors to design a series of inhibitors of mers-cov cl pro that exhibit low micromolar potency. we demonstrate that mers-cov cl pro requires the binding of a ligand for dimer formation, indicating that ligand-induced dimerization is likely a key mechanism in the regulation of mers-cov cl pro activity during virus infection. construct design and expression of mers-cov cl pro -the gene encoding cl pro protease of mers-cov (amino acid residues - in the replicase polyprotein, genbank tm accession number ahc . ) was codon-optimized for optimal expression in e. coli (biobasic inc). the gene was subcloned into pet- a expression vector with an n-terminal his tag followed by the nsp nsp auto-cleavage site using the forward primer Ј-atatacatatgcaccaccaccac-caccacagcggtgttctgcagtctggtc- Ј and the reverse primer Ј-gacggatccttactgcatcacaa-cacccatgatctgc- Ј. the construct was verified by dna sequencing at the purdue university genomics core facility. this construct results in the expression of mers-cov cl pro without any n-or c-terminal extensions. mers-cov cl pro was expressed through auto-induction in escherichia coli bl -de cells in the presence of g/ml carbenicillin as described previously ( ) . cells were harvested by centrifugation at ϫ g for min at °c, and the pellets were stored at Ϫ °c until further use. mers-cov cl pro purification-frozen pellets from liters of bacterial cell culture were thawed on ice and resuspended in ml of buffer a ( mm tris, ph . , . mm edta, % glycerol, and mm ␤-mercaptoethanol (bme)), containing g of lysozyme and a small amount of dnase. cells were then lysed using a single pass through a french press at p.s.i., and cell debris was removed from the cleared lysate by centrifuging at , ϫ g for min. solid ammonium sulfate was added to the cleared lysate to a final concentration of m through gradual mixing on ice. hydrophobic interaction chromatography-the cleared lysate, mixed with ammonium sulfate, was loaded at a flow rate of ml/min onto a -ml phenyl-sepharose fast-flow highsub column (amersham biosciences) equilibrated with buffer b ( mm tris, ph . , m ammonium sulfate, . mm edta, % glycerol, and mm bme). the column was then washed with ϫ column volume ( ml) of buffer b at a flow rate of ml/min. protein was eluted using a ϫ column volume ( ml) linear gradient to % buffer a. fractions ( ml) were collected, and those containing mers-cov cl pro , as judged through sds-page analysis and specific activity measurements, were pooled ( ml) and exchanged into liters of buffer a via overnight dialysis in a , molecular weight cutoff snakeskin dialysis tubing (thermo scientific). deae anion-exchange chromatography-dialyzed sample from the previous step was loaded at a flow rate of ml/min onto a -ml deae anion-exchange column (amersham biosciences) equilibrated with buffer a. the column was then washed with ϫ column volume ( ml) of buffer a at a flow rate of ml/min. a linear gradient (total volume ml) to % buffer c ( mm tris, ph . , m nacl, . mm edta, % glycerol, and mm bme) was used to elute the protein. fractions ( ml) were collected, and those containing mers-cov cl pro were pooled ( ml) and dialyzed for h in liters of buffer d ( mm mes, ph . , . mm edta, % glycerol, and mm bme). mono s cation-exchange chromatography-following dialysis, the ph of the sample was manually adjusted to . using m solution of mes, ph . , and any precipitated protein was removed by filtering through a . -m pore size millex-gp filter (millipore). the filtered sample was then loaded at a flow rate of ml/min onto an -ml mono s / column (amersham biosciences) equilibrated in buffer d. the column was then washed with ϫ column volume ( ml) of buffer d at a flow rate of ml/min. protein was eluted using a ϫ column volume ( ml) and a linear gradient to % buffer e ( mm mes, ph . , m nacl, . mm edta, % glycerol, and mm bme). fractions ( ml) were collected, and those containing mers-cov cl pro were pooled ( ml) and concentrated to ϳ mg/ml. gel filtration chromatography-as the final purification step, the concentrated protein sample was loaded onto the preparation grade superdex / gel filtration column (amersham biosciences) equilibrated with buffer f ( mm hepes, ph . , % glycerol, . mm dithiothreitol (dtt)). protein was eluted isocratically at a flow rate of ml/min with buffer f. fractions ( ml) containing mers-cov cl pro were pooled (total volume of ml) and concentrated to ϳ mg/ml. for final storage of the purified mers-cov cl pro enzyme, -l protein aliquots were placed into -ml screw-cap vials, flash-frozen under liquid nitrogen, and then stored at Ϫ °c until further use. purification of sars-cov, hku -cov, and hku -cov cl pro -sars-cov cl pro and hku -cov cl pro with authentic n and c termini were expressed and purified as described previously ( , ) . hku -cov cl pro was purified utilizing a modified protocol from ref. . final protein yield was calculated based on the measurement of total activity units (m product/min), specific activity (units/mg), and milligrams of protein obtained (bio-rad protein assay) after each chromatographic step. synthesis of compounds - -the peptidomimetic compounds with michael acceptor groups (compounds - , table ) were synthesized via very similar methods to those published previously ( , ) . synthesis of noncovalent peptidomimetic compounds and (table ) has been described previously ( ) . fluorescence-based kinetic assays-the enzymatic activity of cl pro was measured using the following custom-synthesized peptide: hilytefluor tm - -esatlqsglrkak-(qxl tm - )-nh (anaspec, inc.). the hilytefluor tm - fluorescence group was internally quenched by qxl tm - dye. this substrate works as a generic peptide substrate for cl pro enzymes and was designed based on the nsp nsp cleavage sequence for many coronavirus cl pro enzymes. the rate of enzymatic activity was determined at °c by following the increase in fluorescence ( excitation ϭ nm, emission ϭ nm, bandwidths ϭ nm) of hilyte fluor tm - upon peptide hydrolysis by the enzyme as a function of time. assays were conducted in black, half-area, -well plates (corning glass) in assay buffer ( mm hepes, ph . , . mg/ml bsa, . % triton x- , and mm dtt) using a final reaction volume of l. the resulting florescence was monitored using a biotek synergy h plate reader. the rate of the reaction in arbitrary fluorescence units/s (afu/s) was determined by measuring the initial slope of the progress curves, which were then converted to units of micromolars of product produced per min (m/min) using experimentally determined values of fluorescence "extinction coefficient" as described previously ( ) . all reactions were carried out in triplicate. determination of enzymatic efficiency-the apparent enzymatic efficiency for each of the cl pro enzymes was determined by measuring the rate of enzymatic activity as a function of varying substrate concentration in -l reactions. reactions were initiated by the addition of enzyme to the wells of an assay plate containing varying concentrations of substrate. the final substrate concentrations varied over a range from to m. the final enzyme concentrations for each cl pro studied were as follows: mers-cov cl pro at m, sars-cov cl pro at nm, hku -cov cl pro at nm, and hku -cov cl pro at nm. because cl pro enzymes cannot be saturated with this substrate at a substrate concentration that would still allow accurate fluorescent measurements without the inner filter effect, only the apparent k cat /k m values can be determined from the slope of the line that results from a plot of the enzymatic activity (y axis), normalized for the total enzyme concentration, against the substrate concentration (x axis). influence of dimerization on the activity of cl pro enzymes-the dependence of the enzymatic activity on the total enzyme concentration was determined using the fret-based assay described above. the final enzyme concentrations were varied over a concentration range from m to nm for mers-cov cl pro , to nm for sars-cov cl pro , to . nm for hku -cov cl pro , and to nm for hku -cov cl pro . reactions were initiated by the addition of substrate, at a final concentration of m, to the assay plates containing varying enzyme concentrations in the assay buffer. initial rates were determined from the initial slopes of the progress curves at each enzyme concentration. the rates of the cl pro -catalyzed reactions measured over a range of enzyme concentrations can be fit to either equation or to determine the values of the dissociation constant for the monomer-dimer equilibrium as well as the turnover numbers. nonlinear regression and the program tablecurve d version . were used to fit the data to either equation or below ( ) . in equation , v max is the rate of the enzymatic activity calculated at each enzyme concentration (c t ); k d is the monomerdimer equilibrium dissociation constant, and k cat, m and k cat, d are the turnover numbers for the monomer and the dimer, respectively. in equation , v max , c t , and k d have been described previously, and k cat is the turnover number for the dimer only. inhibition assays-to determine the percent inhibition for compounds - , the total concentration of the substrate was fixed at . m, and the enzymes were fixed at nm for sars-cov cl pro , hku -cov cl pro , hku -cov cl pro , and at nm for mers-cov cl pro . dmso stocks ( ϫ) of the compounds were diluted a hundred-fold to a final concentration of m in l of the enzyme solution and incubated for min. after min, the enzymatic activity was measured as initial slope of the progress curve, obtained by initiating the reaction with l of m substrate. % inhibition was calculated using equation . in equation , rate sample is the initial slope of the progress curve in afu/s measured in the presence of the compound; rate pos is the initial slope measured in the absence of any compound, and rate neg is the baseline substrate hydrolysis calculated in the absence of enzyme. all the reactions were carried out in triplicate and contained a final dmso concentration of %. for compounds displaying more than % inhibition, a more extensive characterization of the inactivation kinetics was performed through progress curve analysis. to the reaction well, l of m substrate was added to a final concentration of m, and the total inhibitor concentration [i] total was varied from to m. the reaction was initiated with the addition of l of mers-cov cl pro to a final concentration of nm. fluorescence intensity was then measured over time as afu t for a period of min. equation describes the resulting time course of reaction. in equation , v i is the initial velocity of the reaction; k obs is the observed first-order rate constant for the reaction in the absence and presence of inhibitor; t is the time in minutes; [p] t is the concentration of product produced at time t, and [p] i is the initial product concentration, which is zero. product concentrations were calculated from the values of afu t , using the experimentally determined fluorescence extinction coefficient. the resulting values of [p] t were then plotted against time t, and the data were fit to equation with [p] i ϭ using the nonlinear regression program tablecurve d to derive the fitted parameters v i and k obs and their associated errors ⌬v i and ⌬k obs . values for each k obs were then plotted against [i] total and the data were fit to equation . in equation , k inact defines the maximum rate of inactivation at infinite inhibitor concentration, and k i defines the concentration of inhibitor that yields a rate of inactivation equal to ⁄ k inact . the half-life of inactivation at infinite inhibitor concentration, which is a measure of inactivation efficiency, is defined as t ⁄ ∞ ϭ . /k inact . auc analysis-to determine the oligomeric state of mers-cov cl pro , sedimentation velocity experiments were performed at °c on the beckman-coulter xla ultracentrifuge using varying concentrations of mers-cov cl pro ( - m) in mm hepes, ph . , mm nacl, and mm tris( -carboxyethyl)phosphine at , rpm. to characterize the effect of the ligand on the monomer-dimer equilibrium of mers-cov cl pro , sedimentation velocity experiments were conducted on the beckman-coulter xli instrument using different stoichiometric ratios of mers-cov cl pro with compounds and . samples were prepared by mixing m mers-cov cl pro with , , and m compound or and incubating the mixture overnight at °c before performing the experiments. absorbance optics ( nm) and interference optics were utilized for protein detection. solvent density, viscosity, and partial specific volumes were calculated using sednterp. sedphat was used to fit the data to the monomer-dimer self-association model to estimate the sedimentation coefficients (s), apparent molecular weights, and k d and k off values from size distribution analysis. to obtain exact molecular weights, sedimentation equilibrium experiments were performed at concentrations of and m mers-cov cl pro . the experiments were done at °c utilizing a twochannel centerpiece and run at multiple speeds ( , , and , rpm) in a an- ti rotor. the rate sample , rate pos , and rate neg are as described above for equation . mers-cov cl pro crystallization, x-ray data collection, and structure determination-purified mers-cov cl pro was concentrated to . mg/ml in mm hepes, ph . , and . mm dtt. inhibitor complexes of mers-cov cl pro with compounds and were formed by incubating mers-cov cl pro with the compounds in a : stoichiometric ratio at °c overnight. after iterative rounds of optimization of the crystallization conditions based on the initial hits obtained from high throughput screening of qiagen nextel screens, crystals of mers-cov cl pro inhibitor complexes suitable for x-ray diffraction were grown by the hanging-drop, vapor diffusion method at °c in . m sodium acetate, . m bistris, ph . , and % peg- for the mers-cov cl pro and complex, and . m ammonium acetate, . m bistris, ph . , % peg- for the mers-cov cl pro and complex. for x-ray data collection, crystals were flash-cooled in liquid nitrogen after dragging the crystals through a cryo-solution that contained the crystallization solution supplemented with % -methyl- , -pentanediol. x-ray diffraction data were collected for mers-cov cl pro and and mers-cov cl pro and complexes at the lilly research laboratories collaborative access team (lrl-cat) sector and the life sciences collaborative access team (ls-cat) sector at the advanced photon source, argonne national laboratory, respectively. data were processed and scaled using mosflm version . . ( ) and hkl version ( ) . the method of molecular replacement was used to obtain initial phases using the program phaser-mr in phenix suite version . . ( ) . for mers-cov cl pro and complex, the x-ray structure of sars-cov cl pro (pdb code v m) was used as a phasing model ( ) . the final mers-cov cl pro and complex structure was then used to calculate the initial phases for the mers-cov cl pro and complex model. automated model building using autobuild in phenix was initially used to build a preliminary model of the mers-cov cl pro and inhibitor complex. each structure was then refined using iterative cycles of refinement using phenix refine coupled to manual model building using coot ( ) based on f o Ϫ f c and f o Ϫ f c maps. coordinates and molecular library files for inhibitor molecules were built using the program elbow in the phenix suite. water molecules were added to peaks in residual (f o Ϫ f c ) density maps that were greater than using the "find water" function in coot. molprobity was used to assess structural quality of the final model ( ) . the measured structure factor amplitudes and the atomic coordinates for the final structures were deposited in the protein data bank with accession codes rsp (mers-cov cl pro and complex) and ylu (mers-cov cl pro and complex), respectively. structural superposition was performed using the method of least squares fitting of c-␣ atoms in coot. pymol was used to generate figures of all the structures ( ) . termini-insertion of the nsp nsp cleavage site between the n-terminal his tag and the coding region for mers-cov cl pro results in autoprocessing of the his tag and overexpres-sion of mers-cov cl pro without any n-terminal extension in e. coli bl -de cells. mers-cov cl pro was purified to high purity and an overall yield of % using four sequential chromatographic steps. a summary of the percent enzyme yield, total activity units, and the fold-purification after each chromatographic step is summarized in table . approximately mg of highly pure mers-cov cl pro can be obtained per liter of bacterial cell culture. to verify the production of the enzyme with correct n and c termini, the molecular mass of purified mers-cov cl pro was determined by maldi to be . kda, which is close to the theoretical molecular mass of . kda for the authentic/mature mers-cov cl pro monomer. western blot analysis of purified mers-cov cl pro using an anti-his antibody also confirmed the absence of the n terminus his tag associated with the expression plasmid (data not shown). these results demonstrate that the n-terminal his tag is auto-catalytically removed by mers-cov cl pro during its expression in e. coli, indicating mers-cov cl pro is enzymatically active when expressed in e. coli. fret-based peptide substrate was used to measure the enzymatic activity of mers-cov cl pro as a function of substrate concentration over a substrate concentration range from to . m (fig. a) . we observed that mers-cov cl pro cannot be saturated by the substrate over this concentration range, which is typical for other coronavirus cl pro enzymes because the k m values for peptide substrates approach mm ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . therefore, the slope of the kinetic response of mers-cov cl pro to increasing substrate concentration was determined to derive an apparent (k cat /k m ) value, which is a measure of enzymatic efficiency. we also determined and compared the apparent (k cat /k m ) values for cl pro enzymes from sars-cov, hku -cov, and hku -cov under similar experimental conditions (fig. b) . mers-cov cl pro is able to hydrolyze the peptide substrate; however, the enzymatic efficiency of mers- is noticeably lower than other cl pro enzymes tested. specifically, mers-cov cl pro was -fold less efficient at processing the peptide substrate when compared with sars-cov cl pro . even among the ␤-covs from the same c genogroup (mers, hku , and hku ), mers-cov cl pro was the least efficient enzyme. mers-cov cl pro is a weakly associated dimer-because a dimer has consistently been shown to be the catalytically active form of all cl pro enzymes studied to date, we tested the hypothesis that the lower enzymatic efficiency of mers-cov cl pro is a result of the reduction in its ability to dimerize. therefore, we determined the dependence of the enzymatic activity of mers-cov cl pro on the total enzyme concentration and compared it with other cl pro enzymes from hku , hku , and sars coronaviruses (fig. ) . it is immediately apparent from the data plotted in fig. that the response of mers-cov cl pro enzymatic activity to an increasing enzyme concentration is nonlinear. the strong curvature suggests that a dimer is either the most active form or the only active form of mers-cov cl pro . to determine the mechanism of dimerization, the data in fig. were first fit to equation (see "experimental procedures"), which describes a model where both the monomer and the dimer are active. a fit of the data to equation yielded a negative turnover value for the monomer (k cat, m ), suggesting the monomer is inactive and that the dimer is the only active form of the enzyme. therefore, the data were fit to equation (see "experimental procedures"), which considers only the dimer as the active form of the enzyme. the kinetic data for all four cl pro enzymes, mers-cov, hku -cov, hku -cov, and sars-cov, fit well to this model, and the resulting values for the monomer-dimer equilibrium dissociation constant, k d , and apparent turnover number, k cat , for each enzyme are provided in table . the lower k cat value for mers-cov cl pro , when compared with other coronavirus cl pro enzymes, indicates a moderate reduction ( - -fold) in its ability to turn over the substrate, which is consistent with the observed lower apparent (k cat /k m ) value. in contrast, there is a substantial reduction in the ability of mers-cov cl pro to dimerize compared with the other cl pro enzymes. based on the k d values, the capacity of mers-cov cl pro to dimerize is ϳ - -fold weaker than the other enzymes ( table ). these results indicate that the mers-cov cl pro dimer is much more weakly associated than the other coronavirus cl pro enzymes studied, and these results raise questions as to the structural and mechanistic differences among the cl pro enzymes that ultimately regulate protease activity during coronavirus replication. mers-cov cl pro inhibition by designed peptidomimetic compounds-in an effort to develop potent inhibitors of mers-cov cl pro , we designed and synthesized nine peptidomimetic compounds containing a michael acceptor group, i.e. an ␣,␤-unsaturated carbonyl, capable of irreversibly reacting with the active site cysteine of mers-cov cl pro (table ) . these compounds were designed and synthesized based on our understanding and knowledge of the interactions of similar inhibitor molecules with sars-cov cl pro ( , ) . at a concentration of m, compounds - displayed more than % inhibition of mers-cov cl pro and were further evaluated for their ability to inactivate the enzyme in a time-and concentration-dependent manner (fig. ) . data from the kinetic progress curve for compound (fig. ) , as well as for table . final enzyme concentrations varied over the concentration ranges of m to nm for mers-cov cl pro , to nm for sars-cov cl pro , to . nm for hku -cov cl pro , and to nm for hku -cov cl pro . final substrate concentration was fixed at m. experiments were done in triplicate. error bars represent the standard deviation for triplicate data. shaded box represents the data that are plotted in b. b, enlarged view of the fitted data at low total enzyme concentrations, marked in shaded box in a, illustrating the nonlinear dependence of enzymatic activity on the total concentrations of cl pro from sars-cov, hku -cov, and hku -cov. the michael acceptor group for compound is shaded to highlight this group for all the compounds. the stereochemistry at the benzyl stereocenter of compound is a : mixture of enantiomers (racemic); therefore, the compound was tested as a mixture of diastereomers. * % inhibition was measured as the % loss in enzymatic activity after min of incubation of nm mers-cov cl pro with m of the compound. a as compounds - showed Ͻ % inhibition of mers-cov cl pro , values of k inact , t / ∞ and k i were not determined (nd) for these compounds. compounds - (data not shown), were fit to the appropriate equations (see under "experimental procedures") to obtain the kinetic parameters, k inact , t ⁄ ∞ , and k i , and the resulting values are provided in table . we identified four compounds, - , as micromolar inhibitors of mers-cov cl pro with k i values less than m ( table ) . analysis of structure-activity relationships of these compounds suggests that the s subsite pocket of mers-cov cl pro is small and can only accommodate a smaller p -isobutyl substituent (compounds - ) but not bigger substituents such as p -benzyl or p -isobutylenyl (compounds - ). it was also observed that replacing the p -ethoxy (compound ) with p -isopropoxy (compounds and ) had no effect on the inhibitory activity of the compounds. finally, these compounds provide an excellent chemical scaffold to study the molecular details of interactions of substrate-like compounds with the enzyme and to develop more potent inhibitors of mers-cov cl pro for therapeutic intervention. to evaluate broad spectrum specificity of these compounds, we also calculated % inhibition of sars-cov cl pro , hku -cov cl pro , and hku -cov cl pro after min of incubation in the presence of m compounds - . except for compound , which inhibited sars-cov cl pro by %, we observed % inhibition of all other enzymes in the presence of compounds - . furthermore, we performed progress curve analysis of hku -cov cl pro and hku -cov cl pro in the presence of varying concentrations of compounds - . the k i values of compounds - for hku -cov cl pro are . Ϯ . , . Ϯ . , . Ϯ . , and . Ϯ . m, respectively. the k i values of compounds - for hku -cov cl pro are . Ϯ . , . Ϯ . , . Ϯ . , and . Ϯ . m, respectively. these data suggest that peptidomimetic compounds - have the potential to be developed as coronavirus cl pro inhibitors with broad spectrum specificity. weak association of the mers-cov cl pro dimer is supported by auc studies-to further explore the mechanism of mers-cov cl pro dimerization, we performed analytical ultracentrifugation sedimentation velocity (auc-sv) studies at varying concentrations of mers-cov cl pro (fig. a) . unlike enzyme kinetics, auc allows determination of the monomer-dimer equilibrium constant (k d ) in the absence of substrate. mers-cov cl pro displayed a continuous size distribution at different protein concentrations. two distinct peaks corresponding to monomer ( . s) and dimer ( . s) species are observed, with the dimer peak becoming more pronounced at higher enzyme concentrations (fig. a) . we fit the auc data to a monomer-dimer equilibrium model to determine the values for k d and k off , where k d is the equilibrium dissociation constant for a monomer from the dimer, and k off is the rate constant for dissociation of the monomer from the dimer. the resulting best fit value for k d is Ϯ m and that for k off is Ϫ s Ϫ . the k d value of m for mers cl pro is dramatically different from sars-cov cl pro , which has reported k d values ranging from low nanomolar up to m depending on the enzyme construct used and the experimental conditions and methods utilized to determine the dissociation constant ( ) . the dimer affinity of mers-cov cl pro is substantially weaker than that for sars-cov cl pro , when comparing the same enzyme construct, i.e. the enzyme without any n-or c-terminal modifications. the auc-sv calculated k d value for mers-cov cl pro is ϳ , times higher than the value of . nm determined for sars-cov cl pro ( ) . the auc results (fig. a) show that the monomer peak at ϳ . s does not gradually shift peak position toward the dimer peak at ϳ . s with increasing concentrations of mers-cov cl pro ; rather, the two peaks change in area, which is indicative of very slow monomer-dimer exchange rate (k off ϳ Ϫ s Ϫ ) and the formation of hydrodynamically stable monomer and dimer species ( ) . this k off value is times slower than the k off value ( Ϫ s Ϫ ) reported for sars-cov cl pro indicating that the sars-cov enzyme has a significantly more rapid monomer-dimer exchange rate ( ) . these observations support a model whereby the mers-cov cl pro dimer is weakly associated, suggesting the enzyme exists mainly as a monomer in solution. mers-cov cl pro undergoes extensive ligand-induced dimerization-the weak association of mers-cov cl pro monomers engenders the following questions. "are higher levels of expression of cl pro in mers-cov-infected cells necessary to allow formation of active dimer?" "are other mechanisms such as substrate-or ligand-induced dimerizations involved in activating cl pro ?" to explore the latter question of ligand-induced dimerization of mers-cov cl pro , we performed auc experiments in the presence of compound , which acts as a substrate mimetic and mechanism-based inhibitor, also known as a suicide substrate. peptidomimetic compounds such as compound , which contains a michael acceptor group, interact and react with the active site cysteine of cysteine proteases to covalently modify them. we utilized compound to form a covalent mers-cov cl pro and inhibitor complex that is stable over long periods of time, making it amenable to analysis by auc-sv experiments. in contrast, incubation of a normal peptide substrate with the enzyme would lead to immediate hydrolysis of the substrate and dissociation of the products from the enzyme, confounding auc experiments and subsequent data analysis. mers-cov cl pro was incubated with varying concentrations of compound in stoichiometric ratios of : , : , and : . the modified enzyme was then subjected to auc studies to determine the influence of compound on the monomer-dimer equilibrium (fig. b) . a significant shift in the area under . s peak (monomer) to . s peak (dimer) is detected upon addition of increasing concentrations of compound . we obtained similar results when auc studies were performed utilizing a complex of mers-cov cl pro with a noncovalent peptidomimetic inhibitor (compound , figs. c). the transition of mers-cov cl pro from monomer to dimer in the presence of compounds and suggests that the enzyme undergoes extensive dimerization upon substrate binding. the observed ligand-induced dimerization of mers-cov cl pro , as demonstrated through auc studies, prompted us to investigate whether or not the enzymatic activity of mers-cov cl pro could be increased at low concentrations of a compound via ligand-induced dimerization. to do so, we chose to use a noncovalent peptidomimetic compound (compound , fig. a ) that we previously identified as an inhibitor of sars-cov cl pro . because of the time-dependent, irreversible nature of the reaction between compound and mers-cov cl pro , use of compound was not ideal for these kinetic studies as it would further complicate kinetic data analysis. the kinetic response of mers-cov cl pro to increasing concentrations of compound was first measured at a single enzyme concentration of . m (fig. a) . interestingly, an increase in the activity of mers-cov cl pro , as high as %, was observed in the presence of low inhibitor concentrations ( . to m). inhibition of enzymatic activity was observed only at higher inhibitor concentrations ( m or greater). these results suggest that at low concentrations, compound binds to a monomer and induces the formation of a dimer. the resulting dimer then has one free active site that is capable of processing the substrate. at higher concentrations of inhibitor, the substrate and inhibitor directly compete for the free active site. the model of activation and inhibition suggested by the data at m enzyme would predict that at higher enzyme concentrations less activation by a compound would be observed at lower inhibitor concentrations, and the inhibition of activity would be detected at lower inhibitor concentrations because the equilibrium would be pushed toward dimer formation. in contrast, lower enzyme concentrations would result in higher activation by compounds, and inhibition by the compound would occur at significantly higher compound concentrations. therefore, we further measured the activity of mers-cov cl pro at two additional enzyme concentrations ( . and . m) in the presence of varying concentrations of compound . remarkably, we observed that the activation effect was most pronounced at the lowest mers-cov cl pro concentration tested ( . m), and the effect decreased as the enzyme concentration was increased ( . and . m) (fig. a ). moreover, inhibition by compound occurred at lower compound concentrations when higher concentrations of enzyme were used. these observations further support a model whereby enzyme activation can occur through ligand-induced dimerization. the activation and inhibition of mers-cov cl pro by compound can be explained by a simple kinetic model depicted in fig. b . the mers-cov cl pro monomer exists in equilibrium with the dimer, and their relative concentrations depend on the total enzyme concentration. in the absence of substrate or compound, the k d value is m, and the equilibrium is represented by the gray spheres (blue box) in fig. b . the monomer is unable to hydrolyze the substrate and is therefore inactive. binding of inhibitor (fig. b, green triangle) to the monomer results in monomer to dimer switch leading to the formation of a dimer that contains inhibitor bound in one of the active sites. once the dimer is formed, the substrate binds in the second active site and catalysis takes place. under high inhibitor concentrations, however, the inhibitor molecule directly competes with substrate for the free dimer active site, and inhibition of the enzymatic activity is observed as a result. we would also expect to observe induced dimerization and activation in the presence of the substrate. indeed, the monomer-dimer kinetic studies performed in fig. were performed at a fixed concentration of substrate at m. in this experiment, the k d value for the mers-cov cl pro dimer was determined to be . m, which is lower than the k d value determined in the absence of substrate using auc, thereby supporting substrateinduced dimerization. given the high k m value of cl pro for the peptide substrate ( - ), even higher substrate concentrations would be required to observe substrate activation in a plot of catalytic activity versus substrate concentration. however, we are limited to use our fret-based substrate only at low concentrations due to a significant inner filter effect at higher concentrations of substrate. therefore, a compound that both mimics substrate and has higher binding affinity can act as a useful surrogate for the substrate, allowing the observation of ligand-induced dimerization and activation even at low substrate concentrations. x-ray structure of mers-cov cl pro in complex with compound -to gain atomic level detail and molecular insight into the mechanism for substrate-induced dimerization of mers-cov cl pro , we attempted to crystallize and determine the x-ray structures of the unliganded mers-cov cl pro monomer and the mers-cov cl pro covalently modified with compound . unfortunately, we were unable to crystallize the unliganded mers-cov cl pro monomer after multiple attempts, but we were able to crystallize and determine the x-ray structure of mers-cov cl pro in complex with compound to a resolution of . Å. the statistics for x-ray data collection, processing, and refinement are summarized in table . the mers-cov cl pro and complex crystallized as a biologically relevant, symmetrical dimer in space group c with one monomer in the asymmetric unit. electron density for the entire protein was clearly visible and strong electron density (f o Ϫ f c Ͼ ) was present for compound within the active site (fig. a) . mers-cov cl pro has a smaller s pocket than sars-cov cl pro -the active site of mers-cov cl pro bound with compound is shown in fig. , a and b. compound is covalently bound to the active site cysteine (cys- ) via a . Å bond between the ␥-sulfur and the electrophilic ␤-carbon of the michael acceptor. the pЈ -ethyl ester carbonyl, which mimics the carbonyl of the scissile bond in a substrate, forms a hydro- -shaded box) . b, kinetic model describing the equilibrium between different species of mers-cov cl pro that are formed in the absence (blue box) and presence (green box) of a ligand is shown. based on the auc-calculated k d value of ϳ m, mers-cov cl pro primarily exists as a monomer in solution in the absence of a ligand. upon ligand binding (inhibitor i in our case) to the monomer, the monomer-dimer equilibrium shifts toward dimer formation. next, under lower inhibitor concentrations (cyan-shaded box), substrate (s) binds in the second active site and catalysis takes place. however, under higher inhibitor concentrations (yellow-shaded box), inhibitor directly competes with the substrate for the second active site, and inhibition of the enzymatic activity is observed. gen bond with the backbone nh of gly- that forms part of the oxyanion hole (fig. b) . within the s subsite, the p -lactam carbonyl, which is a surrogate for the amide of p -glutamine of substrates, participates in a hydrogen bonding interaction with the imidazole ring of his- , and the p -lactam nh forms a hydrogen bond with the carboxylate oxygen of glu- . the p -backbone amide nh forms a hydrogen bond with the side chain carbonyl of gln- (fig. b ). the p -leucine side chain atoms of the inhibitor make hydrophobic contacts with the side chains of met- and leu- that line the s subsite pocket. moreover, compared with the equivalent residue thr- in sars-cov cl pro , met- in the s pocket of mers-cov cl pro is expected to reduce the size of the hydrophobic pocket, which is supported by our observed sar described above. the smaller size of the s pocket in mers-cov cl pro is also consistent with the preference for a smaller leucine residue at the p position of cleavage sites instead of a bulkier phenylalanine or methionine residue. indeed, analysis of the preference for leucine or phenylalanine at the p position for the cl pro cleavage sites within the polyprotein of mers-cov shows that none of the cleavage sites contain a phenylalanine residue at this position (fig. c) . leucine is the predominantly favored residue at this position followed by methionine. analysis of the cleavage sites from sars-cov, hku -cov, and hku -cov shows that none of the cleavage sites from group c members (mers-cov, hku -cov, and hku -cov) contain a phenylalanine residue at the p position; however, the sars-cov nsp nsp cleavage site contains a phenylalanine residue at this position. other interactions are also observed to play a significant role in stabilizing the mers-cov cl pro -compound complex. the p -carbonyl and p -nh participate in hydrogen bonding interactions with the backbone nh and carbonyl of glu- . the p -serine side chain is within hydrogen bonding distance of the side chain carboxamide of gln- and the backbone carbonyl of lys- . x-ray structure of mers-cov cl pro in complex with a noncovalent inhibitor-we were also able to obtain diffraction quality crystals of mers-cov cl pro in complex with compound , which has an almost identical chemical structure as that of compound (fig. d) . we previously showed that compounds similar to and act as potent noncovalent inhibitors of cl pro from sars-cov ( ) . the x-ray structure of compound bound to mers-cov cl pro was determined to a resolution of . Å and the x-ray data collection, processing, and refinement statistics are summarized in table . the mers-cov cl pro and complex crystallized in space group p with two biologically relevant dimers in the asymmetric unit. the overall root mean square deviation between the c-␣ atoms of the four chains was less than Å, with the highest c-␣ root mean square deviation of . Å between chains c and d. strong electron density (f o Ϫ f c Ͼ ) was present for compound within all the four active sites of the two dimers (fig. d) . the binding orientation for compound in the active site of mers-cov cl pro is similar to the binding orientation of related compounds in the active site of sars-cov cl pro (pdb code mds). the benzotriazole group binds in the s subsite; phenyl propionamidyl occupies the sЈ -s subsite, and the thiophene group binds in the s subsite. compound also forms two direct and one water-mediated hydrogen bond interactions with amino acids in the mers-cov cl pro active site (fig. e) . the n of the benzotriazole ring forms a hydrogen bond with the side chain ⑀-nitrogen of conserved his- , and the central acetamide oxygen forms a hydrogen bond with the backbone nh of conserved glu- . the nh of the phenyl propionamidyl group interacts with backbone carbonyl oxygen of the catalytic his- residue through a water-mediated hydrogen bond, and the imidazole ring of his- engages with the phenyl ring of phenyl propionamidyl group through t-shaped stacking. the phenyl ring also form hydrophobic contacts with leu- . interactions at the cl pro dimer interface-analysis of the mers-cov cl pro and and mers-cov cl pro and crystal structures reveals key differences between the dimer interface of mers-cov and sars-cov cl pro (pdb code alv) figure . x-ray crystal structure of mers-cov cl pro in complex with inhibitors. a, solvent-accessible surface (gray-shaded surface) of mers-cov cl pro and compound complex. compound is displayed in ball and stick model with atoms colored as follows: carbons (orange), nitrogens (blue), and oxygens (red). electron density associated with compound is shown as an f o Ϫ f c electron density difference map contoured to (green mesh). substrate binding pockets s -sЈ are labeled, where asterisk indicates the electrophilic carbon of compound that forms a c-s covalent bond with the active site cysteine cys- . b, mers-cov cl pro and compound complex with the mers-cov cl pro backbone represented as a ribbon model and relevant amino acids that interact with compound represented as ball and sticks. mers-cov cl pro carbon atoms are colored blue, and compound carbon atoms are colored orange. nitrogen atoms are colored blue, and oxygen atoms are colored red. catalytic residues cys- and his- are also shown. hydrogen bonds are depicted as red dashed lines. c, sequence logos showing amino acid conservation for the polyprotein cleavage sites of different cl pro enzymes (mers-cov, hku -cov, hku -cov, and sars-cov), generated using the weblogo server ( ) . residues p -pЈ are shown. height of each letter corresponds to the amino acid conservation at that position. d, solvent-accessible surface (gray-shaded surface) of mers-cov cl pro and compound complex. compound is displayed in ball and stick model. electron density associated with compound is shown as a f o Ϫ f c electron density difference map contoured to . (green mesh). functional groups of compound with their corresponding binding pockets are highlighted in yellow, green, and blue ellipses. chemical structure of compound is shown in the inset. e, interactions between mers-cov cl pro and compound are illustrated. catalytic residues cys- and his- are also shown. hydrogen bonds are depicted as red dashed lines. ( fig. ) ( ) . two arginine residues, arg- and arg- (fig. , a-c), form some of the key interactions at the dimer interface of sars-cov cl pro , and mutation of either of these amino acids results in a drastic loss of dimerization in sars-cov cl pro ( , ) . interestingly, these two arginine residues (arg- and arg- ) are substituted in mers-cov cl pro by two hydrophobic residues (val- and met- ) that are unable to participate in the formation of hydrogen bonds or salt bridges. therefore, we initially thought that the loss of these key interactions might simply explain the Ͼ , -fold weaker dimerization observed for mers-cov cl pro compared with sars-cov cl pro . surprisingly, however, structural analysis of the dimer interface from the available x-ray structure of hku -cov cl pro (pdb code ynb; fig. , b and c) , and primary sequence alignment of cl pro from mers-cov, hku -cov, hku -cov and sars-cov (fig. ) revealed that val- and met- are conserved between all the ␤-cov c members studied here. substantial differences between the ability of mers-cov cl pro and hku /hku -cov cl pro to dimerize, despite their high sequence identity, led us to the hypothesis that nonconserved residues between mers-cov and other ␤-cov c members that are remote from the dimer interface may play a significant role in dimer formation. analysis of nonconserved residues of mers-cov cl pro -analysis of our current crystal structures does not reveal a clear mechanism for the monomer to dimer switch of mers-cov cl pro upon ligand binding. therefore, we attempted to identify the nonconserved residues in mers-cov cl pro that might affect enzymatic activity due to their proximity to key residues involved in substrate binding and/or dimer formation. based on a sequence alignment, mers-cov cl pro contains ϳ nonconserved amino acids (pink arrows in fig. ). upon analyzing the position of these amino acids in the crystal structure, we observed that a remarkable number of these amino acids are present in the loop regions. fig. a illustrates the nonconserved residues present in the loop regions as gray (monomer a) and pink (monomer b) spheres. interestingly, we also observed that there are hot spots in the protein structure where most of these amino acids are clustered. these hot spots include the n-terminal region, the active site region, the interdomain loop (loop between the catalytic fold and domain iii), and the domain iii. in mers-cov cl pro , nonconserved amino acid his- , which forms van der waals contacts with lys- of the same monomer and thr- of the other monomer, is present at the end of the n-terminal finger (fig. , b and c), whereas amino acids asp- and ala- are part of the n-terminal helix (fig. b) . additionally, amino acids thr- , lys- , and ser- are present within Å of the n-terminal region (fig. b ). substitution to these amino acids in mers-cov cl pro might have changed the protein dynamics in a way that only ligand binding populates the monomer conformation, which is more amenable to dimer formation. we also observe that some of the nonconserved residues in mers-cov cl pro are located in proximity to the substratebinding site and might contribute toward ligand-induced dynamic changes favorable for dimer formation. for example, nonconserved amino acid met- forms hydrophobic interactions with met- , which in turn is in close proximity to the catalytic residue his- (fig. d) . residue ala- is present on a loop, and this loop, along with conserved residues his- and his- , forms the s subsite for binding the p amino acid of the substrate (fig. e ). in addition to its influence on substrate binding, ala- may also contribute toward dimer formation upon substrate binding due to its close proximity with glu- . this glutamate residue in sars-cov cl pro (glu- ) has been established as a key residue linking the substrate-binding site to the dimer interface ( ) . val- forms hydrophobic interaction with other nonconserved residue ala- within domain ii (fig. f) . additionally, val- is present within van der waals contact distance of glul- from extrahelical domain iii (fig. f) . it is noteworthy that glu- forms a salt bridge with arg- across the dimer interface in sars-cov cl pro . however, this interaction is not formed in mers-cov cl pro due to the substitution of arg- with val- . tyr- forms hydrophobic contacts with the conserved residue tyr- (fig. g) . besides amino acid val- that connects domains ii and iii, residue tyr- , along with two other nonconserved residues, thr- and met- , is present on the inter-domain loop that connects the catalytic fold (domains i and ii) with the extra-helical domain iii (fig. g) . flexibility within these residues might affect the orientation of domain iii required for dimer formation. model for regulation of the enzymatic activity of mers-cov cl pro during polyprotein processing-enzymatic activity of coronavirus cl pro is required for the processing of viral polyproteins at distinct cleavage sites, allowing the release of nonstructural proteins that subsequently form a replication complex for virus genome replication. because of its indispensable role in the virus life cycle, regulation of the enzymatic activity of cl pro is instrumental for efficient replication of coronaviruses. based on our experimental results, we propose a model to explain the mechanism for regulating the enzymatic activity of mers-cov cl pro in the context of polyprotein processing during virus infection (fig. ) . a number of in vitro studies performed on sars-cov cl pro have established the mechanism for cl pro auto-release from the polyprotein ( , , ) . based upon these studies and our data on mers-cov cl pro , we propose the polyprotein processing model in fig. . the steps proposed for auto-release of mers-cov cl pro from the polyprotein (steps - , fig. ) have been adapted from chen et al. ( ) , where it is suggested that the n-terminal auto-processing does not require the formation of a mature cl pro dimer for sars-cov. based on the differences between the properties of sars-cov cl pro and mers-cov cl pro , as highlighted in our studies, we added two additional steps (steps and , fig. ) that mers-cov cl pro may need to utilize for efficient polyprotein processing. in fig. , step , two immature mers-cov cl pro monomers in the polyprotein approach each other and form an immature dimer via interactions between domain iii, which allows each of the monomers to insert their n termini into the active site of the other monomer. in step , the n termini are cleaved, and the dimer with uncleaved c termini adopts a conformation similar the n and c termini are labeled, and the yellow cylinder labeled s represents a ligand that can be a peptide inhibitor, peptide substrate, or cl pro cleavage sites in the polyprotein. various steps required for the auto-release of cl pro from the polyprotein and subsequent processing of the polyprotein cleavage sites are described in the text. suggested by our auc and kinetic studies, the shaded region (steps and ) highlights the additional steps mers-cov cl pro would undertake during polyprotein processing and have been described in the kinetic model depicted in fig. b. to the mature dimer. our observation of auto-cleavage of the n-terminal his tag from mers-cov cl pro during expression in bacterial cells supports steps and , where formation of an immature dimer capable of auto-processing the n terminus occurs. in step , two dimers with uncleaved c termini approach each other, followed by insertion of the c terminus from one dimer into one of the active sites of the other dimer. in step , the c termini are cleaved and mature dimer is released from the polyprotein. for sars-cov, the cl pro dimer formed in step continues to process cleavage sites in the polyprotein, effectively skipping steps and (red arrow in fig. ) because the dimer is tightly associated. however, the high k d value of mers-cov cl pro dimer suggests that the active and mature dimer may dissociate into inactive, mature monomers in the absence of any ligand (step ). in order for polyprotein processing to proceed, another step (step ) must occur. in step , a substrate s, e.g. one of the polyprotein cleavage sites, would induce dimer formation and hence activate catalysis and cleavage at the substrate recognition sites. our auc results and the kinetic activation studies performed in the absence and presence of inhibitors support steps and where the inactive but mature monomers require binding of a ligand to undergo ligand-induced dimerization and formation of an active, mature dimer that can then process the polyprotein cleavage sites. nonconserved amino acids of mers-cov cl pro may regulate the dimer formation-long range interactions have been reported to modulate dimerization and activity of cl pro enzymes. barrila et al. ( ) demonstrated that mutation of a conserved amino acid ser- , which is distant from the dimer interface, results in a total loss of dimerization and enzymatic activity of sars-cov cl pro . although ser- does not form direct interactions at the dimer interface, disruption of the dimer upon mutation stems from the fact that ser- makes several interactions with other residues involved in forming a hydrogen bonding network within sars-cov cl pro . site-directed mutagenesis studies on domain iii of sars-cov cl pro , where n a and s a/t a/i a mutants were characterized, revealed that despite being present on an entirely different domain, these residues affect catalysis through a network of residues undergoing correlated motions across the entire protease ( , ) . utilizing cl pro temperature-sensitive mutants of mhv, stobart et al. ( ) have also demonstrated that second-site mutation physically distant from the temperature-sensitive mutation suppresses the temperature-sensitive phenotype through long range interactions, thereby regulating cl pro enzymatic activity during polyprotein processing and virus replication. our studies also suggest that long range interactions among the nonconserved residues can significantly alter the properties of mers-cov cl pro . a detailed analysis of nonconserved residues of mers-cov cl pro among ␤-cov c members identified hot spots, including the n-terminal finger and helix, the active site region, the inter-domain loop, and the domain iii, where these residues are clustered. several studies done on sars-cov cl pro have demonstrated that amino acids from the n-terminal finger, the n-terminal helix, and domain iii significantly contribute toward dimer formation. in addition to the direct interactions at the dimer interface, correct orientation between the catalytic fold and domain iii is also crucial for dimer formation. wu et al. ( ) showed that the mostdramaticdifferencebetweenthecrystalstructuresofmonomer and the ligand-bound dimer of the r a mutant of sars-cov cl pro was a °rotation of domain iii ( ) . this rotation results in a steric clash between domain iii from two monomers and would essentially block dimer formation. however, upon addition of a ligand, domain iii of the r a mutant adopts the correct orientation and results in the formation of a dimer structure. similar to the sars-cov cl pro r a mutant, ligand binding into the active site of the mers-cov cl pro monomer possibly stabilizes the inter-domain loop conformation that maintains domain iii in the correct orientation for dimer formation. most of the nonconserved residues within domain iii are present on the surface and also are distant from the dimer interface. these residues may be involved in providing the flexibility required for conformational changes during the monomer to dimer switch. we have identified several amino acids in mers-cov cl pro that may contribute to the dimer formation upon ligand binding. however, single amino acid mutagenesis alone is unlikely to reveal significant differences in the dimerization properties. as demonstrated by myers et al. ( ) for ornithine decarboxylase, the response of single amino acid to ligand binding may be limited to only local conformational changes and may not have significant contribution toward dimer stability. however, local conformational changes in a network of residues may propagate larger effects that stabilize dimer formation upon ligand binding. analysis of the nonconserved residues of mers-cov cl pro discussed here sets forth a framework to perform systematic single or multiple mutagenesis studies to gain insights into the mechanism for ligand-induced dimerization of the enzyme. development of cl pro inhibitors with broad spectrum specificity-insights into the mechanistic and structural similarities as well as differences between cl pro enzymes from different coronavirus subgroups are instrumental for the development of cl pro inhibitors with broad spectrum specificity. to evaluate the broad spectrum specificity of our peptidomimetic compounds, we determined their inhibitory activity against cl pro from mers-cov, sars-cov, hku -cov, and hku -cov. our inhibitory data and k i values clearly show that compounds - inhibit all the cl pro enzymes tested here. the x-ray structure of mers-cov cl pro in complex with compound revealed that out of eight direct hydrogen bonds formed between compound and mers-cov cl pro , four of these hydrogen bonds involve interactions with conserved structural elements of the peptide backbone of the enzyme. furthermore, the amino acids that form hydrogen bonds with compound through side chain interactions are conserved in all the coronavirus cl pro enzymes evaluated here, as well as cl pro enzymes from other ␤-coronaviruses like mhv, oc , and hku . these results suggest that canonical structural features exist among the cl pro enzymes that can be exploited for structure-based design of broad spectrum inhibitors. for the noncovalent inhibitor compound , the x-ray structure reveals two direct hydrogen bonding interactions between the compound and mers-cov cl pro . one of the hydrogen bonds forms with the side chain ⑀-nitrogen of conserved his- , and the second involves the backbone nh of conserved glu- . we speculate these interactions remain conserved in other cl pro enzymes as well, because his- and glu- amino acids are conserved in all cl pro enzymes. in fact, the crystal structure of sars-cov cl pro in complex with an inhibitor similar to compound (pdb code mds) reveals that the interactions of the inhibitor with the amino acids his- and glu- are conserved. the identification of cl pro -inhibitor interactions utilizing conserved elements of the protein structure, including the peptide backbone and conserved side chains of active site residues, suggests that the development of broad-spectrum inhibitors of coronavirus cl pro is feasible. our studies here demonstrate the unique properties of mers-cov cl pro among ␤-cov c members, evident from the requirement for a ligand to induce dimerization. although the peptidomimetic compounds containing a michael acceptor group (for example, compounds - ) induce dimer formation of mers-cov cl pro , the irreversible nature of their reaction with the active site cysteine ensures complete inhibition of the enzyme at stoichiometric ratios in a time-dependent manner. on the contrary, noncovalent peptidomimetic compounds (for example, compounds and ) inhibit the enzymatic activity of mers-cov cl pro only at high compound concentrations. based on these observations, compounds that irreversibly modify the cl pro active site may serve as better candidates for the development of inhibitors for mers-cov cl pro . potential complexity in the development of mers-cov cl pro inhibitors as antiviral agents-induced dimerization of mers-cov cl pro , as seen in the presence of peptidomimetic inhibitors, has significant implications in the development of antiviral agents targeting mers-cov cl pro . as a consequence of enzyme activation, the development of an effective antiviral agent 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are important for enzyme function we-blogo: a sequence logo generator multiple sequence alignment with hierarchical clustering deciphering key features in protein structures with the new endscript server key: cord- -qgklt wa authors: huang, yi-ping; cho, chao-cheng; chang, chi-fon; hsu, chun-hua title: nmr assignments of the macro domain from middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) date: - - journal: biomol nmr assign doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: qgklt wa the newly emerging human pathogen, middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov), contains a macro domain in the highly conserved n-terminal region of non-structural protein . intense research has shown that macro domains bind adp-ribose and other derivatives, but it still remains intangible about their exact function. in this study we report the preliminary structural analysis through solution nmr spectroscopy of the mers-cov macro domain. the near complete nmr assignments of mers-cov macro domain provide the basis for subsequent structural and biochemical investigation in the context of protein function. dispensable for coronavirus replication (putic et al. ) , however it seems to play a role in the pathogenesis of mouse hepatitis virus infection (eriksson et al. ). in addition, viral macro proteins may act via adp-ribose binding to influence the cellular macro domains-regulated pathways either to promote virus replication or to inhibit host responses directed against the virus (neuvonen and ahola ). since the biochemical, enzymatic and structural analysis of mers-cov macro domain is not available, here we present the expression, purification, and chemical shift assignments of mers-cov macro domain. the nmr chemical shift assignments serve as the basis for further structural characterization and ligand screening, which provides insight into the conformational properties of this domain in solution and contributes to understanding its function. the dna sequence containing mers-cov macro domain (aa. - ) was chemical synthesized and cloned into ndei/xhoi site of pet- a(?) vector system (novagen). bacteria of the e. coli strain bl (de ) transformed with the pet- a (?)-macro domain plasmid were grown in liters of lb medium at °c until the absorbance at nm reach . . cells were then harvested by centrifugation and re-suspended in one liter of m minimal medium supplemented with g/l of nh cl and g/l of c -glucose (cambridge isotope laboratories). isopropylb-d-thiogalactoside (iptg, mm) was added to induce his-tagged protein for h at °c. the cell culture was harvested by centrifugation at rpm. for purification, cell pellets were re-suspended in ml buffer containing mm sodium phosphate and mm nacl at ph . and then disrupted by sonication for min. the cell extract was clarified by centrifugation at , rpm for min at °c to remove debris. the supernatant was then applied to ni-nta column (ge, healthcare) equilibrated with the same re-suspension buffer, and his-tagged protein was eluted with mm imidazole. the purified his-tagged macro domain was then digested with thrombin for h at °c to remove the his-tag. finally, macro domain protein ( kda, with extra gly, ser, his and met at n-terminus) was purified using size-exclusion superdex xk / column (ge, healthcare). the purified protein was concentrated to . - . mm in mm sodium phosphate (ph . ) and mm or mm nacl for nmr structural studies. all nmr experiments were carried out at k on bruker avance mhz nmr or mhz spectrometers equipped with mm triple resonance cryoprobe and z-gradient. the data was acquired and processed using the software topspin . (bruker, germany) and further analyzed using sparky, version . (t. d. goddard and d. g. kneller, sparky , university of california, san francisco), following the procedures as described previously (yang et al. ; chen et al. ) . h chemical shifts were externally referenced to ppm of , -dimethyl- -silapentane- -sulfonate, whereas c and n chemical shifts were indirectly referenced according to iupac recommendations (markley et al. ) . protein backbone resonance assignments were based on standard triple resonance experiments (sattler et al. ): hncacb, cbca(co)nh, hnco and hn(ca)co. aliphatic side-chain assignments were primarily done by hcch-tocsy and hcch-cosy with the help of hcc(co)nh and hbha(co)nh experiments. the backbone resonance assignments were nearly complete. figure illustrates the d ( h- n) hsqc spectrum and assignments of the amide resonances. except for the first four amino acids on n-terminal (gly - , ser - , his and met ) and six proline residues (pro , pro , pro , pro , pro , and pro ), amides of all other residues ( out of ) have been assigned under the experimental conditions (ph . at k). among these residues, all other backbone resonances ( ha, ca, cb and c) are % completed. completeness of h resonances assignment, including side-chain, calculated by cyana . (güntert ) is . %. secondary structure elements of mers-cov macro domain were identified by calculating the chemical shift deviations of the ca(ddca) and cb(ddcb) from the random coil values and was corroborated by analysis of the chemical shift data using the program talos? (shen et al. ). positive and negative values of the difference between ddca and ddcb correspond to a-helix and b-sheet secondary structure, respectively and correlated well with talos? index (fig. ) . six helices and seven b-strands could be deduced for mers-cov moacro domain protein based on the secondary chemical shift analysis, which results in residues - , - . - , - , - and - in a-helices and residues - , - , - , - , - , - and - forming b-sheets. the resonance assignments have been deposited to the biomagresbank (http://www.bmrb.wisc.edu/) under the accession number . backbone resonance assignments of the a sub-domain of brevibacillus thermoruber lon protease middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov): announcement of the coronavirus study group mouse hepatitis virus liver pathology is dependent on adpribose- -phosphatase, a viral function conserved in the alphalike supergroup coronaviruses: an overview of their replication and pathogenesis automated nmr protein structure calculation with cyana the macro domain protein family: structure, functions, and their potential therapeutic implications bats as reservoirs of severe emerging infectious diseases dissection of aminoterminal functional domains of murine coronavirus nonstructural protein the macro domain is an adpribose binding module recommendations for the presentation of nmr structures of proteins and nucleic acids. iupac-iubmb-iupab inter-union task group on the standardization of data bases of protein and nucleic acid structures determined by nmr spectroscopy differential activities of cellular and viral macro domain proteins in binding of adp-ribose metabolites the hepatitis e virus orf 'x-domain' residues from a putative macrodomain protein/appr- -pase catalyticsite, critical for viral rna replication adp-ribose- -monophosphatase: a conserved coronavirus enzyme that is dispensable for viral replication in tissue culture heteronuclear multidimensional nmr experiments for the structure determination of proteins in solution employing pulsed field gradients talos?: a hybrid method for predicting protein backbone torsion angle from nmr chemical shifts resonance assignments of human c (c orf ) protein, a novel tumor biomarker isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia acknowledgments the nmr spectra were obtained at high-field nuclear magnetic resonance center (hf-nmrc) and grc nmr core facility in academia sinica, taiwan. this work was supported by the ministry of science and technology, taiwan ( - -m- - -my ), and national taiwan university (ntu-erp- r and ntu-icrp- r - ) to c.-h. hsu. key: cord- -k s iy u authors: khalafalla, abdelmalik i.; lu, xiaoyan; al-mubarak, abdullah i.a.; dalab, abdul hafeed s.; al-busadah, khalid a.s.; erdman, dean d. title: mers-cov in upper respiratory tract and lungs of dromedary camels, saudi arabia, – date: - - journal: emerg infect dis doi: . /eid . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: k s iy u to assess the temporal dynamics of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infection in dromedary camels, specimens were collected at – month intervals from independent groups of animals during april –may in al-ahsa province, saudi arabia, and tested for mers-cov rna by reverse transcription pcr. of live camels, ( . %) nasal swab samples were positive; of camel carcasses, ( . %) lung tissue samples were positive. positive samples were more commonly found among young animals (< years of age) than adults (> years of age). the proportions of positive samples varied by month for both groups; detection peaked during november and january and declined in march and may . these findings further our understanding of mers-cov infection in dromedary camels and may help inform intervention strategies to reduce zoonotic infections. m iddle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) is an emerging pathogen associated with severe respiratory symptoms and renal failure in infected persons ( , ) . saudi arabia is the country most severely affected by the virus and is where the first recognized case was identified in . the origin of mers-cov remains a mystery. bats seem to be the reservoir host of the virus ( ) but are probably not the source of the ongoing mers-cov outbreak because of limited contact with humans in the arabian peninsula. early observations that some mers-cov-infected persons had been exposed to camels suggested a possible role of these animals as intermediate reservoir hosts ( , ) . serologic surveys subsequently conducted in several countries in the arabian peninsula and africa identified high rates of mers-cov-specific antibodies in dromedary camels ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . furthermore, mers-cov infection in dromedary camels was definitively proven by the detection of virus and virus sequences in respiratory specimens, feces, and milk collected from camels in qatar ( , ) , oman ( ) , saudi arabia ( , , ) , and egypt ( ) . the few published studies that looked for mers-cov in the respiratory tract of naturally infected dromedary camels examined nasal or ocular swab samples but not samples from the lower respiratory tract. moreover, several studies relied on only a few specimens or collected specimens at only time point ( , ( ) ( ) ( ) . to address these limitations and to clarify the dynamics of mers-cov infection in these animals, we conducted a year-round study in which we collected a large number of specimens from the upper respiratory tracts of live dromedary camels and from the lungs of dromedary camel carcasses. this study was approved by the institutional review board of the camel research center, king faisal university, al-ahsa, saudi arabia. respiratory specimens were collected from independent groups of mixed-age dromedary camels (camelus dromedaruis). the first collection was obtained during april -may at the al omran abattoir, al omran city, in al-ahsa province in the eastern region of saudi arabia. livestock slaughtered at this abattoir include cattle, goats, sheep, and camels originating from al-ahsa and neighboring provinces. animals selected for slaughter were mainly from the livestock market and from herds located around al-ahsa province. at the livestock market in al-ahsa, dromedary camels are housed in small groups ( - animals), where they may stay for no more than days. they are then transported in vehicles to the abattoir, where they are kept for no more than hours before slaughter. samples were taken from slaughtered dromedary camels on occasions (every - months). on each particular collection date, tissue specimens were collected from the lungs of all slaughtered dromedary camels. a total of animal carcasses were sampled; had been young animals (< years of age) and had been adults (> years of age). lung lobes that showed pulmonary lesions were sampled; if both lobes showed lesions or if no lesions were visible, the left lobe was sampled because of its close proximity to the person collecting the sample. the tissue samples (≈ - g) were collected aseptically from inside the lung lobes by using sterile surgical instruments (scalpels, forceps, and scissors). to avoid cross-contamination, lungs were moved to a clean room adjacent to the slaughtering hall and examined on a freshly disinfected table by a person wearing a newly donned gown, face mask, and sterile gloves and using a new set of sterile surgical instruments. collected tissue samples were immediately deposited in labeled sterile plastic bags and placed in a cooler containing ice packs for transport to the laboratory. a second sample was collected from age-matched animals over the same period and consisted of nasal swab specimens ( young animals and adults), from visually healthy dromedary camels and from camels with nasal and lachrymal discharge. nasal swabs were collected from animals at locations in al ahsa province (al omran abattoir, al ahsa livestock market, and the veterinary hospital of king faisal university). for this procedure, a long sterile flexible swab was inserted into nostril until slight resistance was felt; the swab was then rotated, held in place for seconds, withdrawn, and placed in ml of cold viral transport medium containing antibiotics (this medium was chosen to enable future attempts to isolate the virus). both swab and lung specimens were transported on ice to the laboratory within - hours of collection and stored at − °c until testing. collection dates and numbers of samples are listed in table . swab specimens in transport media were mixed and then clarified by centrifugation at × g for minutes; the supernatants were recovered for extraction. lung samples were thawed and homogenized by using a tissueruptor homogenizer (qiagen, hilden, germany), and % suspensions were prepared in ml of transport medium. the resulting homogenates were subjected to centrifugation as above, and the supernatants were recovered for extraction. total rna was extracted from μl of each nasal swab or lung sample by using the qiaamp viral rna mini kit (qiagen) according to the manufacturer's instructions. extracted rna was tested by using a gel-based pancoronavirus reverse transcription pcr (rt-pcr) assay according to the protocol of vijgen et al. ( ) . realtime rt-pcr (rrt-pcr) was performed by using an assay kit provided by the centers for disease control and prevention (cdc; atlanta, ga, usa). this assay panel targets the mers-cov nucleocapsid protein gene ( ) and a region upstream of the envelop protein gene described by corman et al. ( ) . all samples were screened by using gel-based rt-pcr and rrt-pcr assays and were considered positive for mers-cov if a positive result was obtained with at least of the tests following world health organization recommendations (http://www.who.int/csr/disease/coronavirus_infections/ who_interim_recommendations_lab_detection_mer-scov_ .pdf). all rt-pcrs included no-template negative controls and quantified mers-cov transcript as positive control. cdna was prepared from positive samples and shipped to cdc for independent confirmation and sequencing. to assess the genetic variability of mers-cov, we sequenced the spike protein gene coding region ( , nt) on the positive samples. sequencing was performed on an applied biosystems xl genetic analyzer (thermo fisher scientific, grand island, ny, usa) by using sequencher version . software (gene codes, ann arbor, mi, usa) for sequence assembly and editing. sequence alignments were performed by using clustalx version . implemented in bioedit version . . (http://www.mbio. ncsu.edu/bioedit/bioedit.html). phylogenetic analyses were performed by using mega version . (http://www. megasoftware.net). the neighbor-joining method (tree algorithm inferred with the kimura -parameter substitution model of sequence evolution) was used to construct phylogenetic trees, and bootstrap resampling analyses were performed ( , replicates) to test tree reliability. during the study, a total of lung tissue samples and nasal swabs were obtained from the groups of camels (table ) (table ) . all animals from both groups appeared healthy on visual inspection except for . these -month-old dromedary camel calves, located outside of the al omran abattoir, exhibited purulent nasal and lachrymal discharge; mers-cov rna was detected in nasal swab specimens from these calves (figure ). mers-cov rna was more often detected in the lung and nasal cavity of young camels than adult camels (table ) our results confirm previous reports documenting wide circulation of mers-cov in dromedary camel populations in the middle east. in other studies, rt-pcr detection of mers-cov in nasal swab specimens from these animals has ranged from . % to . %. studies conducted in qatar detected mers-cov in ( . %) of ( ) and ( . %) of ( ) animals tested; in saudi arabia, ( %) of ( ) and ( %) of ( ); in oman, ( . %) of ( ) ; and in egypt, ( . %) of ( ) . a recent large study of , dromedary camels in the united arab emirates identified mers-cov rna in only . % of animals ( ) . of note, these authors found proportionately more positive animals near the border with saudi arabia and detected > fold more among animals sampled from slaughter houses. overall, we detected mers-cov in the upper respiratory tract of a higher proportion of animals tested in al-ahsa, but this proportion was within the upper range previously reported. in contrast, alagaili et al. ( ) , in a comprehensive survey conducted in november and december , sampled regions of saudi arabia (gizan in the south, taif in the west, tabuk in the north, uniza in the center, and hofuf [al-ahsa] in the east) and reported % positivity by rrt-pcr in animals from taif versus only % from al-ahsa, despite seroprevalence of % in the latter. during the same period and in the same region, we detected mers-cov in . % of nasal swab samples. this difference may be because of differences in the numbers and ages of animals sampled, time of specimen collection, or even between geographically proximate dromedary camel herds where rates of mers-cov detection can vary dramatically ( ) . of note, detection of mers-cov rna by rt-pcr does not necessarily indicate active virus replication. when dromedary camels were experimentally inoculated, infectious mers-cov was detected in the upper respiratory tract for only days, but rna could be detected by rt-pcr for up to days after inoculation ( ). we were unable to perform virus isolation studies because of lack of suitable biosafety infrastructure. we also found that a high proportion of lung tissues from slaughtered dromedary camels at the al omran abattoir were mers-cov positive by rt-pcr. in their experimental inoculation study, adney et al. ( ) observed histologic lesions in the epithelium of the upper and lower (trachea, bronchi, and bronchioles) respiratory tract and recovered viable virus from these tissues and from of lung lobes of an animal euthanized days after inoculation; viable virus was not recovered from tissues of other animals at and days after inoculation. although that limited study found infection extending to the lung of animal, the authors found that the upper respiratory tract was the predominant site of virus replication and offered that finding as an explanation for the lack of observed systemic illness among naturally infected dromedary camels. an alternative hypothesis posits that, in the natural setting, subclinical mers-cov infection of the lower respiratory tract also occurs, possibly enhanced by crowding and stress endured during transport and corralling before slaughter. although we did not collect matching premortem nasal swab samples from slaughtered animals to determine how many were also positive for mers-cov in the upper respiratory tract, our findings raise the possibility that testing upper respiratory tract samples alone may underestimate the true number of actively infected animals. in humans, mers-cov was detected in the lower respiratory tract of infected patients for ≈ month while oronasal swab samples were negative ( ) . likewise, mers-cov detection has been found to be enhanced from lower respiratory tract specimens, and therefore these specimens are recommended by the world health organization for diagnosis of mers-cov infection ( , , ) . although great care was taken to avoid contamination with ambient mers-cov present in the abattoir, the possibility that sample contamination occurred cannot be entirely ruled out. further studies that include immunohistologic examination and virus isolation from the lower respiratory tract of naturally infected dromedary camels will be needed to substantiate these findings. our detection of mers-cov rna in camel calves with purulent nasal discharge was consistent with those of hemida et al. ( ) , who also observed mild clinical signs characterized by nasal discharge in some naturally infected young dromedary camels, and of adney et al. ( ) , who documented appearance of purulent nasal discharge in the experimentally infected adult dromedary camels. we also detected mers-cov rna in a higher proportion of specimens from younger than from older adult dromedary camels, consistent with findings of previous studies that mers-cov infection is more common among young camels ( , ) . our study also investigated temporal variation in mers-cov infection in dromedary camels. although data interpretation was complicated by discontinuity in the months sampled and sampling from only animal group in some months, a temporal pattern in mers-cov prevalence was apparent. for both animal groups, peak detection occurred during november -january , followed by a steady decline, reaching the lowest point in may . although we observed no clear temporal differences in the geographic origins or ages of dromedary camels brought to slaughter, which might bias these results, our data are nevertheless limited and should not be used to imply a general pattern of mers-cov circulation in dromedary camels in saudi arabia. nevertheless, these findings would not be unexpected. increased circulation of mers-cov among dromedary camels during the cool season is consistent with the prevailing cooler ambient temperatures, which have been shown to enhance coronavirus survivability outside the host ( , ) , and the cool season is the period of peak circulation of other respiratory viral pathogens of humans in saudi arabia ( ) ( ) ( ) . this period also corresponds with the peak calving season for dromedary camels in saudi arabia ( ) ; higher rates of mers-cov infections among a greater proportion of young animals with higher virus loads may increase opportunities for virus spread ( , ) . whereas the link between dromedary camels and mers-cov infection of humans is well established ( , ) , the overall contribution of zoonotic infections to community-acquired mers-cov remains unclear. serologic studies of animal handlers in saudi arabia who work emerging infectious diseases • www.cdc.gov/eid • vol. , no. , july in close proximity to dromedary camels have shown limited evidence of mers-cov infection ( ) ( ) ( ) . alghamdi et al. ( ) , who examined patterns of mers-cov infections among humans in saudi arabia between june and may , did not find a concomitant temporal increase in human infections that corresponded with our findings in dromedary camels. those authors observed a slight, temporary increase in cases among humans in june and september and few cases from october through february, after which cases and deaths sharply increased beginning in april . the authors concluded that lower relative humidity and higher temperatures during these months might have contributed to the dramatic surge in reported cases. however, more recent data from the world health organization ( ) show a sharp decline in mers-cov cases among humans in may ; low numbers of cases were reported from june through august , when mean temperature was highest and relative humidity was lowest in saudi arabia ( ) . moreover, a recent increase in numbers of mers-cov cases in humans from september through february corresponds more closely with the temporal pattern we found in dromedary camels the preceding year. further studies conducted over multiple years are needed to better understand the ecology of mers-cov, which might help inform intervention strategies to reduce zoonotic infections. isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia clinical features and virological analysis of a case of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in bats, saudi arabia recovery from severe novel coronavirus infection middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in dromedary camels in saudi arabia seroprevalence in domestic livestock in saudi arabia seroepidemiology for mers coronavirus using microneutralisation and pseudoparticle virus neutralization assays reveal a high prevalence of antibody in dromedary camels in egypt middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) serology in major livestock species in an affected region in jordan 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coronavirus by real-time reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction structure of mers-cov spike receptor-binding domain complexed with human receptor dpp prevalence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in dromedary camels in abu dhabi emirate replication and shedding of mers-cov in upper respiratory tract of inoculated dromedary camels mers-cov study group. clinical features and viral diagnosis of two cases of infection with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: a report of nosocomial transmission severe respiratory illness caused by a novel coronavirus stability of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) under different environmental conditions t he effects of temperature and relative humidity on the viability of the sars coronavirus viral aetiology and epidemiology of acute respiratory infections in hospitalized saudi children respiratory viruses in children attending a major referral centre in saudi arabia viral agents causing acute lower respiratory tract infections in hospitalized children at a tertiary care center in saudi arabia evidence for camel-to-human transmission of mers coronavirus investigation of anti-middle east respiratory syndrome antibodies in blood donors and slaughterhouse workers in jeddah and makkah, saudi arabia, fall sparse evidence of mers-cov infection among animal workers living in southern saudi arabia during . influenza other respir viruses lack of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus transmission from infected camels the pattern of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in saudi arabia: a descriptive epidemiological analysis of data from the saudi ministry of health middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov): summary of current situation, literature update and risk assessment we thank isam al jalii and khalid borsais for assistance with sample collection and marzooq m. al eknah for financial support.dr. khalafalla is professor of veterinary virology at king faisal university, al-ahsa, saudi arabia. his research focus is on viral diseases of dromedary camels. key: cord- -g n n authors: khudhair, ahmed; killerby, marie e.; al mulla, mariam; abou elkheir, kheir; ternanni, wassim; bandar, zyad; weber, stefan; khoury, mary; donnelly, george; al muhairi, salama; khalafalla, abdelmalik i.; trivedi, suvang; tamin, azaibi; thornburg, natalie j.; watson, john t.; gerber, susan i.; al hosani, farida; hall, aron j. title: risk factors for mers-cov seropositivity among animal market and slaughterhouse workers, abu dhabi, united arab emirates, – date: - - journal: emerg infect dis doi: . /eid . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: g n n camel contact is a recognized risk factor for middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infection. because specific camel exposures associated with mers-cov seropositivity are not fully understood, we investigated worker–camel interactions and mers-cov seroprevalence. we assessed worker seroprevalence in slaughterhouses and live-animal market in abu dhabi, united arab emirates, during – and administered an epidemiologic survey in and . across sampling rounds during – , we sampled – workers, and %– % were seropositive for mers-cov at each sampling round. one ( . %) of seronegative workers tested at multiple rounds seroconverted. on multivariable analyses, working as a camel salesman, handling live camels or their waste, and having diabetes were associated with seropositivity among all workers, whereas handling live camels and either administering medications or cleaning equipment was associated with seropositivity among market workers. characterization of high-risk exposures is critical for implementation of preventive measures. m iddle east respiratory syndrome (mers) coronavirus (mers-cov) was first identified as a cause of severe respiratory tract infections in saudi arabia in october ( ) . the clinical spectrum of mers ranges from asymptomatic infection to acute respiratory distress syndrome and death ( ) . as of april , , a total of , laboratory-confirmed cases of infection have been reported by countries to the world health organization (who); the reported case-fatality rate is % ( ) . all reported cases have an epidemiologic link to the arabian peninsula, and imported cases have been reported in europe, asia, north america, and africa. the united arab emirates has reported the third-highest number of mers cases since ( ) . mers-cov is a zoonotic virus, and dromedaries (camels) are recognized as a major virus reservoir for spillover to humans ( ) . multiple studies have isolated mers-cov or mers-cov rna from camels across the arabian peninsula and africa ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . serologic studies of camels in the middle east and africa have revealed mers-cov seroprevalence of > %- % ( , ( ) ( ) ( ) . in natural infection, camels have been found to shed mers-cov in respiratory secretions and to a lesser extent in stool ( , ) . evidence of virus rna has also been found in milk collected by traditional milking procedures, which involve calf suckling as a stimulus for milk letdown ( ) . epidemiologic links between infected camels and human mers-cov infections have been shown, with identical or nearly identical mers-cov genomes found in human cases and in camels with which they had direct contact ( ) ( ) ( ) . also, a case-control study identified exposure to camels as a risk factor for human mers-cov infection ( ) . human seroprevalence studies also support the association between mers-cov infection and camel contact; in saudi arabia mers-cov seroprevalence was found to be times greater in camel shepherds and times greater in slaughterhouse workers compared with the general population ( ) . further studies have also shown high seroprevalence in specific occupational groups with various camel exposures (e.g., seropositivity was detected in . % of a cohort of camel workers in qatar [ ] and in % of a cohort of camel workers in saudi arabia [ ] ). although multiple lines of evidence suggest camel exposure is associated with human mers-cov infection, the exact mechanisms of transmission are not fully understood. information on specific risk factors relating to camel interactions are needed to further understand how the virus might be transmitted from camels to humans and to guide interventions to prevent zoonotic transmission, including changes to camel management practices. because mers-cov vaccines are currently in development and have reported success in phase i clinical trials ( ), knowledge of groups at risk for mers-cov infection might also be useful when considering future vaccine use. our study aimed to identify risk factors for mers-cov seropositivity among live-animal market and slaughterhouse workers. the study sites consisted of an open-air animal market and slaughterhouses ( commercial and public). all facilities housed camels, goats, sheep, and cattle ( figure ). typically during the study period, approximately persons worked at the market, at the public slaughterhouse, and at the commercial slaughterhouse. the market investigated in this study was linked to a human mers case in ( ) . prior investigation showed a large diversity of mers-covs circulating among camels at the market; ( %) of screened camels had detectable mers-cov rna in nasal swab specimens in the spring of ( ) . we conducted rounds of worker serum sampling. the first round was conducted during may - , , and the second round during march -april and may - , . during the first rounds of sampling, all available workers at the market and public slaughterhouse were requested to provide a serum sample as part of a public health investigation. we conducted a third round of serum sampling during september -october , , and march - , . the third round of sampling included workers at the market, public slaughterhouse, and the newly opened commercial slaughterhouse. all available workers were requested to provide serum samples, although participation was voluntary. some, but not all, workers were repeatedly sampled, when feasible, during multiple rounds. we administered an epidemiologic survey to all workers only during the third round of serum sampling in and . no surveys were administered in or . the survey consisted of questions covering worker demographics; occupational history; contact with various animal species; travel history; medical history; consumption of raw camel milk, raw camel meat, and camel urine; specific tasks performed with camels; types of personal protective equipment (ppe) worn; and handwashing practices (appendix , https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/ / / - -app .pdf). separate lists of questions covering specific camel tasks performed were asked of market and slaughterhouse workers because of the different nature of camel tasks among occupational groups. interviews were conducted in arabic by staff from the abu dhabi department of health. human serum samples were tested for mers-cov antibodies at the us centers for disease control and prevention (cdc) by using indirect elisas for nucleocapsid (n) and spike (s) proteins, followed by a confirmatory microneutralization test, as previously described ( ) . samples were initially tested by using both n and s elisas as screening assays with serum diluted to : . all serum samples with optical densities above assay cutoff were diluted serially, -fold, from : to : , , and used for endpoint titer determinations. serum samples that were positive by n or s elisa with titers at : , : , or : , , plus % of samples negative by n or s elisa at these titers, were tested by using microneutralization with live mers-cov performed in a biosafety level laboratory, as previously described ( ) . in addition, we conducted confirmatory microneutralization tests on seronegative samples from any persons who showed a change in seropositivity status over time to confirm changes in seropositivity status. samples were considered positive if positive on n and s elisa or if positive on microneutralization. specimens near the limits of detection but not consistently above or below these limits were considered indeterminate. for the epidemiologic analysis, persons with an indeterminate result were considered seronegative. we used epi info (https://www.cdc.gov/epiinfo) for data entry and r version . . (https://cran.r-project.org/ bin/windows/base/old/ . . ) for data analysis. we performed comparisons between prevalence of work practices by setting (market vs. slaughterhouse) by using the pearson χ square test. we used univariable logistic regression to estimate odds ratios, % cis, and p values (wald test) for all associations between potential risk factors and seropositivity. we assessed associations between demographics, occupational history, contact with various animal species, consumption of camel products, travel history, and medical history with seropositivity for all workers. we separately tested associations between specific interactions with camels, types of ppe worn, and handwashing practices with seropositivity for stratified subgroups of market and slaughterhouse workers because of the different nature of work setting and standard practices between these populations. we then performed additional exploratory data description by occupation on the basis of results of univariable analyses. we developed multivariable logistic models to identify associations between risk factors and seropositivity. first, we constructed a model of risk factors common to all workers and then constructed occupationally stratified models (i.e., separate models for market workers and slaughterhouse workers) to model specific interactions with camels, ppe use, and handwashing practices. we combined or eliminated highly correlated variables, which were determined by condition indices and variance decomposition proportions. we reduced categorical variables to binary options if small group size was observed. we performed initial variable selection by using least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (lasso) and then tested person-variable significance by using the likelihood ratio test with a cutoff of p< . within an ordinary logistic regression model. we then included age and number of years worked at current setting as potential confounders in all final models. we excluded persons with missing data at the lasso stage but included them for the final logistic regression model. for the stratified market worker and slaughterhouse models, we also included variables significant in the all workers model but not directly relating to camel interactions (e.g., reported underlying conditions) in the final occupationally stratified models. we did not include significant variables directly relating to camel exposures in the all workers model in the stratified models because more specific camel risk practices were assessed in the stratified models. for market and slaughterhouse models, we tested interactions between significant risk practices and select ppe use and handwashing practices for a protective effect. we sampled workers in round ( ), workers in round ( ), and workers in round ( and ); overall mers-cov seroprevalence was % for round , % for round , and % for round . twenty-one persons had specimens taken at rounds and , twenty-three at rounds and , thirteen at rounds and , and twenty-two at all rounds ( figure ). of persons who were seronegative at their first sample, only ( . %, % ci . %- . %) seroconverted: a -year-old man who was a cleaner at the public slaughterhouse tested negative at round and positive at round . of persons who were seropositive at their first sample, ( %) was later found to be seronegative: a -year old man who was an administrative supervisor at the market was resampled between rounds and . this person did not report handling camels or their waste and did not perform any tasks directly relating to camels. one additional person who had a positive serologic result at their first and second samples and an indeterminate result at their third sample was not subsequently evaluated for change in seropositive status. because some study participants might have had different medical record numbers across the sampling rounds, we could not determine all potential seroconversions or losses of seropositivity, although we also performed matching by name and age. we compiled serologic results for all participants who ever tested positive (appendix , https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/ article/ / / - -app .pdf). in total, persons both completed the epidemiologic survey and were sampled during round . one additional person completed the epidemiologic survey but refused serum sampling and was not included in any analyses. all workers were men, and their median age was years (range - years). the median number of years worked at the current settings was (range . - years). we observed no significant effect of age (p = . ) or years worked (p = . ) on seropositivity on univariable analysis. worker occupations were categorized into animal handlers (n = ), camel salesmen (n = ), other animal salesmen (n = ), animal or waste transporters (n = ), butchers (n = ), cleaners (n = ), veterinarians (n = ), and other (e.g., supervisor, cashier, and tourist guide) (n = ). salesmen only worked in the market, and butchers only worked in the slaughterhouses. the remaining occupations were found in both settings, but each person could only work at a slaughterhouse or the market. none of the workers reported working at any other job outside of the market or slaughterhouses, and the only animals reported present at home were poultry and stray cats. overall, ( %) of market workers had daily contact with camels or their waste, compared with ( %) of slaughterhouse workers (p = . ). certain ppe use and handwashing were more frequently reported by slaughterhouse workers than market workers. among slaughterhouse workers, % reported wearing a dust mask (equivalent to a surgical mask), compared with % of market workers (p< . ). only % of slaughterhouse workers reported taking their work clothes home, compared with % of market workers (p< . ). eighty-one percent of slaughterhouse workers reported washing their hands before and after each animal-related task, compared with % of market workers (p< . ). ninety-three percent of slaughterhouse workers reported washing their hands at the beginning and end of the day, compared with only % of market workers (p< . ). rates of seropositivity were higher among market workers ( [ %] of ) than among slaughterhouse workers ( [ %] of ), although this difference was not statistically significant on univariable analysis (p = . ). by occupation, camel salesmen and animal or waste transporters had significantly higher odds of seropositivity than the reference group of other salesmen (table ) . univariable analyses showed that several characteristics were associated with seropositivity among all workers (table ) , including handling camels or their waste daily. not all seropositive workers reported handling camels or their waste; workers initially claimed they never handled camels or their waste, although of these later reported that they contacted either camel equipment, viscera, or waste within the slaughterhouse. for the subgroup of market workers, univariable analyses revealed multiple camel exposures to be associated with seropositivity and handwashing practices that were inversely associated with seropositivity (table ). for the subgroup of slaughterhouse workers, no individual risk factors were associated with seropositivity (table ) . because camel salesmen had the highest odds of mers-cov seropositivity, we summarized their frequency of specific camel exposures separately (figure ). direct observation of camel salesmen in the market showed that most of their time was spent in the camel pens, including while they ate and rested, and direct handling of the animals occurred frequently (data not shown). for the multivariable model evaluating risk factors associated with seropositivity in all workers, the following variables remained in the final logistic regression model: handling camels or their waste daily (adjusted odds ratio [aor] . , % ci . - . ), working as a camel salesman (aor . , % ci . - . ), and self-reported diabetes (aor . , % ci . - . ). all factors significantly increased odds of seropositivity. for market workers, multivariable analysis resulted in a final model in which the following variables were each independently associated with seropositivity: handling live camels (aor . , % ci . - . ), administering medications to camels (aor . , % ci . - . ), and self-reported diabetes (aor . , % ci . - . ). cleaning equipment was also significantly associated with seropositivity (aor . , % ci . - . ); substituted for administering medication to camels, this factor produced a model with a near-identical fit along with the other risk factors. given that administering medications to camels was highly correlated with cleaning equipment, the statistical significance of both factors was lost if both factors were included in the model because of collinearity (ρ = . ). none of the select ppe and handwashing practices evaluated as interactions with risk practices showed a significant protective effect. no individual risk factors were significantly associated with slaughterhouse workers by multivariable analysis. our study investigated risk factors for mers-cov seropositivity in animal market and slaughterhouse workers at a site previously associated with zoonotic transmission of mers-cov. given the large number of camels present, including many young camels, and the mixing of camels from multiple sources, this site probably facilitates mers-cov transmission among camels. our results demonstrated a relatively high mers-cov seroprevalence in workers at this site, ranging from % to % at each round across all occupations. because we did not record occupation and other risk factors during the first sampling rounds, we were unable to further assess reasons for the different seropositivity rates between sampling rounds. we found particularly high seroprevalence in specific occupational groups, namely camel salesmen ( %) and animal or waste transporters ( %). previous studies of workers with occupational exposure to camels have reported either lower seropositivity rates (e.g., . % of workers with occupational camel contact seropositive in qatar [ ] and . % of camel shepherds seropositive in saudi arabia [ ] ) or comparable seropositivity (e.g., % of camel workers positive in saudi arabia [ ] ). our rates of seropositivity might underestimate actual exposure to mers-cov. previous studies have demonstrated that examining mers-covspecific t cells from mers patients is more sensitive than examining serum antibodies alone ( ) . to examine t-cell responses, peripheral blood mononuclear cells must be collected, which was beyond the scope of our study. on multivariable analysis, we found that contact with camels or their waste, working as a camel salesman, and self-reported diabetes were all independently associated with seropositivity in all workers. because of small stratum size, belonging to other occupational groups could not be meaningfully explored as risk factors. diabetes has previously been shown to be a commonly reported underlying condition in mers cases ( ) , has been associated with risk for infection in a case-control study ( ) , and has been associated with increased risk for death in mers patients ( ) . we found an association between diabetes and mers-cov seropositivity in a cohort with occupational exposure to camels. although persons with diabetes might be at increased risk for mers-cov infection, the association between diabetes, mers-cov infection, and the resulting antibody response is still not fully understood. however, because persons with diabetes are considered at high risk for developing severe disease from mers-cov infection, who recommends these persons take precautions when visiting farms or markets where camels are present, including avoiding contact with camels ( ). among market workers, handling live camels and either administering medications to camels or cleaning equipment were practices associated with significantly increased risk for mers-cov seropositivity. given that administering medications to camels was highly correlated with cleaning equipment, neither factor was statistically significant if both were included in the model. the biological importance of these associations might therefore be difficult to interpret, because either or both risk factors could be statistically associated with mers-cov seropositivity and have an undefined strength of association. practices potentially associated with camel calves, such as milking or assisting with camel birth, were not associated with mers-cov seropositivity despite a higher prevalence of viral rna in camels < year of age compared with other ages ( ) and a previously reported association between milking camels frequently and seropositivity ( ) . however, these practices were not commonly reported by market workers in our study, limiting the power to detect an association with seropositivity. no specific work practices were found to be associated with seropositivity among slaughterhouse workers. compared with market workers, slaughterhouse workers had less exposure to live camels and a higher self-reported prevalence of potentially protective practices such as ppe use and frequent handwashing. although our multivariable analysis did not show a significant association between ppe use (e.g., wearing a dust mask and gloves) or handwashing practices and seropositivity, the small sample size might have restricted the power to detect interactions between ppe and camel exposures. because camel-to-human transmission of mers-cov is not fully understood, who recommends broad preventive measures for slaughterhouse and market workers, including wearing facial protection when feasible, washing hands before and after each animal-related task, and washing soiled work clothes and shoes at the work place to avoid exposing family members to soiled work clothing ( ) . where feasible, increased use of such measures could be encouraged, particularly in market workers, to decrease risk for infection. because only a single human mers case has been reported in connection with the study site, our reported rates of seroprevalence suggest unrecognized transmission (and potentially unrecognized illness) at this site. however, because the length of time mers-cov antibodies persist is unknown ( ), the time and place these infections might have occurred is unknown; transmission potential also exists in the united arab emirates outside of markets and slaughterhouses. whether infections were symptomatic is also unknown. participants were asked whether they had seen a healthcare provider for respiratory illness in the previous months, but such reported illness was not associated with seropositivity, and multiple pathogens other than mers-cov could be responsible for any reported respiratory illness. despite these limitations, mers-cov was detected in camels at the market during our study period ( ) , and an interim seroconversion was noted in worker, suggesting active zoonotic transmission. taken collectively, our findings suggest an underestimated prevalence of human mers-cov infection in settings where the virus is circulating among camels, probably resulting from camel-to-human transmission. our study had additional limitations, including the overall sample size and limited number of subjects within specific substrata. concentration of camel interactions within particular occupational groups limited our ability to differentiate risk among specific camel interactions, despite our use of multivariable analysis. furthermore, because most persons reported interactions either daily or never, determining whether increased risk was associated with increased frequency of individual tasks was not possible. also, some mers-cov infections might not result in detectable antibodies, particularly when the infections are asymptomatic or mild ( ) . persistence of detectable mers-cov antibodies after infection is not well-defined, limiting the ability of serologic testing to define previous infection. finally, because of incomplete linkage of study participants by medical record numbers across the sampling periods, not all potential seroconversions or losses of seropositivity could be determined. in summary, our study found significantly increased odds of mers-cov seropositivity in persons with exposure to camels, in particular among those who handle live camels. odds of seropositivity were also significantly higher for camel salesmen, suggesting that preventive measures such as ppe use could focus on specific occupational groups, in addition to individual work practices. determining groups at highest risk for zoonotic mers-cov infection could also inform future vaccine trials in geographic regions where mers-cov is known to circulate. middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) is a novel cov known to cause severe acute respiratory illness in humans; approximately % of confirmed cases have been fatal. human-tohuman transmission and multiple outbreaks of respiratory illness have been attributed to mers-cov, and severe respiratory illness caused by this virus continues to be identified. isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) world health organization. who mers-cov global summary and assessment of risk middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) origin and animal reservoir middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov): animal to human interaction risk factors for mers coronavirus infection in dromedary camels in mers coronaviruses from camels in africa exhibit region-dependent genetic diversity middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in dromedary camels in saudi arabia prevalence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in dromedary camels in abu dhabi emirate middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in dromedary camels: an outbreak investigation 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for mers-cov infection high prevalence of mers-cov infection in camel workers in saudi arabia inovio pharmaceuticals i. inovio's mers vaccine generates high levels of antibodies and induces broad-based t cell responses in phase study man in germany dies of complications stemming from mers virus diversity of middle east respiratory syndrome coronaviruses in dromedary camels based on full-genome sequencing inclusion of mers-spike protein elisa in algorithm to determine serologic evidence of mers-cov infection recovery from the middle east respiratory syndrome is associated with antibody and t-cell responses epidemiological, demographic, and clinical characteristics of cases of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus disease from saudi arabia: a descriptive study korean society of infectious diseases. clinical presentation and outcomes of middle east respiratory syndrome in the republic of korea acute middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in livestock dromedaries risk factors for primary middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in camel workers in qatar during - : a case-control study mers-cov antibody responses year after symptom onset we thank yassir eltahir for critical input during the conceptualization and implementation of this study. this investigation was considered a public health response by the abu dhabi department of health and cdc. dr. khudair is a senior officer in the communicable disease control and management section of the abu dhabi department of health. his research interests include mers-cov and tuberculosis. dr. killerby is an epidemiologist in the division of viral diseases, national center for immunization and respiratory diseases, cdc. her research interests include respiratory viruses such as mers-cov, human coronaviruses, and adenoviruses. key: cord- -nrmj qre authors: algaissi, abdullah; hashem, anwar m. title: evaluation of mers-cov neutralizing antibodies in sera using live virus microneutralization assay date: - - journal: mers coronavirus doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: nrmj qre the microneutralization (mn) assay is a standard and important technique in virology, immunology, and epidemiology. it is a highly specific and sensitive assay for evaluating virus-specific neutralizing antibodies (nabs) in human and animal sera. it provides the most precise answer to whether or not an individual or animal has antibodies that can neutralize or inhibit the infectivity of a specific virus strain. however, using live virus-based mn assay might require working under high containment facilities especially when dealing with high-risk pathogens such as the middle east respiratory syndrome-coronavirus (mers-cov). in this chapter, we describe the isolation, amplification, and titration of mers-cov, as well as detailed mn assay to measure nab levels in sera from different mammalian species. the middle east respiratory syndrome-coronavirus (mers-cov) is a novel zoonotic β-coronavirus that was first identified in saudi arabia in [ ] . epidemiological evidence suggests that dromedary camels are the main zoonotic source of mers-cov [ , ] . mers-cov causes a wide range of manifestations ranging from asymptomatic infections to mild or severe respiratory disease. detection of anti-mers-cov antibodies (abs) in humans and/or animals represents a valuable tool in diagnostics as well as epidemiological, virological, and immunological studies including evaluation of vaccine immunogenicity [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . several serological assays have been developed and used for mers-cov, including elisabased assays, immunofluorescence assays, protein microarrays, and pseudovirus-based neutralization assays [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . however, most of these assays pose several drawbacks and limitations such as low specificity and sensitivity, need for expensive and special equipment and reagents, and/or highly trained technical staff, which could limit their use. on the other hand, live virus-based microneutralization (mn) assay is a highly sensitive and specific technique used for the quantitation of virus-specific neutralizing antibodies (nabs) to a given virus in mammalian sera as well as the evaluation of antiviral activities of small molecules and biologics. the assay has several advantages in detecting nabs against mers-cov. it can precisely detect virus-specific nabs in human and animal sera without the need for specific reagents or equipment, it can be carried out readily once the virus is isolated, and it can overcome strain-specific antigenic changes. the protocol presented in this chapter consists of four major steps, including mers-cov isolation, amplification, titration, and neutralization. the mn assay described here is suitable to quantitatively measure the titer of nabs in sera from different mammalian species. proper aseptic techniques should be used, and all equipment and solutions to be used with cells must be sterile. all cell culture incubations should be performed in a humidified c incubator with % co , and all solutions should be pre-warmed to room temperature or c before use with cells. . remove a cryovial of frozen vero e cells from liquid nitrogen storage and quickly thaw the cells for < min by gently swirling in a c water bath until there is just a small bit of ice left in the vial (see note ). . transfer the vial into a laminar flow biosafety cabinet and quickly disinfect the outside of the vial with % ethanol. . open the vial and transfer all the volume to a sterile ml falcon tube containing ml of pre-warmed m- (see note ). . centrifuge the cell suspension at approximately -  g for min at room temperature. . aseptically decant the supernatant without disturbing the cell pellet (see note ). . gently re-suspend the cells in ml of pre-warmed m- (see note ). . transfer the cell suspension to t tissue culture flask using sterile ml serological pipette. . incubate the flask in c incubator with % co . . when cells reach > - % confluency, passage cells into new tissue culture flasks at : to : split ratio (see notes and ). . maintain cells in continuous culture and passage them as needed for at least - passages after removal from long-term storage and before use. amplification of mers-cov . harvest confluent vero e cells from a t tissue culture flask using standard trypsinization procedure (see note ). . count cells using cell counter or hemocytometer and prepare a cell suspension of  cells/ml in pre-warmed m- . . seed ml (~ .  cells) or ml (~  cells) of the cell suspension into a t or t tissue culture flask, respectively, so that they are - % confluent the next day (see note ). . incubate the flasks in c incubator with % co for overnight. . next day, change the media by removing old media and add ml or ml of fresh pre-warmed m- into a t or t tissue culture flask, respectively. . if using positive mers-cov sample, filter sterilize samples using sterile . μm γ-irradiated syringe filters before inoculation onto vero e cells (see note ). . add . - ml of isolated mers-cov or filtered positive sample to the cells (see note ). . distribute the virus evenly over the cells and incubate for h in c incubator with % co . . make up the final volume of media to ml or ml in t or t tissue culture flasks, respectively. . incubate the flask in c incubator with % co for - days or until significant cytopathic effect (cpe) is observed (fig. ). . check the flask daily post-infection (see note ). . when cpe is > %, collect supernatant from the flask and centrifuge at  g for min to remove cellular debris (fig. ). . aliquot collected clarified supernatant in μl or ml aliquots in sterile . ml tubes and store at À c (see note ). culture infective dose (tcid ) . harvest confluent vero e cells from the t tissue culture flask using standard trypsinization procedure (see note ). . count the cells using cell counter or hemocytometer and prepare a cell suspension of  cells/ml in pre-warmed m- . re-suspend  cells in ml per -well plate. . seed  vero e cells ( μl) per well into sterile -well tissue culture plate so that they are - % confluent the next day (see note ). . incubate the plate in c incubator with % co for overnight. . next day, in a new sterile u-shaped -well plate, add μl pre-warmed m- to all wells (fig. ). . add μl of mers-cov per well in all wells of column to have : dilution (fig. ) . . perform tenfold serial (log ) dilution by transferring μl progressively from column to column (fig. ) . calculate tcid using reed-muench formula [ ] . . count the cells using cell counter or hemocytometer and prepare a cell suspension of  cells/ml in pre-warmed m- . re-suspend  cells in ml per -well plate. . seed  vero e cells ( μl) per well into sterile -well tissue culture plate so that they are - % confluent the next day (see note ). . incubate the plate in c incubator with % co overnight. . next day, heat-inactivate test sera to be used for virus microneutralization by incubation for min at c. . in a new sterile u-shaped -well plate, add μl pre-warmed m- to all wells (fig. ) . . add an additional μl pre-warmed m- to wells a -a in row a (fig. ). . add μl heat-inactivated serum per well in wells a -a in row a to have : dilution (fig. ) . do not add serum to a and a (see note ) . . perform twofold serial dilutions on added serum samples by transferring μl progressively from row to row (i.e., a to b ; b to c ; etc. up to g to h ) using a multichannel pipette (fig. ) . . during each dilution step mix well by pipetting eight times up and down (see note ) . . discard the final μl after row h. . prepare virus suspension in pre-warmed m- so that μl contains tcid (i.e.,  tcid /ml). approximately ml/plate is needed (see note ). . add μl diluted virus to all wells except wells in columns (cc wells). . add μl pre-warmed m- to all cc wells (i.e., columns ). . incubate the serum-virus mixtures for h in c incubator with % co . . remove the -well tissue culture plate containing confluent vero e cells and aspirate the media (see note ) . . incubate the -well tissue culture plate in c incubator with % co for days (see note ) . . calculate mn or mn titers of each serum sample as the highest serum dilution that completely protect the cells from cpe in half or all wells, respectively. . the water bath is a potential source of contamination. to reduce the risk of contamination, keep the o-ring and cap of the cryovial out of the water. . frozen cell stocks contain dimethyl sulfoxide (dmso), which is harmful to the cells, and it should be diluted and removed after thawing the cells and before transferring the cells to tissue culture flasks. . after centrifugation, check the clarity of the supernatant and visibility of a complete pellet. . different volumes and culture vessels could be used. it is better to initiate vero e cells culture in a t tissue culture flask. if using a t tissue culture flask, re-suspend the cells in ml media, and if using t tissue culture flask, re-suspend the cells in ml media. . vero e cells recover slowly after freezing and may take more than a week before they are ready to be passaged. it may take - passages before the vero e cells reach their normal growth rate. . it is important to monitor vero e cells and to subculture them once confluent. depending on the number of seeded cells and the size of the used flask, vero e cells usually need to be passaged - times per week. to harvest or maintain vero e cells, remove media from the flask, wash the cell monolayer gently with - ml of sterile pre-warmed dpbs without calcium or magnesium, and discard the used washing solution. add - ml pre-warmed  trypsin-edta in dpbs without calcium or magnesium to the cell monolayer and incubate for - min at c, % co to detach cells (incubation may vary, so check the cells every - min). after cells are detached, add ml pre-warmed m- to the flask to inactivate trypsin activity, and collect detached cells in ml sterile falcon tube. make sure to centrifuge the collected cells and discard the supernatant. then, add new - ml pre-warmed m- and re-suspend the cells by pipetting up and down using ml pipette to make a homogenous cell suspension. . cpe could be strain specific, and it depends on the strain and starting titer of the seed virus. . each tube should be used once only to avoid freezing and thawing as this can significantly decrease the virus titer. use ml aliquots tubes for virus amplification. . other dilutions such as ½ log dilution could be used. . change pipette tips between wells. . avoid cell drying by minimizing the time between media aspiration and adding the virus inoculum or the serum-virus mixtures. . alternatively, remove media from cells and fix cells with μl ice-cold % paraformaldehyde for min at room temperature. remove fixative and stain cells with μl crystal violet ( . % w/v) in % methanol for min at room temperature, and wash cells in tap water. score wells as positive for mers-cov (i.e., no crystal violet) or negative for mers-cov (i.e., cells are stained with crystal violet). . for each serum sample, μl are needed per single test; however, sera should be tested in at least duplicates, so more volume is needed. different plates should be used when testing neutralization against different virus strains. . set up back virus titration to ensure working virus concentration is accurate. starting with the working virus dilution (  tcid /ml), prepare twofold serial dilution in pre-warmed m- in a final volume of μl ( replicates per dilution). after dilution, add μl of pre-warmed m- to each well for a final volume of μl and incubate for h in c incubator with % co . then, transfer μl to vero e cells in -well tissue culture plate and incubate for days in c incubator with % co . after incubation, examine the plate for cpe and calculate tcid using reed-muench formula. isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in dromedary camels in saudi arabia evidence for camel-to-human transmission of mers coronavirus kinetics and pattern of viral excretion in biological specimens of two mers-cov cases presence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus antibodies in saudi arabia: a nationwide, cross-sectional, serological study viral shedding and antibody response in patients with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection recovery from the middle east respiratory syndrome is associated with antibody and t-cell responses immunogenicity of candidate mers-cov dna vaccines based on the spike protein seroepidemiology for mers coronavirus using microneutralisation and pseudoparticle virus neutralisation assays reveal a high prevalence of antibody in dromedary camels in egypt specific serology for emerging human coronaviruses by protein microarray hospital-associated outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: a serologic, epidemiologic, and clinical description seroepidemiology of middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) coronavirus in saudi arabia ( ) and australia ( ) and characterisation of assay specificity inability of rat dpp to allow mers-cov infection revealed by using a vsv pseudotype bearing truncated mers-cov spike protein comparison of serological assays in human middle east respiratory syndrome (mers)-coronavirus infection characterization of novel monoclonal antibodies against the mers-coronavirus spike protein and their application in speciesindependent antibody detection by competitive elisa inclusion of mers-spike protein elisa in algorithm to determine serologic evidence of mers-cov infection development and validation of different indirect elisas for mers-cov serological testing a simple method of estimating fifty per cent endpoints this work was supported by king abdulaziz city for science and technology (kacst) through the mers-cov research grant program (number - to amh), which is a part of the targeted research program. key: cord- - d bqji authors: malik, ajamaluddin; alsenaidy, mohammad a. title: mers‐cov papain-like protease (pl(pro)): expression, purification, and spectroscopic/thermodynamic characterization date: - - journal: biotech doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: d bqji within a decade, mers-cov emerged with nearly four times higher case fatality rate than an earlier outbreak of sars-cov and spread out in countries in short span of time. as an emerging virus, combating it requires an in-depth understanding of its molecular machinery. therefore, conformational characterization studies of coronavirus proteins are necessary to advance our knowledge of the matter for the development of antiviral therapies. in this study, mers-cov papain-like protease (pl(pro)) was recombinantly expressed and purified. thermal folding pathway and thermodynamic properties were characterized using dynamic multimode spectroscopy (dms) and thermal shift assay. dms study showed that the pl(pro) undergoes a single thermal transition and follows a pathway of two-state folding with t (m) and van’t hoff enthalpy values of . ± . °c and . ± . kj/mol, respectively. an orthogonal technique based on intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence also showed that mers-cov pl(pro) undergoes a single thermal transition and unfolds via a pathway of two-state folding with a t (m) value of . °c. our findings provide significant understandings of the thermodynamic and structural properties of mers-cov pl(pro). frequent fatal coronavirus outbreaks in humans and animals have caused serious concerns in the healthcare sector, scientific community, and animal husbandry. first human outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov) in caused life-threatening atypical pneumonia in more than people in countries with a case fatality rate (cfr) of % (pillaiyar et al. ; al-tawfiq et al. ; who b) . another lethal coronavirus outbreak emerged in the arab peninsula countries in which was caused by what is now known as the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) . from september to december , laboratory-confirmed mers-cov cases of infection in countries with mortalities (nearly four times higher cfr than sars-cov) have been reported (al-tawfiq et al. ; who a) . coronavirus survivors after acute infections suffer from many health issues and require long-term medical assistance (han et al. ; ong et al. ; chan et al. ; leow et al. ; siu ; cha et al. ) . in addition to sars-cov and mers-cov, at least four other pathological coronaviruses (hcov-oc , hcov- e, hcov-hku , and hcov-nl ) are continuously circulating in humans causing relatively mild respiratory conditions that may in some instances escalate to severe pathological illnesses (mackay et al. ; carbajo-lozoya et al. ; simon et al. ) . coronaviruses have also caused deadly diseases in animals, leading to huge economic losses in the animal husbandry sector (vlasova et al. ; lee and lee ; sun et al. ) . moreover, high mutation and recombination rates in coronaviruses allow them to cross species barriers and adapt to new hosts more easily (denison et al. ; lau and chan ) . viral proteases are essential for pathogenesis and virulence. like all coronaviruses, mers-cov contains two cysteine proteases (main protease and papain-like protease) which processes viral nonstructural polypeptides (kilianski et al. ; hilgenfeld ) . mers-cov main protease (m pro , also called the c-like protease, cl pro ) cleaves at eleven sites, while mers-cov papain-like protease (pl pro ) cuts at three sites on the nonstructural polypeptides and releases mature nonstructural proteins (hilgenfeld ) . thus, mers-cov proteases make up a suitable target for antiviral therapies. mers-cov open-reading frame (orf ) encodes two large polyproteins (pp a and pp b). mers-cov pl pro domain is encoded on the pp a proteins (residue - ) (yang et al. ; hilgenfeld ; kilianski et al. ) . like other coronaviruses, mers-cov pl pro contains a catalytic triad and exhibits similar proteolytic, deubiquitination, and isg -linked isgylation properties (lin et al. ; chen et al. ; clementz et al. ; yang et al. ; zheng et al. ) . in this study, we expressed and purified mers-cov pl pro . thermal stability was studied by thermal shift assay using intrinsic fluorescence and dynamic multimode spectroscopy (dms). mers-cov pl pro was found to unfold via a single thermal transition and follows a pathway of two-state folding. this study will not only help in the understanding of the folding and stability of mers-cov pl pro but also could help shed some light on other deubiquitinating enzymes with the similar folding scaffold. the orf of mers-cov pl pro ( - polyprotein residues, genbank accession number nc_ . ) was cloned into pet a plasmid under t promoter as published before (lin et al. ) . the codon was optimized (genscript, usa) and cloned between ncoi and xhoi sites which was in frame of c-terminal his tag present on the vector. e. coli bl (de ) plyss was used for the expression of recombinant protein. low-molecular weight protein markers, prepacked ni-nta, and superdex columns were from amersham biosciences (united kingdom). chicken egg lysozyme was from usb corporation, usa. benzonase, ans, and kanamycin from sigma. iptg was purchased from bio basic, canada. all other chemicals used in this study were of reagent grade. cary spectrometer and cary eclipse spectrofluorometer were from agilent technologies, usa. akta purification system was from amersham biosciences (united kingdom) and sds-page assembly from bio-rad (usa). thermomixer and benchtop cooling centrifuge were from eppendorf, germany. innova r shaking incubator was from new brunswick, germany. chirascan-plus spectropolarimeter was from applied photophysics, united kingdom. expression and purification of mers-cov pl pro in e. coli bl (de ) plyss e. coli bl (de ) plyss harboring pet a-mpl pro was used for expression of mers-cov pl pro . protein expression and soluble protein extraction were performed as described in lin et al. ( ) . purification of mers-cov pl pro was performed with minor modification of an earlier published protocol (lin et al. ) . briefly, mm dtt was used throughout unless described. cleared crude lysate was passed through a -ml ni-nta column pre-equilibrated with mm tris, ph . , mm nacl, mm imidazole, and mm dtt and washed with cv equilibration buffer. bound protein was eluted with a linear gradient of - % buffer b (equilibration buffer containing mm imidazole) at ml/min flow rate on akta purification system. the purity of eluted fractions was analyzed on sds-page. the prepacked superdex equilibrated with mm tris, ph . , mm nacl, and mm dtt was calibrated with proteins of known molecular weight. subsequently, ni-nta-purified mers-cov pl pro was further purified using superdex column. the purity of eluted fractions was analyzed on sds-page. highly pure fractions were pooled, aliquoted, and stored at - °c. before analysis, the frozen aliquots were thawed and centrifuged at , rpm for min at °c. protein concentration was determined spectrophotometrically at nm using a molar extinction coefficient of , m - cm - . tryptophan fluorescence spectra ( lg/ml) of mers-cov pl pro were recorded using a cary eclipse fluorescence spectrophotometer in a -mm-path length cuvette. to measure tryptophan fluorescence, mers-cov pl pro sample was excited at nm and emission spectra were collected between and nm ( nm excitation and nm emission bandwidth). temperature melting studies of mers-cov pl pro were performed at °c increments as well as a linear increase of °c/min. mers-cov pl pro incubated at different temperatures from to °c in peltier-controlled cary eclipse fluorometer. the temperature of the protein samples was monitored using an internal temperature probe. when the desired temperature was reached, the sample was allowed to equilibrate for min before tryptophan fluorescence spectra were measured. the maximum fluorescence intensity (i max ) and maximum fluorescence wavelength (k max ) were plotted with respect to temperature. in a similar experiment, mers-cov pl pro was gradually heated from to °c at a rate of °c/min during which tryptophan fluorescence was measured by exciting at nm and collecting at and nm to obtain the temperature melting curve. to study the secondary structure of mers-cov pl pro in terms of conformational and thermal stability, dynamic multimode spectroscopy was applied. the measurement was performed using chirascan-plus spectrophotometer, calibrated with ( s)-(?)- -camphorsulfonic acid. in this study, . mg/ml of mers-cov pl pro was gradually heated from to °c at °c/ml rate. internal thermal probe was inserted in the . -cm-path length cuvette to precisely monitor the actual temperature of the samples. far-uv cd spectra from to nm were recorded at each temperature. thermal transition data were processed using manufacturer's global software. the steady-state kinetics of mers-cov pl pro was measured as described in lin et al. ( ) , with slight modification. briefly, lm fluorogenic peptidyl substrate, dabcyl-frlkggapikgv-edans (genscript), was mixed with different concentrations of mers-cov pl pro ( . - . lm, in twofold serial dilution) using mm phosphate at ph . as a buffer at room temperature. the fluorescence signal was measured for min at -s intervals in a hidex chameleon plate reader using nm (excitation) and nm (emission filter) with % gain. expression and purification of recombinant mers-cov pl pro in this study, mers-cov pl pro was overexpressed in e. coli bl (de ) plyss. mers-cov pl pro was purified in two-step chromatography as described in lin et al. ( ) . ni-nta elute contained minor impurities (data not shown). when ni-nta elute passed through gel filtration column, one major symmetrical sharp peak was obtained (fig. a) . sds-page analysis of the pooled fractions showed the yield of highly pure mers-cov pl pro (fig. b) . we obtained nearly mg of mers-cov pl pro from a -l shake flask culture. in an earlier study, the yield of soluble mers-cov pl pro was strain dependent and the best yield (* mg purified protein from l shake flask culture) was obtained with e. coli bl (de ) star strain (lin et al. ) . the difference in the yield of mers-cov pl pro was due to the different strain's genetic background. intrinsic fluorescence spectroscopy is a highly sensitive tool, which provides information about the microenvironment of trp and tyr residues within proteins. tyrosine emission maximum is less sensitive to its local environment compared to tryptophan. indole ring in the tryptophan residues undergoes two isoenergetic transitions which causes polarity sensitivity, while tyrosine undergoes through a single electronic state (ghisaidoobe and chung ) . during the course of protein unfolding, the polarity of fluorophore microenvironment changes, which in turn leads to changes in the maximum fluorescence intensity (i max ) as well as maximum fluorescence wavelength (k max ). therefore, intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence emission is sensitive to the tertiary structure and detects subtle protein conformational changes in solution. it has been frequently used for the characterization of protein's conformational changes under different stress conditions (kumar et al. ; xiao et al. ) . a previous study analyzing the quaternary structure of mers-cov pl pro using analytical ultracentrifugation technique has shown that pl pro is found in the monomeric state (lin et al. ) . mers-cov pl pro contains ten tyrosine and five tryptophan residues (fig. a) . mers-cov pl pro consists of two domains: n-terminal ubiquitinlike (ubl) domain and a catalytic core domain. the n-terminal ubl domain consists of residues and contained one a-helix, one -helix and five b-strands. the substrate-binding region is solvent exposed and comprised of the right-hand scaffold (lei et al. ) . three tryptophan residues (w , and ) are buried, while w and w are surface exposed (fig. b) . figure a shows the decrease in intrinsic fluorescence of mers-cov pl pro with increasing temperature. at low temperature ( °c), highest fluorescent intensity (i max ) was observed with maximum fluorescence wavelength (k max ) at nm, indicating an overall localization of all five tryptophans in the partially hydrophobic environment. as the temperature increases gradually from to °c, i max decreased with major transitions occurring between and °c (fig. a, b) . initially, k max increased from to nm when the temperature was increased from to °c. as the temperature was increased further, a blue-shift in k max with increasing temperature was observed, indicating conformational rearrangements in different temperature regimes. the major blue-shift in k max was found between and °c (fig. c) . the -nm blue-shift of tryptophan fluorescence spectrum indicated that the microenvironment of the tryptophan residues is becoming more hydrophobic during thermal denaturation. mers-covpl pro thermal unfolding is different from most other proteins. commonly, protein unfolding fluorescence spectra are characterized by a long wavelength shift ''red-shift.'' but some proteins, fig. a sequence of c-terminal his-tagged mers-cov pl pro showing ten tyr and five trp residues, which are highlighted in green and blue, respectively. potential internal protease site is highlighted in red and his-tagged residues are underlined. b three-dimensional structure of mers-cov pl pro (pdb id: r d) with the side chains of the five trp residues being numbered and colored in blue including mers-cov pl pro , exhibit blue-shift upon denaturation (slutskaya et al. ; duy and fitter ; pattanaik et al. ) . pig pancreatic a-amylase showed red-shifted fluorescence spectra when chemically unfolded and showed blue-shifted spectra during thermal unfolding (duy and fitter ) . equine lysozyme first exhibits a blue-shift transition at lower temperature and red-shift above °c (morozova et al. ) . to obtain temperature melting curve, mers-covpl pro was gradually heated from to °c at °c/min and the ratio of / nm tryptophan fluorescence was plotted with respect to temperature (fig. ) . data were fitted according to the equation f = y ? a/( ? exp(-(xx )/ b)) with an r value of . . our results showed that mers-cov pl pro was moderately stable and unfolds via a single transition with a t m value of . °c. since mers-cov pl pro is a protease, it may undergo autolysis during thermal shift assay. it contains one potential autolysis site (lkgg) as shown in fig. a . to evaluate the extent of autolysis as well as the extent of irreversible thermal unfolding and aggregation, mers-cov pl pro ( . mg/ml) was incubated on a thermomixer from to °c with °c intervals. six samples were gradually heated and equilibrated at the respective temperatures for min. when the desired temperatures were attained, the samples were removed, kept on ice, and centrifuged at , rpm for min to remove any forming aggregates. equal volumes of the supernatant were analyzed (fig. ) . if mers-cov pl pro would undergo autolysis during the course of thermal incubation, we would expect to see the appearance of two or more bands of mers-cov pl pro fragments on sds-page gels or at least a decrease in the band intensity of mers-cov pl pro . we found that the intensity of mers-cov pl pro band was apparently unchanged, indicating that autolysis was not occurring during the thermal shift assays applied in this study. in another scenario, irreversible unfolding aggregates may form during thermal shift assay. if this is the case, then aggregated protein will be pelleted down upon centrifugation and band intensity would have decreased in the supernatant sample. our result showed that the band intensity of the supernatant samples incubated from to °c was apparently unchanged (fig. ) , indicating fig. thermally induced structural changes in mers-cov pl pro as monitored by the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence spectroscopy. a to monitor tryptophan fluorescence at different temperatures, mers-cov pl pro was slowly heated and allowed to equilibrate for min at the respective temperatures. the sample was excited at nm and the emission spectra were collected from to nm ( nm excitation and nm emission bandwidth). b effect of temperature on the tryptophan emission intensity showing the decrease of i max with increasing temperature. major transition occurred between and °c. c effect of temperature on the tryptophan maximum emission wavelength (k max ). blue-shift was observed during thermal unfolding of mers-cov pl pro . initially, red-shift was observed when the temperature was increased from to °c. further increase in temperature leads to blue-shift with major changes occurring between and °c no or insignificant aggregation occurring during thermal shift assays. information about thermal stability, unfolding pathway, and secondary structure of mers-cov pl pro was obtained using an orthogonal method. we employed dms, a newly developed information-rich experimental technique, to obtain spectroscopic and thermodynamic data of melting temperature (t m ) and van't hoff enthalpy (dh vh ) (john and weeks ; greenfield ; al-ahmady et al. ) . temperature-induced secondary structural changes in mers-cov pl pro in the far-uv region were monitored to study thermodynamic parameters. moreover, dms also characterized thermal unfolding pathway and identified the number of folding intermediate species and their relative concentrations during the unfolding process (malik et al. (malik et al. , . mers-cov pl pro was gradually heated from to °c at °c/min increments and far-uv cd spectra were recorded from to nm. far-uv cd spectra at several wavelengths were plotted as a function of temperature (fig. a) . mers-cov pl pro underwent a single thermal transition as a function of temperature, suggesting two-state folding. similar transition was also observed in the thermal shift assay using fluorescence spectroscopy. in an earlier study, secondary structure content was calculated and it was found that b-sheet structure ( %) is dominant in mers-cov pl pro (lin et al. ) . similarly, our results showed that mers-cov pl pro presented a single negative minimum at * nm suggesting a predominant b-sheet structure as well. when mers-cov pl pro was gradually heated, secondary structure was lost and became irregularly disorder structure (fig. b) . the relative concentrations of folded and unfolded species as a function of temperature are shown in fig. c . the thermal melting point (t m ) and van't hoff enthalpy (dh vh ) of mers-cov pl pro calculated using global analysis software were . ± . °c and . ± . kj/mol, respectively. the thermal melting points (t m ) of mers-cov pl pro calculated by thermal shift assay and dms were found to be in close proximity, reflecting tertiary-secondary structure unfolding events, respectively. in a recent study, papainlike protease of murine coronavirus also underwent a single thermal transition with a t m value of * °c (mielech et al. ) . a three-dimensional model of the thermal transitions of mers-cov pl pro was generated using global analysis software (fig. d) . a single transition is clearly evident at lower wavelengths in the far-uv spectra region. mers-cov pl pro was expressed in soluble state in e. coli and purified to homogeneity in two-step chromatography. two orthogonal techniques were used for studying unfolding pathway that include the utilization of dms and thermal shift assay. the results showed that mers-cov pl pro unfolds via a single thermal transition and follows a two-state unfolding pathway. thermal shift assay calculated a t m value of . °c and dms method calculated a t m value of . ± . °c, in agreement with sequential unfolding events of tertiary and secondary structures, respectively. similar folding behavior and thermal melting point were also observed in papain-like protease of murine lipid-peptide vesicle nanoscale hybrids for triggered drug release by mild hyperthermia in vitro and in vivo travel implications of emerging coronaviruses: sars and mers-cov middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: current situation and travelassociated concerns replication of human coronaviruses sars-cov, hcov-nl and hcov- e is inhibited by the drug fk a case report of a middle east respiratory syndrome survivor with kidney biopsy results sars: prognosis, outcome and sequelae proteolytic processing and deubiquitinating activity of papain-like proteases of human coronavirus nl deubiquitinating 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middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus papain-like protease plp , a potent deubiquitinase from murine hepatitis virus, strongly inhibits cellular type i interferon production acknowledgements the authors extend their appreciation to the deanship of scientific research at king saud university for funding this work through the research project no r - - - . conflict of interest to the best of our knowledge, no conflict of interest, financial or others, exists. all authors are fully aware of this submission. key: cord- - acsko authors: cheng, qi; yang, yue; gao, jianqun title: infectivity of human coronavirus in the brain date: - - journal: ebiomedicine doi: . /j.ebiom. . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: acsko a new strain of human coronaviruses (hcovs), severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus- (sars-cov- ), has been identified to be responsible for the current outbreak of the coronavirus disease (covid- ). though major symptoms are primarily generated from the respiratory system, neurological symptoms are being reported in some of the confirmed cases, raising concerns of its potential for intracranial invasion and neurological manifestations, both in the acute phase and in the long-term. at present, it remains unclear the extent to which sars-cov- is present in the brain, and if so, its pathogenic role in the central nervous system (cns). evidence for neuroinvasion and neurovirulence of hcovs has been recognised in animal and human studies. given that sars-cov- belongs to the same family and shares characteristics in terms of receptor binding properties, it is worthwhile exploring its potential cns manifestations. this review summarises previous findings from hcovs in relation to the cns, and compares these with the new strain, aiming to provide a better understanding of the effects of sars-cov- on the cns. human coronaviruses (hcovs) are a group of enveloped rna viruses that are composed of a single stranded positive sense rna genome (~ kb). the entire genome of hcovs encodes spike (s) glycoprotein, membrane (m) glycoprotein, envelope (e) glycoprotein, nucleocapsid (n) protein, rna polymerase and genes for numerous accessory proteins that modulate pathogenesis, among which the n protein is highly conserved in most coronaviruses and abundantly expressed during infection [ ] , thus acting as a critical antigen for viral detection. the s protein is biologically critical for tropism and modulation [ ] , and is considered to be integral in the capability of hcovs to reach the brain [ , ] . the hcovs include seven strains, three of which, namely sars-cov- , sars-cov, and middle east respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus (mers-cov), may cause severe respiratory disease with a relatively high morbidity and mortality. in contrast, the other four strains oc , e, nl and hku , are often associated with symptoms akin to the 'common cold' and hence, are relatively harmless. based on genome analysis, the oc strain shares a % and a % identity with sars-cov and hcov- e, respectively [ ] . the new strain, sars-cov- (previously called -cov), shares a % and % identity with sars-cov and mers-cov, respectively [ ] . mainly considered as respiratory viruses, a common manifestation from hcovs related acute respiratory disease is hypoxia, which predisposes the brain to edema, disturbed metabolism, and subsequent neurological manifestation. however, hypoxia is not the only way hcovs were related to central nervous system. in fact, hcovs have also been shown to be capable of invading neural cells, and hence manifesting with neurological symptoms and signs ( table ). the potential for significant neurological deficits recently became a concern following the report of a covid- patient who demonstrated loss of involuntary control of breathing due to presumed involvement of the inspiratory area in the brainstem, as well as reports of sars-cov- infected patients developing ataxia, loss of smell and convulsions [ ] . in vitro studies have shown that e and oc hcov strains can infect a wide range of human neural cell cultures, including neuroblastoma, neuroglioma, astrocytoma, microglial and oligodendrocytic cell lines [ À ]. in addition, animal studies have also revealed the neuroinvasion and neurovirulence of hcov-oc [ , , À ] . importantly, a significantly higher prevalence of the oc strain in terms of viral rna detection has been shown in human brain autopsy samples from multiple sclerosis (ms) patients when compared to other neurological diseases and normal controls, which is consistent with the left lower lobe infiltrates ( ) →obvious resolution ( ) →progressive bibasilar infiltrations ( ) ct: broad encephalic pathological changes of probably ischemia and necrosis and brain edema ( ) none eye-ground exam: an exudation around the visual yellow zone ( ) death ( recovery [ ] all cases had fever and/or flu-like symptoms at the onset. half of the patients ( / ) had headache, dizziness or vomiting as an early sign of neurological manifestation. / sars patients had seizures, whereas / mers patients and both oc -infected cases had facial/limb paralysis. unfortunately, mers-cov has not been detected in csf samples of any of the reported cases. ischaemic changes have been detected in images of half of the patients, while haemorrhagic pathology has been identified on one mers patient. the oc -related cns-infected patients were younger compared to sars and mers patients. gcs: glasgow coma scale; ncv: nerve conduct velocity; emg: electroneuromyography. capability for neuroinvasion of this hcov [ ] . furthermore, oc has also been identified in a teenager patient with demyelinating disease, in whom the virus was detected in both csf and nasopharyngeal secretions by pcr technology [ ] . the hcov-oc has also been associated with a fatal encephalitis in an infant although the underlying circumstances are still unclear [ ] . additionally, co-infection with the e and oc strains has been reported in a young girl who developed an acute flaccid paralysis [ ] . sars-cov and mers-cov have also been linked with neurological manifestations. sars-cov has been shown to be capable of infecting human neural cells [ ] , and neuroinvasion and neurovirulence have been found in studies involving both sars-cov [ À ] and mers-cov [ , ] . an association of these two more highly pathogenic viruses with neurological manifestations have also been reported. for instance, sars-cov particles and genomic sequences have been detected from post-mortem brain tissues of sars patients [ À ]. they have also been detected using rt-pcr in csf samples from a -year-old pregnant female patient who presented with a brief duration generalized convulsion and accompanying loss of consciousness [ ] and within h of a first seizure in a -year-old female patient [ ] . although there is less of direct evidence of viral presence in the cns, mers patients have also presented with neurological findings, such as altered consciousness, as well as manifested with a wide range of abnormalities on brain mri [ , ] . regarding the regional distribution of the virus in the cns, data from the post-mortem studies have shown that infection from sars-cov was confined to neurons within selected areas of the brain, including thalamus, cerebrum, brainstem, hypothalamus and cortex [ , ] . intriguingly, sars-cov has been detected in cerebrum, but not in cerebellum, in both animal [ ] and human [ ] studies. in animals infected in the cns with mers-cov, the thalamus and brain stem were found to be the highest infected sites [ ] . data from multiple hace transgenic mouse models has revealed that sars-cov detection in the brain is significantly delayed compared to that within the lung, consistent with the initial establishment of infection within the respiratory system before dissemination to the cns [ À ]. several dissemination routes have been proposed for coronaviruses to gain access to the cns (fig. ) . the mouse hepatitis virus (mhv), a neurotropic coronavirus, has been shown to enter the cns via a transneuronal route and disseminate within the brain via neuroanatomic pathways [ ] . in mice transgenic for hace , sars-cov seems to enter the brain via the olfactory bulb post intranasal inoculation before disseminating transneuronally to distal connected neurons and causing the dysfunction/ death of these infected neurons [ ] . a similar dissemination pattern has also been detected in oc -inoculated mice [ , ] . however, different observations were found in another hace transgenic mouse model, in which no sars-cov was detected in the olfactory bulb, or preferentially in sites transneuronally connected to the olfactory bulb [ ] . in addition, a recent study has revealed that ace (angiotensinconverting enzyme ) and tmprss (transmembrane protease, serine ), two key genes involved in sars-cov- entry, are not expressed in olfactory sensory or bulb neurons, but rather in olfactory epithelial cells [ ] , suggesting the involvement of other dissemination mechanisms independent of axonal transport. it has also been proposed that hcovs can gain access to the cns via the certain neurotransmitter pathways such as serotoninergic dorsal raphe system [ ] , which primarily projects to cerebral cortex, neostriatum, amygdala, substantia nigra, pons, hippocampus, entorhinal cortex and locus coeruleus. however, this hypothesis is speculative and requires to be further tested in vivo models. viremia has been observed following intranasal inoculation with mhv [ ] and sars-cov [ ] in transgenic mice. in addition, viral rna has been measured in the blood of patients infected with sars-cov and mers-cov [ ] and thus, the dissemination of these two viruses to the cns may be mediated by the hematogenous route through a damaged blood-brain barrier (bbb). once crossing the bbb, hcovs-infected cells could potentially invade the brain through perivascular spaces, also known as virchow-robin spaces. these fluid-filled spaces are implicated as sites in which macrophages and lymphocytes interact to initiate immune response in patients with viral encephalitis [ ] . for instance, the cryptococcal organisms in aids patients have been shown to disseminate through the virchow-robin spaces before further propagation into other brain regions [ ] . whether hcovs could disseminate via the same route remains unclear. the intranasal inoculation of rodents with mhv has also revealed a lymphatic dissemination of coronavirus via cervical and mesenteric lymph nodes in addition to viremia [ ] . additional studies are required to determine the role of this potential dissemination route. the infection of hcovs may also result in long-term neurological deficits. the pathologic examination of brain tissue collected from a sars patient revealed necrosis of neurons and broad hyperplasia of gliocytes, indicative of the presence of a chronic progressive encephalitis during the course of viral infection [ ] . in addition, scattered red degeneration of neurons, a sign of neuronal hypoxia or ischaemia [ ] , as well as oedema around small veins with demyelination of nerve fibres [ ] , have been detected in brains of sars patients, which may provide an explanation for an incidence of long-term neurological [ ] and/or psychological [ ] abnormalities observed in sars survivors. in surviving mice post hcov-oc infection, spongiform-like degeneration was a residual finding post acute infection, indicating the possibility of neurodegenerative neuropathological sequelae [ ] . further, a decline of locomotor activity and an abnormality in the limb clasping reflex were observed starting several months after viral infection, and neuronal loss especially in the hippocampal region was still detectable one year post infection [ ] . although the majority of infectious virus ( %) was cleared in surviving animals, viral rna could persist for months [ ] . even for cells that have survived the initial viral infection, little is known about their long-term functional status. to better understand this, cov-infected models that allow the identification and isolation of survival cells, such as the cre reporter mouse model of mhv infection, may be helpful [ ] . recovery from acute infection does not necessarily promise complete clearance of the virus, and if an infection were to becomes chronic, it may result in long-term sequelae including chronic neurological diseases. however, given the limited clinical data, the long-term effects of hcovs on the cns post acute infection are unknown and thus, more studies involving the long-term follow-up of survivors are needed. ace was reported as a functional cellular receptor for sars-cov due to the ability of the s domain of the spike (s) protein to efficiently bind to ace for subsequent viral replication in the cytoplasm of sensitive cells [ ] . in addition, previous autopsy studies have inferred that only ace -postive cells were susceptible to sars-cov infection because the s protein and its rna could not be detected in ace -negative cells [ ] . it has been reported that sars-cov- might also use ace as a cellular receptor, despite a variation at some key residues of the receptor-binding domain compared to that of sars-cov [ ] . the lack of ace expression in neuronal cells at both transcription and protein level contrasts with the viral susceptibility of these cells and cytopathogenicity during the acute phase of infection in neural cell lines of human and rat origins [ ] as well as in humans brains [ ] . even in hace transgenic mice, when specific brain regions were heavily infected by sars-cov, the expression levels of hace in the brain were no more than to % of those found in the lungs [ ] . furthermore, even in cells highly expressing hace in the transgenic animal model, sars-cov infection could be absent, indicating that the expression of hace alone might not be sufficient for maintaining viral infection [ ] . these findings suggest that other receptor (s) or co-receptor(s) are involved in the viral entry into neural cells. dpp- (also known as cd ) was identified as a cellular receptor for mers-cov [ ] . two lines of human dpp- transgenic mice were found to have high affinity to infection by mers-cov [ , ] . dpp- is expressed in human brains [ ] , therefore, when the virus gains access to the brain, cells expressing dpp- are potentially available for viral replication within the cns. aminopeptidase n (apn, also known as cd ), a cell-surface metalloprotease, was proposed as a receptor for hcov e [ ] , as well as sars-cov [ ] . human aminopeptidase n was shown, in vitro, to be a cellular receptor for hcov e infection of human neuronal, astrocytic and oligodendrocytic cell lines [ ] . another glycoprotein, namely cd l (also called l-sign) has also been identified as an alternative cellular receptor for sars-cov [ ] . in addition, the infection of sars-cov on ace -expressing cells seemed to be dependent on a proteolytic enzyme cathepsin l (ctsl ) in a ph sensitive manner [ , ] . the expression levels of these receptors in human brain, however, require further elucidation to determine the extent to which they may be responsible for the hcovs infection in the cns. in addition to known and putative receptors, antibody-dependent enhancement (ade) of viral entry using the fusogenic spike protein has also been reported as a pathway to transfer coronavirus (mhv ) from infected cells to non-infected cells [ ] . in vitro studies have shown that coronavirus entry could be mediated by special antibodies that bind the virus surface spike protein and facilitate subsequence viral entry of mers-cov [ ] and sars-cov [ ] in a receptor-like manner. the ade pathway is particularly important for vaccine design and the development of antibody-based drug therapies. . is sars-cov- likely to be present in the central nervous system? at present, it remains unknown whether sars-cov- is present in the cns, possibly due to limited access to brain tissue and csf from patients infected with the virus. autopsies are being increasingly carried out, however, initial biopsies have been taken only from lung, liver and heart for histopathology [ ] . given that several strains of hcovs have been shown to be present in the brain, as well as csf [ À , À ], with neuroinvasion and neurovirulence shown in cell culture and animal models [ , , À , À ] , it is reasonable to consider that the sars-cov- may also be present in the cns. this is further supported by the fact that some covid- patients present with headache, nausea and vomiting, symptoms that potentially indicates neurological involvement [ ] . the frequency of neurological manifestations including changes in consciousness and acute cerebrovascular disease increase in parallel with the severity of the disease [ ] . one study on nasal epithelium samples taken from a subset of covid- patients exhibiting olfactory dysfunction has suggested that the disturbance of smell in these patients is more possibly due to sars-cov- infection of non-neuronal cells rather than olfactory neurons [ ] . more recently, the report of a cohort of covid- patients showed a correlation between acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards) and encephalopathy, mainly agitation, confusion and corticospinal tract signs [ ] . however, these findings need to be confirmed by studies on brain samples or csf. the most efficient way to identify involvement of neurological systems remains to be determined. the presence of sars-cov- in csf was confirmed by gene sequencing in a -year-old patient with covid- , which was the first direct evidence for the neuroinvasion of this novel coronavirus [ ] . brain samples remain the gold standard of confirmation, however, access to such samples will almost certainly remain very limited and it is not a practical or ethical consideration in larger cohorts, especially in mild to moderate cases. several pathways of invasion for hcovs have been proposed, including via the olfactory nerve, neurotransmitter pathways, hematogenous route, virchow-robin space surrounding arterioles and venules, lymphatic systems and receptors, from which alternative parameters and types of samples may offer opportunity for proof of cns involvement. more studies are needed to evaluate and compare these alternative pathways and parameters. in addition, the timing of sampling needs further investigation, as the change of viral load in the human body at different stages of covid- -related infection and recovery remains unclear. though considered mainly as respiratory viruses, several strains of hcovs have been detected in brains from patients with encephalitis and multiple sclerosis. in addition, the detection of sars-cov in csf of patients with neurological manifestation has also provided direct evidence for the neuroinvasion and neurovirulence of hcovs. however, the role of the virus in the process of the disease in acute phase as well as in the long term still remains elusive. the current strain sars-cov- can also potentially infect neuronal cells in the brain. therefore, a better understanding of dissemination characteristics and neuropathogenesis of these hcovs in the cns is urgently needed. catching a viral infection with ensuing cytokine release and tissue lesions may lead to a variety of cns-related manifestations (delirium, headache, vomiting, etc.), which are recognizable for many viruses including hcovs, however, these non-specific clinical symptoms and signs may be constitutional and represent systemic involvement rather than direct cns infection. therefore, we should be cautious when reporting cases with neurological symptoms and/or signs that lack solid evidence for cns infection (e.g. absence of viral detection in csf samples or abnormalities supportive of infection on brain imaging). it is particularly challenging when evaluate the neurological deficits during the advanced stage of covid- -related disease. the clinical diagnosis and treatment strategy has to be made on the basis of a differential diagnosis which includes hypoxia, respiratory, metabolic acidosis, ards-related encephalopathy, the effect or withdrawal of medications, and viral infection of the cns. pubmed search of articles: "human coronavirus", "sars", "mers", "oc ", " e", "neurological symptom", "neurological sign", "neurological manifestation", "neuroinvasion", and "neurovirulence". additional articles were selected based on articles in these searches and as suggested by reviewers. we declare no conflicts of interest. identification of an epitope of sars-coronavirus nucleocapsid protein engineering the largest rna virus genome as an infectious bacterial artificial chromosome neuroinvasion by human respiratory coronaviruses vacuolating encephalitis in mice infected by human coronavirus oc human respiratory coronavirus oc : genetic stability and neuroinvasion genomic characterisation and epidemiology of novel coronavirus: implications for virus origins and receptor binding neurological manifestations in covid- caused by sars-cov- persistent infection of human oligodendrocytic and neuroglial cell lines by human coronavirus e acute and persistent infection of human neural cell lines by human coronavirus oc infection of primary cultures of human neural cells by human coronaviruses e and oc murine encephalitis caused by hcov-oc , a human coronavirus with broad species specificity, is partly immunemediated susceptibility of murine cns to oc infection axonal transport enables neuron-to-neuron propagation of human coronavirus oc detection of coronavirus in the central nervous system of a child with acute disseminated encephalomyelitis human coronavirus oc associated with fatal encephalitis a rare cause of acute flaccid paralysis: human coronaviruses susceptibility of human and rat neural cell lines to infection by sars-coronavirus severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection causes neuronal death in the absence of encephalitis in mice transgenic for human ace mechanisms of host defense following severe acute respiratory syndrome-coronavirus (sars-cov) pulmonary infection of mice a mouse-adapted sars-coronavirus causes disease and mortality in balb/c mice severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection of mice transgenic for the human angiotensin-converting enzyme virus receptor lethal infection of k -hace mice infected with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus differential virological and immunological outcome of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in susceptible and resistant transgenic mice expressing human angiotensin-converting enzyme generation of a transgenic mouse model of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection and disease middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus causes multiple organ damage and lethal disease in mice transgenic for human dipeptidyl peptidase detection of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus in the brain: potential role of the chemokine mig in pathogenesis multiple organ infection and the pathogenesis of sars organ distribution of severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) associated coronavirus (sars-cov) in sars patients: implications for pathogenesis and virus transmission pathways possible central nervous system infection by sars coronavirus detection of sars coronavirus rna in the cerebrospinal fluid of a patient with severe acute respiratory syndrome severe neurologic syndrome associated with middle east respiratory syndrome corona virus (mers-cov) neurological complications of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: a report of two cases and review of the literature effect of olfactory bulb ablation on spread of a neurotropic coronavirus into the mouse brain viremic dissemination of mouse hepatitis virus-jhm following intranasal inoculation of mice middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: another zoonotic betacoronavirus causing sars-like disease immunological and neuropathological significance of the virchow-robin space dilated virchow-robin spaces in cryptococcal meningitis associated with aids: ct and mr findings the clinical pathology of severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars): a report from china persistence of physical symptoms in and abnormal laboratory findings for survivors of severe acute respiratory syndrome posttraumatic stress, anxiety, and depression in survivors of severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) human coronavirus oc infection induces chronic encephalitis leading to disabilities in balb/c mice murine olfactory bulb interneurons survive infection with a neurotropic coronavirus angiotensin-converting enzyme is a functional receptor for the sars coronavirus expression of elevated levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines in sars-cov-infected ace + cells in sars patients: relation to the acute lung injury and pathogenesis of sars tissue distribution of ace protein, the functional receptor for sars coronavirus. a first step in understanding sars pathogenesis tissue and cellular tropism of the coronavirus associated with severe acute respiratory syndrome: an in-situ hybridization study of fatal cases dipeptidyl peptidase is a functional receptor for the emerging human coronavirus-emc dipeptidyl-peptidase iv from bench to bedside: an update on structural properties, functions, and clinical aspects of the enzyme dpp iv human aminopeptidase n is a receptor for human coronavirus e aminopeptidase n inhibitors and sars involvement of aminopeptidase n (cd ) in infection of human neural cells by human coronavirus e cd l (l-sign) is a receptor for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus inhibitors of cathepsin l prevent severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus entry sars coronavirus, but not human coronavirus nl , utilizes cathepsin l to infect ace -expressing cells dissemination of mhv (strain jhm) infection does not require specific coronavirus receptors molecular mechanism for antibody-dependent enhancement of coronavirus entry antibodies against trimeric s glycoprotein protect hamsters against sars-cov challenge despite their capacity to mediate fcgammarii-dependent entry into b cells in vitro pathological findings of covid- associated with acute respiratory distress syndrome development and clinical application of a rapid igm-igg combined antibody test for sars-cov- infection diagnosis the neuroinvasive potential of sars-cov may play a role in the respiratory failure of covid- patients neurologic features in severe sars-cov- infection sars-cov- : underestimated damage to nervous system non-neuronal expression of sars-cov- entry genes in the olfactory system suggests mechanisms underlying covid- -associated anosmia we thank a/prof dennis cordato, senior specialist/neurologist, liverpool hospital, sydney, australia, for critical review and grammar check of the manuscript. we received no funding for this review. key: cord- -la g g t authors: kim, ji soo; choi, jeong sil title: factors influencing emergency nurses' burnout during an outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in korea date: - - journal: asian nurs res (korean soc nurs sci) doi: . /j.anr. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: la g g t purpose: emergency department (ed) nurses suffer from persistent stress after experiencing the traumatic event of exposure to middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov), which can subsequently lead to burnout. this study aimed to assess ed nurses' burnout level during an outbreak of mers-cov and to identify influencing factors in order to provide basic information for lowering and preventing the level of burnout. methods: study participants were ed nurses working in eight hospitals designated for treating mers-cov-infected patients in korea. we performed multiple regression analysis to explore the factors influencing burnout. results: the ed nurses' burnout was affected by job stress (β = . , p < . ), poor hospital resources for the treatment of mers-cov (β = − . , p < . ) and poor support from family and friends (β = − . , p < . ). these three variables explained . % of the variance in burnout. conclusions: ed nurses taking care of mers-cov-infected patients should be aware that burnout is higher for nurses in their divisions than nurses in other hospital departments and that job stress is the biggest influential factor of burnout. to be ready for the outbreak of emerging contagious diseases such as mers-cov, efforts and preparations should be made to reduce burnout. job stress should be managed and resolved. working conditions for mitigating job stress and systematic stress management programs should be provided, and hospital resources for the treatment of mers-cov need to be reinforced. moreover, promoting support from family and friends is required. the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) is an emerging infectious disease that infects the respiratory system. since its first outbreak in saudi arabia, the number of affected countries has been increasing [ , ] . korea had its first mers-cov infected patient in may . as of july , , the total number of patients in the country diagnosed with the disease was . of these, patients have died, and patients have been treated [ ] . most mers-cov-infected patients first visit a hospital's emergency department (ed). consequently, ed nurses are the first healthcare professionals to care for patients infected with the novel contagious disease. in fact, there were many cases of exposure to the disease in eds during the mers-cov outbreak [ ] . compared to nurses in other areas, ed nurses are faced with hectic, unpredictable, and ever-changing situations [ ] . because they deal with various diseases, traumatic events, and urgent situations, they do not have enough time for recovery, putting them under persistent stress. as a result, ed nurses are reported to experience much higher burnout than nurses in other hospital departments [ e ] . burnout is a longterm consequence of prolonged exposure to certain job demands and a reaction that appears when a person can no longer endure the stress they have been undergoing [ ] . it is a syndrome of physical, mental, and emotional exhaustion that includes a negative selfconcept and work attitude, and a reduced interest in patients [ ] . it has also been strongly associated with working conditions in nursing [ e ], leading it to be the focus of many nursing studies [ e ] . previous studies of ed nurses' burnout have focused on the severity of burnout or its influencing factors [ e ] . according to a systematic review of reports on emergency room (er) nurses' burnout published over the past years, . % of them suffered from burnout [ ] . although varying between studies, the factors influencing burnout have been largely divided into individual factors and work-related factors [ , ] . individual factors reported in previous studies include demographic characteristics such as gender, age, religion, education level [ , ] , having children, living with family [ ] , job stress [ , ] , personality, coping strategies, and job attitude [ , ] . major work-related influencing factors are exposure to traumatic events, level of wages, social support, staffing, and lack of material resources [ , ] . a nationwide outbreak of mers-cov is an unfamiliar traumatic event for ed nurses, so there has been little research into mers-covrelated burnout. similarly, when severe acute respiratory syndrome such as sars spread rapidly, most nurses experienced severe stress, and some nurses refused to care for patients [ , ] . in addition, the factors influencing nurses' desire to leave their jobs during an outbreak of sars were identified as the perceived risk of fatality from sars, tenure, work stress, and social relationships [ ] . when h n avian flu spread rapidly, taiwanese nurses' fear of infection from the disease was a significant factor influencing their willingness to care for patients infected with the avian flu [ ] . since an emerging respiratory infectious disease such as mers-cov can happen anywhere in the world, nursing managers need to pay attention to ed nurses' burnout in association with their experiences of a nationwide mers-cov outbreak. however, not even a basic survey has been conducted on the level of burnout experienced by ed nurses, who are in the front line taking care of mers-cov patients, or factors of burnout that consider the specific nature of mers-cov. thus, this study attempted to assess ed nurses' burnout level during an outbreak of mers-cov and to identify influencing factors in order to provide basic information for lowering and preventing the level of burnout. this was a cross-sectional design study conducted to identify the factors influencing mers-cov-related burnout in ed nurses who had experienced an outbreak of mers-cov in korea. during the outbreak of mers-cov in korea, hospitals designated for treating mers-infected patients in seoul, gyeonggi-do, and incheon, korea. the participants were drawn from nurses working in the eds of these hospitals. this study used convenience sampling to select eight eds, all of which gave their consent to the survey. the sample size was estimated using g*power . [ ] . with an input a at . , a medium effect size of . , power of . , and the number of predictors at for a linear multiple regression analysis, the minimum sample size required for this study was . however, for an even distribution of the participants among the hospitals selected, this study sampled ed nurses from each institution by simple random sampling, for a total of ed nurses. of all the participants, replied to the survey (response rate . %). after unanswered questionnaires were excluded, questionnaires were used as valid data in this study. approval for conducting this study was obtained from the institutional review board of gachon university in korea (no. - -hr). burnout [ ] and job stress [ ] were measured with a scale from previous studies, which was translated into korean, validated, and used by choi et al [ ] . other scales were developed by the researcher through a literature review [ , , , ] and the developed tools were tested for content validity by two infection control nurse practitioners, one infectious disease specialist (doctor), and one nursing professor. the developed tools were translated into korean by two phd-prepared bilingual nursing faculty and then back translated into english. back translation was performed by a separate professional translator, who did not have prior information about the scale. in addition, the scales were tested through a pilot study with ed nurses. mers-cov-related burnout was assessed using the oldenburg burnout inventory (olbi) developed by demerouti et al [ ] . in order to limit the study to burnout related to mers-cov, the phrase "caused by mers-cov" was added to each item. the olbi consists of items in two subdomains: emotional exhaustion and disengagement from work. each item is answered on a -point scale ranging from (strongly disagree) to (strongly agree), with a high score meaning a high level of burnout. cronbach a of the scale was . in the previous study, . in the preliminary survey, and . in the main survey. mers-cov-related job stress was assessed by measuring the pressure from time and anxiety with a scale developed by parker and decotiis [ ] . in order to limit the study to job stress related to mers-cov, the phrase "caused by mers-cov" was added to each item. this scale consists of nine items, with each item answered on a -point scale ranging from (strongly disagree) to (strongly agree). a high score means a high level of stress. cronbach a of the scale was . in the previous study, . in the preliminary survey, and . in the main survey. the scale for fear of mers-cov infection was developed by the researcher based on a previous study of nurses' fear during the outbreak of h n avian flu [ ] . this scale has just one item, "i am afraid of being infected with mers-cov," which is answered on a -point visual analogue scale. a high score means a high fear of mers-cov infection. the scale for measuring hospital resources for the treatment of mers-cov was developed by the researcher based on previous studies reporting material resources as one of the influencing factors of burnout [ , , , ] . in this scale, each item is answered on a -point scale ranging from (strongly disagree) to (strongly agree), with a high score meaning satisfactory hospital resources for the treatment of mers-cov are available. the three items of this scale are as follows: "my hospital is equipped with facilities sufficient for preventing the spread of mers-cov," "my hospital applies the best infection control guideline for preventing the spread of mers-cov," and "my hospital discusses how to prevent mers-cov regularly." cronbach a of the scale was . in the preliminary survey and . in the main survey. content validity index was . . the scale for measuring support from family and friends was developed by the researcher based on previous studies reporting social support as one of the influencing factors of burnout [ , , , ] . in this scale, each item is answered on a -point scale ranging from (strongly disagree) to (strongly agree), with a high score meaning high support from family and friends. the four items of this scale are as follows: "my friends will avoid me if they find that i have cared for mers patients," "my friends will support me caring for mers patients," "my family will avoid me if they find that i have cared for mers patients," and "my family will support me caring for mers patients." cronbach a of the scale was . in the preliminary survey and . in the main survey. content validity index was . . data were collected during the period from july , to july , , about months after the outbreak of mers-cov and when the disease had not yet been controlled. the researcher visited the eight convenience-sampled hospitals designated for treating mers-cov patients, explained the purpose of this study, obtained their consent, and delivered the questionnaires. the charge nurse of the relevant department in each hospital explained the purpose of the study to the nurses, obtained their written consent, and then distributed and collected the questionnaires. the whole process of the survey was conducted anonymously, and all personal information was kept confidential. the data were collected and analyzed using spss for windows version . (ibm corp., armonk, ny, usa), and the normal distribution of the main variables was confirmed before analysis (kolmogorov-smirnov test). the participants' general characteristics, mers-cov-related burnout, job stress, fear of mers infection, available hospital resources for the treatment of mers-cov, and support from family and friends were analyzed with frequencies, percentages, means, and standard deviations. scale reliability was assessed with cronbach a. differences in burnout according to general characteristics were analyzed using independent t tests, analysis of variance, and scheffe's post hoc test. correlation was computed using pearson's correlation test. multiple regression was performed using the enter method with input variables found to be significant in the difference testing and correlation analysis, to explore factors influencing mers-cov-related burnout. the participants' mean age was . years, and ( . %) were female. in addition, ( . %) were unmarried, and ( . %) had at least a bachelor's degree. the mean length of clinical experience was . years. most of the participants ( , . %) were working under the three-shift system, and ( . %) had actual experience in caring for mers-cov-infected or mers-covsuspected patients. the mean number of hospital beds was . . the level of mers-cov-related burnout was found to be significantly higher in nurses who worked a three-shift system, and in those who had nursed mers-cov-infected or mers-covsuspected patients than those who did not (p < . ) ( table ) . the mean score of mers-cov-related burnout was . out of ; mers-cov-related job stress was . out of ; fear of mers-cov infection was . out of ; hospital resources for the treatment of mers-cov was . out of ; support from family and friends was . out of ( table ) . mers-cov-related burnout was significantly correlated with mers-cov-related job stress, fear of mers-cov infection, availability of hospital resources for the treatment of mers-cov, and support from family and friends (p < . ). however, it was not significantly correlated with age, number of beds, or length of clinical experience. mers-cov-related job stress was found to be the biggest influencing factor of mers-cov-related burnout (b ¼ . , p < . ), with the level of mers-cov-related burnout higher when job stress was high. in addition, poor hospital resources for the treatment of mers-cov (b ¼ À . , p < . ) and poor support from family and friends (b ¼ À . , p < . ) increased mers-cov-related burnout. these three variables explained . % of the variance in mers-covrelated burnout ( table ) . the regression analysis satisfied the basic assumption of the model. the durbin-watson statistic was . , indicating that there was no autocorrelation. tolerance was . e. , which was higher than . ; the variance inflation factor was . e . , which was smaller than , indicating that there was no multicollinearity problem. this study was meaningful in that it surveyed factors influencing mers-cov-related burnout in ed nurses who experienced the traumatic event of a mers-cov outbreak. the study adapted scales from previous studies to measure fear of mers-cov infection [ , ] , social support, and lack of material resources [ , ] . during the outbreak of mers-cov in korea, one super-spreader (a host, an organism infected with a disease that infects disproportionally more secondary contacts than other hosts also infected with the same disease) had contact with people in an emergency department and transmitted mers-cov to of them [ ] . as such, it is highly likely that ed nurses who dealt with him or her then were more inclined to experience burnout when other enduring stress situations arise [ ] . the burnout level in ed nurses who experienced the mers-cov outbreak was . on a -point scale ( . on a -point scale). the olbi, a burnout scale suggested by demerouti et al [ ] , is an adequate scale for assessing the emotional aspects of exhaustion, including its physical and cognitive elements [ , e ] . the study of hopper et al [ ] , which surveyed er nurses' burnout level using maslach's burnout inventory, reported that . % and . % of ed nurses experienced a high level of burnout, respectively. in particular, a systematic review of studies that surveyed burnout in ed nurses reported that . % of them experienced emotional exhaustion exceeding the cut-off score [ ] . another study reported that burnout among ordinary nurses, midwives and nurses with some sort of specialization surveyed using the olbi, was . on a -point scale [ ] . accordingly, the burnout level surveyed in this study using the olbi shows that the participants' experience of burnout was above average compared to other nurses dealing with burnout in general. this suggests a need to pay particular attention to burnout in er nurses who are on the front line in treating mers-cov-infected or mers-cov-suspected patients. this also suggests the necessity for programs designed to help manage and control burnout levels in ed nurses during the outbreak of an infectious disease like mers-cov. in the univariate analysis, mers-cov-related burnout was significantly higher in nurses working under the three-shift system and in those with experience in caring for mers-covinfected or mers-cov-suspected patients. in the multiple regression analysis, the three-shift system was not a significantly influential factor of burnout. shift work is a major factor in increasing mers-cov-related burnout not only for er nurses but also for nurses in other departments [ ] . however, in some studies, shift work was not a factor influencing burnout [ , ] . in this study, although shift work did not show a significant relationship with mers-cov-related burnout for ed nurses, it may have an indirect effect on mers-cov-related burnout. therefore, the ed nurses who came into contact with mars-cov-related patients, their burnout need to be monitored by reducing their shift work. previous studies have reported that repeated exposure to traumatic events causes burnout in nurses [ , ] . it has also been found that when ed nurses have been exposed to traumatic events, they experience higher emotional exhaustion than those without such exposure [ ] . consistent with previous reports, the burnout level in this study was significantly higher in ed nurses who cared for mers-cov-infected or mers-cov-suspected patients during the nationwide outbreak of the disease. this finding supports the proposal that the outbreak of mers-cov was a traumatic event for which nurses' burnout needs to be managed. previous studies have reported demographic characteristics such as gender, age, religion, education level [ , ] , having children, and living with family [ ] as factors influencing burnout. in other studies, however, burnout was not significantly correlated with gender, age, experience, shift work, education level, or religion [ ] , and financial reward was not an influencing factor for ed nurses' burnout [ ] . because previous studies report conflicting results related to gender, age, education level, and experience, replication studies should be continuously conducted [ , ] . stress is a significant influencing factor that correlates with burnout in previous studies [ , ] . in this study, job stress induced by the outbreak of mers-cov was also found to be the biggest influencing factor, showing a correlation with burnout, that is, the burnout level was higher when job stress was high. thus, during the outbreak of an emerging infectious disease such as mers-cov, the continuous inflow of patients and the highly infectious nature of the disease increase ed nurses' stress, which in turn, aggravates their burnout [ ] . in order to manage ed nurses' burnout, efforts should be made to find the sources of stress and to resolve them. in addition to mers-cov-related job stress, the second and third biggest influencing factors increasing mers-cov-related burnout were poor hospital resources for the treatment of mers-cov and poor support from family and friends. this finding is consistent with the systematic review [ ] and literature review [ ] , which reported that hospital resources and support from family and friends were major influencing factors for ed nurses' burnout [ , ] . in particular, a lack of material resources is reported to be correlated with a high level of burnout [ ] . these findings suggest that, in preparation for the outbreak of an emerging infectious disease, hospitals should prepare facilities for preventing infection, establish systematic infection control guidelines, and continue discussions about preventive measures [ , ] . what is more, support from family and friends experienced as more extensive social support, was found to be another influencing factor, as reported in previous studies [ , ] . in the context of employment, typical sources of social support are coworkers, supervisors, and the organization in general. social support from one's supervisor and colleagues is found to provide a buffering effect that directly or indirectly reduces job stress [ , , , ] . accordingly, it is suggested that the aspect of social support from an employee's supervisor and colleagues should be taken into consideration for further research in future studies. if social support is provided in consideration of national and cultural factors, it may reduce burnout in nurses caring for patients in such a national crisis as the outbreak of mers-cov [ , ] . the principles of mers-cov infection prevention and control strategies associated with healthcare suggest the need for administrative controls and hospital resources [ ] . in addition, if the government, with strong leadership, develops stronger and more resilient health systems in preparation against emerging contagious diseases such as mers, ed nurses' mers-cov-related burn out and job stress will decrease. one limitation of this study is that the scope of research was confined to the outbreak of mers-cov in one country. as such, it is necessary to expand the number of study participants for comparison with cases in other countries. furthermore, as most of the survey respondents were female, future studies need to include more male nurses so as to examine gender characteristics. in addition, factors such as personality, coping strategies, and job attitude could be surveyed as additional influencing factors of burnout. lastly, we also suggest that a mixed-method research design combining cross-sectional surveys and in-depth interviews be adopted for an in-depth inquiry into mers-cov-related burnout. during the outbreak of an emerging infectious disease such as mers-cov, nursing managers need to pay attention to burnout in ed nurses, who are the first to treat patients. the participants' mers-cov-related burnout was higher than the average of nurses dealing with burnout in general. the biggest influencing factor of mers-covrelated burnout was mers-cov-related job stress, followed by availability of hospital resources for the treatment of mers-cov and support from family and friends. these three variables explained . % of the variance in mers-cov-related burnout. the outcome of this study is expected to provide basic information related to ed nurses' burnout in connection to an outbreak of an emerging infectious disease such as mers-cov and to contribute to programs and strategies for reducing burnout. in order to lower the level of burnout, nursing managers need to make efforts to reduce job stress, to reinforce hospital resources for the treatment of mers-cov, and to promote support from family and friends. particularly in the area of ed nursing, it is essential that we develop effective and systematic burnout management programs for monitoring and preventing burnout in preparation against possible future outbreaks of infectious diseases. the authors declared no conflict of interest. middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) department of health 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services correspondence the prevalence and impact of post traumatic stress disorder and burnout in nurses ambulance personnel and critical incidents: impact of accident and emergency work on mental health and emotional well-being the authors wish to thank all the ed nurses who so willingly participated in this study. key: cord- - fmul c authors: vabret, nicolas; britton, graham j.; gruber, conor; hegde, samarth; kim, joel; kuksin, maria; levantovsky, rachel; malle, louise; moreira, alvaro; park, matthew d.; pia, luisanna; risson, emma; saffern, miriam; salomé, bérengère; selvan, myvizhi esai; spindler, matthew p.; tan, jessica; van der heide, verena; gregory, jill k.; alexandropoulos, konstantina; bhardwaj, nina; brown, brian d.; greenbaum, benjamin; gümüş, zeynep h.; homann, dirk; horowitz, amir; kamphorst, alice o.; curotto de lafaille, maria a.; mehandru, saurabh; merad, miriam; samstein, robert m. title: immunology of covid- : current state of the science date: - - journal: immunity doi: . /j.immuni. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: fmul c abstract the coronavirus disease (covid- ) pandemic, caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov- ) has affected millions of people worldwide, igniting an unprecedented effort from the scientific community to understand the biological underpinning of covid pathophysiology. in this review, we summarize the current state of knowledge of innate and adaptive immune responses elicited by sars-cov- infection and the immunological pathways that likely contribute to disease severity and death. we also discuss the rationale and clinical outcome of current therapeutic strategies as well as prospective clinical trials to prevent or treat sars-cov- infection. the recent emergence and rapid global spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov- ) and the resulting coronavirus disease (covid- ) poses an unprecedented health crisis that was declared a pandemic by the world health organization (who) on march , . the origin of sars-cov- was traced to the city of wuhan in hubei province, china, where a cluster of viral pneumonia cases was first detected, many in connection with the huanan seafood wholesale market. china reported this outbreak to the who on december st , and soon after identified the causative pathogen as a betacoronavirus with high sequence homology to bat coronaviruses using angiotensin-converting enzyme (ace ) receptor as the dominant mechanism of cell entry wan et al., b) . following a likely zoonotic spillover, human-to-human transmission events were confirmed with clinical presentations ranging from no symptoms; to mild fever, cough, and dyspnea; to cytokine storm, respiratory failure, and death. sars-cov- is also closely related to sars (retrospectively named sars-cov- ) and mers (middle eastern respiratory syndrome) coronaviruses, causing local outbreaks and zoonotic epidemics in , respectively (de wit et al., . while sars-cov- is not as lethal as sars-cov- or mers-cov (fauci et al., ) , the considerable spread of the current pandemic has brought tremendous pressure and disastrous consequences for public health and medical systems worldwide. the scientific response to the crisis has been extraordinary with a plethora of covid- studies posted in preprint servers, in an attempt to rapidly unravel the pathogenesis of covid- and potential therapeutic strategies. in response, trainees and faculty members of the precision immunology institute at the icahn school of medicine at mount sinai (priism) have initiated an institutional effort to critically review the preprint literature (vabret et al., ) , together with peer-reviewed articles published in traditional journals, and summarize the current state of science on the fast evolving field of covid- immunology. we thematically focus on the innate and adaptive immune responses to sars-cov- and related coronaviruses, clinical studies and prognostic laboratory correlates, current therapeutic strategies, prospective clinical trials, and vaccine approaches. (bouvet et al., ; chen et al., ; ivanov et al., ) , thereby resembling host mrna to promote translation, prevent degradation, and evade rlr sensing. finally, covs also encode an endoribonuclease, nsp , that cleaves ' polyuridines formed during viral replication, which would otherwise be detected by mda (deng et al., ; hackbart et al., ) . coronaviruses have evolved additional strategies to impede activation of prrs. sars-cov- n-protein prevents trim activation of rig-i . likewise, mers-cov ns a, which itself binds dsrna, impedes pkr activation (comar et al., ; rabouw et al., ) and inhibits pact, an activator of rlrs (niemeyer et al., ; siu et al., ) . additionally, mers-cov ns b antagonizes rnasel, another activator of rlrs (thornbrough et al., ) . the role of other prrs remains unclear. for example, sars-cov- papain-like-protease (plp) antagonizes sting, suggesting that self-dna may also represent an important trigger (sun et al., ) . the extent to which sars-cov- homologs overlap in these functions is currently unknown. following activation, rlr and tlrs induce signaling cascades leading to the phosphorylation of transcription factors, such as nf-kb and the interferon-regulatory factor family (irf), ultimately leading to transcription of ifn and proinflammatory cytokines. although no experimental studies have delineated the precise functions of sars-cov- proteins, proteomic studies have demonstrated interactions between viral proteins and prr signaling cascades. sars-cov- orf b indirectly interacts with the signaling adaptor mavs via its association with tom (gordon et al., ) , consistent with prior reports that sars-cov- orf b suppresses mavs signaling (shi et al., ) . furthermore, sars-cov- nsp interacts with signaling intermediate tbk , and nsp is associated with rnf /nrdp , an activator of tbk and irf (gordon et al., ) . similarly, sars-cov- m protein is known to inhibit the tbk signaling complex (siu et al., ) , as does mers-cov orf b (yang et al., ) . other proteins, including sars-cov- plp, n, orf b and orf , block irf phosphorylation and nuclear translocation (devaraj et al., ; . nf-kb is also inhibited by covs proteins. these include sars-cov- plp (frieman et al., ) and mers-cov orf b and orf (canton et al., ; menachery et al., ) . finally, sars-cov- nsp (huang et al., a; kamitani et al., ) and mers-cov nsp (lokugamage et al., ) initiate general inhibition of host transcription and translation, thus limiting antiviral defenses nonspecifically. to prevent signaling downstream of ifn release, cov proteins inhibit several steps of the signal transduction pathway that bridge the receptor subunits (ifnar and ifnar ) to the stat proteins that activate transcription. for sars-cov- , these mechanisms include ifnar degradation by orf a (minakshi et al., ) , decreased stat phosphorylation by nsp (wathelet et al., ) , and antagonism of stat nuclear translocation by orf kopecky-bromberg et al., ) . however, sars-cov- orf shares only % sequence homology with sars-cov- , suggesting this function may not be conserved. in support of this notion, sars-cov- infection fails to limit stat phosphorylation, unlike in sars-cov- infection (lokugamage et al., ) . mucosal immune responses to infectious agents are orchestrated and regulated by myeloid cells with specialized functions, which include conventional dcs (cdcs), monocyte-derived dcs (modcs), plasmacytoid dcs (pdcs), and macrophages (guilliams et al., ) . a growing body of evidence points to dysregulated myeloid responses that potentially drive the covid- hallmark syndromes such as acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards), cytokine release syndrome (crs) and lymphopenia (mehta et al., ) . flow cytometric analyses of pbmcs from symptomatic covid- patients have shown a significant influx of gm-csf-producing, activated cd + t cells and cd + hla-dr lo inflammatory monocytes (im) (giamarellos-bourboulis et al., ; zhou et al., b) . this matches single-cell transcriptomic (scrnaseq) data demonstrating cd + il- β + monocytic expansion wen et al., ) , interferon-mapk driven adaptive immune responses , and il- βassociated inflammasome signatures (ong et al., ) in peripheral blood of covid- patients, although systemic levels of il- β detected are conspicuously low (gnjatic et al., unpublished) . importantly, these immune signatures track with progression of clinical disease. scrnaseq studies performed on pulmonary tissues of patients with severe covid- disease have revealed an expansion of ims and ficolin- + monocyte-derived macrophages, at the expense of tissue-resident reparative alveolar macrophages (am) . the aforementioned study also observed signatures of ifn-signaling and monocyte recruitment that likely contribute to the rapid decline in alveolar patency and promote ards. although most of the clinical focus has been on pulmonary damage and mononuclear phagocyte (mnp) dysfunction therein, it is increasingly clear that covid- likely presents systemic challenges in other organ sites such as the ileum and kidneys. understanding the role of non-pulmonary myeloid cells in tissue-specific pathology associated with covid- will be important. while data on covid- patients continues to rapidly emerge, studies of myeloid cell dysfunction in sars-cov- and mers-cov can provide an important roadmap to understanding covid- pathogenesis ( figure ). sars-cov- infection in mouse models results in an aberrant am phenotype that limits dc trafficking and t cell activation (zhao et al., ) . additionally, ym + fizz + alternative macrophages can increase airway hypersensitivity, thus exacerbating sars-associated fibrosis (page et al., ) . further, as described above, murine sars-cov- studies have demonstrated that delayed ifn-i signaling and inflammatory monocytes-macrophages promote lung cytokine and chemokine levels, vascular leakage, and impaired antigenspecific t cell responses, culminating in lethal disease (channappanavar et al., ) . the role played by prominent ifn-producing pdcs in sars-cov- control or pathogenesis warrants investigation, as they have been shown to be critical in murine coronavirus (mhv) control (cervantes-barragan et al., ) . longitudinal studies in sars-cov- models are awaited, but initial phenotypic studies in humanized hace mice have shown the characteristic alveolar interstitial pneumonia, with infiltration of lymphocytes and monocytes and accumulation of macrophages in the alveolar lumen (bao et al., a) , which recapitulates patient findings . lastly, nonhuman primate (nhp) studies and patient data on sars-cov- have also shown that virus spike-specific igg responses can exacerbate acute lung injury due to repolarization of alveolar macrophages into pro-inflammatory phenotypes and enhanced recruitment of inflammatory monocyte via ccl and il- (clay et al., ; liu et al., ) . however, the extent to which the antibody response contributes to disease pathophysiology remains to be confirmed. the initial mode of viral pathogen-associated signal (pamp) recognition by innate cells has a major impact on downstream myeloid signaling and cytokine secretion (de marcken et al., ) . while macrophages are somewhat susceptible to mers-cov and sars-cov- infection (perlman and dandekar, ; zhou et al., ) , data do not suggest that they are infected by sars-cov- , although one study reported ace and sars-cov- nucleocapsid protein is expressed in lymph nodes and spleenassociated cd + macrophages of covid- patients producing il- . significantly elevated systemic levels of pro-inflammatory cytokine il- have been reported in several covid- patient cohorts and shown to correlate with disease severity (mehta et al., ) . increased il- can also be associated with higher levels of il- , il- , ifn-ɣ and gm-csf as seen in secondary hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis. in response to viral infections, mnps drive interleukin, and ifn-i and ifn-iii production, resulting in inflammasome activation, induction of pathogenic th and th cell responses, recruitment of effector immune cells and crs pathology (prokunina-olsson et al., ; tanaka et al., ) . independently, in vitro studies have demonstrated sars-cov- infection can induce intracellular stress pathways resulting in nlrp -dependent inflammasome activation and macrophage pyroptosis shi et al., ) . functional studies are required to implicate these myeloid inflammasome pathways in covid- lung pathology and to assess other immunogenic pathways such as ripk / -dependent necroptosis (nailwal and chan, ) . in conclusion, the strength and duration of myeloid interferon-stimulated gene (isg) signaling potentially dictate covid- disease severity, but rigorous studies are warranted to confirm this. lastly, more work is needed to ascertain the mechanistic role played by lung-resident and recruited granulocytes in sars-cov- control and pathogenesis (camp and jonsson, ; flores-torres et al., ) . in contrast to their early protective role, neutrophil netosis and macrophage crosstalk can drive later-stage inflammatory cascades (barnes et al., ) , underscoring the overall pathogenic nature of damagesensing host responses ( figure ) . collectively, the current knowledge of coronaviruses and sars-cov- infection, in particular, points to an inadvertent collusion involving myeloid cells in covid- pathogenesis, despite their critical role in early sensing and antiviral responses. innate lymphoid cells (ilcs) are innate immune effector cells that lack the expression of rearranged antigen receptors (tcr, bcr). the ilc family is divided into two main groups: the cytotoxic natural killer (nk) cells and the non-cytotoxic helper ilcs, which include ilc , ilc and ilc (vivier et al., ) . conventional nk cells include cd bright cd -nk cells and cd dim cd + cells, that are specialized in cytokine production or cytotoxicity, respectively. multiple studies have reported reduced numbers of nk cells in the peripheral blood of covid- patients, which is associated with severity of the disease wang et al., f; yu et al., ; zheng et al., b) . a recent scrnaseq analysis revealed a transcriptomic signature for nk cells that was equally represented in lungs from patients and healthy donors . the majority of lung nk cells are non-resident (gasteiger et al., ; marquardt et al., ) , and cxcr has been shown to mediate nk cell infiltration upon influenza infection (carlin et al., ) . in vitro, cxcr ligands (cxcl - ) are increased in sars-cov- -infected human lung tissue (chu et al., ) , and cxcr ligand-producing monocytes are expanded in the lungs of covid- patients . this suggests that the cxcr pathway might facilitate nk cell recruitment from the peripheral blood to the lungs in covid- patients ( figure ). nk cells express inhibitory and activating receptors that regulate their cytotoxicity. they are therefore able to induce the lysis of virus-infected cells that upregulate virus-derived proteins, as well as stress-inducible ligands, which are then recognized by nk cellactivating receptors, such as nkp (cerwenka and lanier, ; draghi et al., ; duev-cohen et al., ; glasner et al., ) . future studies should investigate the expression of nk receptor ligands on sars-cov- -infected cells, in order to better understand the mechanisms underlying nk cell activation in covid- disease. further, secretion of igg and igg antibodies during sars-cov- infection (amanat et al., ) may induce cd dim cd + nk cell activation through fc receptor recognition of antibodies, either bound to surface antigens expressed on infected cells or to extracellular virions as immune complexes ( figure ). this interaction might trigger both cytokine production by nk cells and lysis of infected cells through antibodymediated cellular cytotoxicity (adcc), as shown in influenza infection (von holle and moody, ) . emerging data highlight the capacity for nk-mediated adcc in response to naturally isolated sars-cov- anti-s igg that cross-reacts with sars-cov- s glycoprotein when transfected into chinese hamster ovary (cho) cells (pinto et al., ) . these findings suggest that triggering nk cell activation may not only contribute to the resolution of infection, but also contribute to the cytokine storm in ards. ex vivo nk cells from peripheral blood of covid- patients have reduced intracellular expression of cd a, ksp , granzyme b and granulysin, suggesting an impaired cytotoxicity, as well as an impaired production of chemokines, ifn-ɣ and tnf-α (wilk et al., ; zheng et al., b) . several pathways may contribute to the dysregulation of nk cells. while influenza virus infects nk cells and induces apoptosis (mao et al., ) , lung nk cells do not express the entry receptor for sars-cov- , ace , and are therefore unlikely to be directly infected by sars-cov- (travaglini et al., ) . the majority of nk cells found in human lung display a mature cd + kir + cd dim phenotype and are able to induce cell cytotoxicity in response to loss of hla class i or through fc receptor signaling, although to a lower extent than their peripheral blood counterpart (marquardt et al., ) . killer-immunoglobulin receptors (kirs) are acquired during nk cell development alongside cd (fcrγiiia) and are essential for nk cell licensing and subsequent capacity for cytolytic function (sivori et al., ) . frequencies of nk cells expressing cd and/or kir are decreased in the blood following sars-cov- and sars-cov- infection, respectively (xia et al., ; wang et al., d) . collectively, the data suggest either an impaired maturation of the nk compartment or migration of the mature, circulating nk cells into the lungs or other peripheral tissues of sars-cov- -infected patients. the immune checkpoint nkg a is increased on nk cells and cd t cells from covid- patients . nkg a inhibits cell cytotoxicity by binding the nonclassical hla-e molecule (braud et al., ; brooks et al., ) , and this interaction is strongly correlated with poor control of hiv- infection (ramsuran et al., ) . genes encoding the inhibitory receptors lag and tim are also upregulated in nk cells from covid- patients (wilk et al., ; hadjadj et al., ) . thus, increased immune checkpoints on nk cells might contribute to viral escape. additionally, covid- patients have higher plasma concentrations of il- , which significantly correlate with lower nk cell numbers . in vitro stimulation by il- and soluble il- receptor has previously revealed impaired cytolytic functions (perforin and granzyme b production) by healthy donor nk cells, which can be restored following addition of tocilizumab (il- r-blockade) (cifaldi et al., ) . tnf-α is also upregulated in the plasma of covid- patients , and ligand-receptor interaction analysis of peripheral blood scrnaseq data suggests that monocyte-secreted tnf-α might bind to its receptors on nk cells . tnf-α is known to contribute to nk cell differentiation (lee et al., ) , which includes downregulation of nkp (ivagnes et al., ) , though no effect of tnf-α or il- on nk cell-mediated adcc has been reported so far. collectively, these data suggest that cross-talk with monocytes might impair nk cell recognition and killing of sars-cov- infected cells, and antibodies targeting il- and tnf-signaling may benefit enhanced nk cell functions in covid- patients ( figure ). no studies, to date, have reported ilc , ilc , or ilc functions in sars-cov- infection. all three subsets are present in healthy lung (de grove et al., ; yudanin et al., ) . ilc s are essential for the improvement of lung function following influenza infection in mice, through amphiregulin-mediated restoration of the airway epithelium and oxygen saturation (monticelli et al., ) . however, ilc s also produce il- , contributing to the recruitment of macrophages to the lung and influenza-induced airway hyperreactivity (chang et al., ) . indeed, ilcs are involved in the polarization of alveolar macrophages, either towards a m -like phenotype (ilc and ilc ) or a m like phenotype (ilc ) (kim et al., ) . given the increased il- concentrations and the dysregulation of the macrophage compartment observed in covid- patients, the role played by ilcs in sars-cov- infection warrants further investigation. t cells play a fundamental role in viral infections: cd t cells provide b cell-help for antibody production and orchestrate the response of other immune cells, whereas cd t cells kill infected cells to reduce the viral burden. however, dysregulated t cell responses can result in immunopathology. to better understand the role of t cell responses in sars-cov- infection, the pursuit of two major questions is imperative: ( ) what is the contribution of t cells to initial virus control and tissue damage in the context of covid- , and ( ) how do memory t cells established thereafter contribute to protective immunity upon re-infection? some tentative answers are beginning to emerge. similar to earlier observations about sars-cov- infection , several current reports emphasize the occurrence of lymphopenia with drastically reduced numbers of both cd and cd t cells in moderate and severe covid- cases ( figure ) nie et al., b; wang et al., d; zeng et al., ; zheng et al., b) . the extent of lymphopenia -most striking for cd t cells in patients admitted to icu -seemingly correlates with covid- -associated disease severity and mortality diao et al., ; liu et al., b liu et al., , c tan et al., a; wang et al., d zeng et al., ; zhou et al., c) . patients with mild symptoms, however, typically present with normal or slightly higher t cell counts thevarajan et al., ) . the cause of peripheral t cell loss in moderate to severe covid- , though a phenomenon also observed in other viral infections, remains elusive, and direct viral infection of t cells, in contrast to mers-cov (chu et al., ) , has not been reported. several mechanisms likely contribute to the reduced number of t cells in the blood, including effects from the inflammatory cytokine milieu. indeed, lymphopenia seems to correlate with serum il- , il- , and tnf-α (diao et al., ; wan et al., a) , while convalescent patients were found to have restored bulk t cell frequencies paired with overall lower pro-inflammatory cytokine levels diao et al., ; liu et al., a liu et al., , b zheng et al., b) . cytokines such as ifn-i and tnf-α may inhibit t cell recirculation in blood by promoting retention in lymphoid organs and attachment to endothelium (kamphuis et al., ; shiow et al., ) . however, in an autopsy study examining the spleens and hilar lymph nodes of six patients who succumbed to covid- , chen et al. observed extensive cell death of lymphocytes and suggested potential roles for il- as well as fas-fasl interactions . in support of this hypothesis, the il- receptor antagonist tocilizumab was found to increase the number of circulating lymphocytes (giamarellos-bourboulis et al., ) . t cell recruitment to sites of infection may also reduce their presence in the peripheral blood compartment. scrnaseq analysis of bronchoalveolar lavage (bal) fluid of covid- patients revealed an increase in cd t cell infiltrate with clonal expansion . likewise, post-mortem examination of a patient who succumbed to ards following sars-cov- infection showed extensive lymphocyte infiltration in the lungs . however, another study that examined post-mortem biopsies from four covid- patients only found neutrophilic infiltration (tian et al., a) . further studies are therefore needed to better determine the cause and impact of the commonly observed lymphopenia in covid- patients. available information about sars-cov- -specific t cell immunity may serve as an orientation for further understanding of sars-cov- infection. immunogenic t cell epitopes are distributed across several sars-cov- proteins (s, n, m as well as orf ), although cd t cell responses were more restricted to the s protein (li et al., ) . in sars-cov- survivors, the magnitude and frequency of specific cd memory t cells exceeded that of cd memory t cells and virus-specific t cells persisted for at least - years suggesting that t cells may confer long-term immunity (ng et al., ; tang et al., ) . limited data from viremic sars patients further indicated that virusspecific cd t cell populations might be associated with a more severe disease course, since lethal outcomes correlated with elevated th cell (il- , il- , il- ) serum cytokines (li et al., ) . however, the quality of cd t cell responses needs to be further characterized to understand associations with disease severity. few studies have thus far characterized specific t cell immunity in sars-cov- infection. in patients recovering from mild covid- , robust t cell responses specific for viral n, m and s proteins were detected by ifn-γ elispot, weakly correlated with neutralizing antibody concentrations (similar to convalescent sars-cov- patients (li et al., ) , and subsequently contracted with only n-specific t cells detectable in about one third of the cases post recovery . in a second study, pbmcs from covid- patients with moderate to severe ards were analyzed by flow cytometry, approximately weeks after icu admission (weiskopf et al., ) . both virus-specific cd and cd t cells were detected in all patients at average frequencies of . % and . %, respectively, and very limited phenotyping according to cd ra and ccr expression status characterized these cells predominantly as either cd tcm (central memory) or cd tem (effector memory) and temra (effector memory ra) cells. this study is notable for the use of large complementary peptide pools comprising , sars-cov- epitopes (overlapping -mers for s protein as well as computationally predicted hla-i-and -ii-restricted epitopes for all other viral proteins) as antigenspecific stimuli that revealed a preferential specificity of both cd and cd t cells for s protein epitopes, with the former population modestly increasing over ~ - days after initial onset of symptoms. a caveat, however, pertains to the identification of specific t cells by induced cd and cd co-expression, since upregulation of cd by cd t cells, in contrast to cd , may preferentially capture regulatory t cells (treg) (bacher et al., ) . further analyses of s protein-specific t cells by elisa demonstrated robust induction of ifn-γ, tnf-α and il- concomitant with lower levels of il- , il- , il- , il- and il- . a third report focused on s-specific cd t cell responses in patients with mild, severe or critical covid- using overlapping peptide pools and induced cd and cd co-expression as a readout for antiviral cd t cells. such cells were present in % of cases and presented with enhanced cd , hla-dr and ki- expression indicative of recent in vivo activation (braun et al., ) . of note, the authors also detected low frequencies of s-reactive cd t cells in % of sars-cov- seronegative healthy control donors. however, these cd t cells lacked phenotypic markers of activation and were specific for c-terminal s protein epitopes that are highly similar to endemic human coronaviruses, suggesting that crossreactive cd memory t cells in some populations (e.g., children and younger patients that experience a higher incidence of hcov infections) may be recruited into an amplified primary sars-cov- -specific response (braun et al., ) . similarly, endemic cov-specific cd t cells were previously shown to recognize sars-cov determinants (gioia et al., ) . how previous infections with endemic coronavirus may affect immune responses to sars-cov- will need to be further investigated. finally, in general accordance with the above findings on the induction of sars-cov- specific t cells, using tcrseq, huang et al. and liao et al. reported greater tcr clonality of peripheral blood as well as bal t cells in patients with mild vs. severe covid- . moving forward, a comprehensive identification of immunogenic sars-cov- epitopes recognized by t cells (campbell et al., ) , as well as further studies on convalescent patients who recovered from mild and severe disease, will be particularly important. while the induction of robust t cell immunity is likely essential for efficient virus control, dysregulated t cell responses may cause immunopathology and contribute to disease severity in covid- patients (figure ). this is suggested in a study by zhou et al. which reported a significantly increased pbmc frequency of polyclonal gm-csf + cd t cells capable of prodigious ex vivo il- and ifn-γ production only in critically ill covid- patients . of note, gm-csf + cd t cells have been previously implicated in inflammatory autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis or juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, and high levels of circulating gm-csf + cd t cells were found to be associated with poor outcomes in sepsis . additionally, two studies observed reduced frequencies of treg cells in severe covid- cases qin et al., ) . since treg cells have been shown to help resolve ards inflammation in mouse models (walter et al., ) , a loss of tregs might facilitate the development of covid- lung immunopathology. similarly, a reduction of γδ-t cells, a subset of t cells with apparent protective antiviral function in influenza pneumonia (dong et al., ; zheng et al., ) , has been reported in severely sick covid- patients lei et al., b) . currently, little is known about specific phenotypical and/or functional t cell changes associated with covid- . in the majority of preprints and peer-reviewed studies, there are reports of increased presence of activated t cells ( figure ) characterized by expression of hla-dr, cd , cd , cd , cd and ki- (braun et al., ; dong et al., ; guo et al., ; liao et al., ; thevarajan et al., ; yang et al., a; zheng et al., a) . generally, independent of covid- disease severity, cd t cells seem to be more activated than cd t cells thevarajan et al., ; yang et al., a) , a finding that echoes stronger cd , than cd , t cell responses during sars-cov- (li et al., ) . furthermore, in a case study of covid- patients, diao et al. showed that levels of pd- increased from prodromal to symptomatic stages of the disease (diao et al., ) . pd- expression is commonly associated with t cell exhaustion, but it is important to emphasize that pd- is primarily induced by tcr signaling; it is thus also expressed by activated effector t cells (ahn et al., ) . in addition, several studies reported higher expression of various co-stimulatory and inhibitory molecules such as ox- and cd , ctla- and tigit (zheng et al., a) , and nkg a . reduced numbers of cd + cd t cells as well as larger frequencies of pd- + /tim + cd t cells in icu patients were also reported . expression of most of these markers was found to be higher in cd than in cd t cells, and levels tended to increase in severe vs. non-severe cases, which may be due to differences in viral load. cellular functionality was shown to be impaired in cd and cd t cells of critically ill patients, with reduced frequencies of polyfunctional t cells (producing more than one cytokine) as well as generally lower ifn-γ and tnf-α production following re-stimulation with pma and ionomycin zheng et al., a zheng et al., , b . similarly, zheng et al. reported that cd t cells in severe covid- appear less cytotoxic and effector-like with reduced cd a degranulation and granzyme b (gzmb) production . in contrast, a different study found that both gzmb and perforin were increased in cd t cells of severely sick patients (zheng et al., a) . in accordance with the latter observation, when compared to a moderate disease group, convalescent patients with resolved severe sars-cov- infection had significantly higher frequencies of polyfunctional t cells, with cd t cells producing more ifn-γ, tnf-α and il- , and cd t cells producing more ifn-γ, tnf-α and cd a, respectively (li et al., ) . however, given the vigorous dynamics of acute t cell responses and potential differences in sample timing throughout disease course, these observations are not necessarily mutually exclusive. accordingly, rnaseq data by liao et al. showed that cd t cells in the bal fluid of severe covid- patients express cytotoxic genes such as gzma, gzmb, and gzmk at higher levels, while klrc and xcl are enriched in mild cases . in summary, t cells in severe covid- seem to be more activated and may exhibit a trend towards exhaustion, based on continuous expression of inhibitory markers such as pd- and tim- as well as overall reduced polyfunctionality and cytotoxicity. conversely, recovering patients were shown to have an increase in follicular helper cd t cells (t fh ) as well as decreasing levels of inhibitory markers along with enhanced levels of effector molecules such as gzm a, gzmb and perforin (thevarajan et al., yang et al., a; zheng et al., b) . collectively, these studies provide a first glimpse into t cell dynamics in acute sars-cov- infection, but any conclusions have to be tempered at this stage on account of significant limitations in many of the current investigations. the humoral immune response is critical for the clearance of cytopathic viruses and is a major part of the memory response that prevents reinfection. sars-cov- elicits a robust b cell response, as evidenced by the rapid and near-universal detection of virusspecific igm, igg and iga, and neutralizing igg antibodies (nabs) in the days following infection. the kinetics of the antibody response to sars-cov- are now reasonably well described . similar to sars-cov- infection (hsueh et al., ) , seroconversion occurs in most covid- patients between and days after the onset of symptoms, and antibody titers persist in the weeks following virus clearance (figure ) , (haveri et al., ; lou et al., ; okba et al., ; wölfel et al., ; wu et al., b; zhao et al., a) . antibodies binding the sars-cov- internal n protein and the external s glycoprotein are commonly detected (amanat et al., ; ju et al., ; . the receptor binding domain (rbd) of the s protein is highly immunogenic and antibodies binding this domain can be potently neutralizing, blocking virus interactions with the host entry receptor, ace (ju et al., ; wu et al., b) . anti-rbd nabs are detected in most tested patients (ju et al., ; . although cross-reactivity to sars-cov- s and n proteins and to mers-cov s protein was detected in plasma from covid- patients, no cross-reactivity was found to the rbd from sars-cov- or mers-cov. in addition, plasma from covid- patients did not neutralize sars-cov- or mers-cov (ju et al., ) . rbd-specific cd + igg + memory b cells were single-cell sorted from a cohort of covid- donors between days - after the onset of symptoms (ju et al., ) . from their antibody gene sequences, sars-cov- specific monoclonal antibodies were produced. the monoclonal antibodies had a diverse repertoire, relatively low or no somatic mutations, and variable binding reactivity, with dissociation constants reaching - to - , similar to antibodies isolated during acute infections. two potent neutralizing sars-cov- rbd-specific monoclonal antibodies were characterized that did not cross-react with the rbd of sars-cov- or mers-cov (ju et al., ) . together, these results demonstrate that antibody mediated neutralization is virusspecific and likely driven by binding of epitopes within the rbd. the b cell response to a virus serves not only to protect from the initial challenge, but also to offer extended immunity against reinfection. following resolution of an infection, plasma cells formed during the acute and convalescent phases continue to secrete antibodies, giving rise to serological memory. memory b cells that are also formed during the primary infection constitute the second arm of b cell memory. memory b cells can quickly respond to a reinfection by generating new high affinity plasma cells. longterm protection is achieved through the induction of long-lived plasma cells and memory b cells. there is great interest in understanding the life-span of b cell memory responses to sars-cov- . protection from reinfection has direct medical and social consequences as the world works to develop vaccination strategies and resume normal activities. in covid- patients, evidence of near universal seroconversion and the lack of substantial descriptions of reinfection point to a robust antibody response, which, along with the t cell memory response, would offer protection to reinfection. indeed, a case study of a single patient described induction of cd hi cd hi antibody secreting cells (ascs), concomitant with an increase in circulating follicular t helper cells (tfh) cells (thevarajan et al., ) , and a scrnaseq study of pbmc from critically ill and recently recovered individuals revealed a plasma cell population . in addition, igg memory cells specific to the rbd have been identified in the blood of covid- patients (ju et al., ) . consistent with the development of immunity after covid- infection, a recent study of sars-cov- infection in rhesus macaques found that two macaques that had resolved the primary infection were resistant to reinfection days later (bao et al., b) . due to the timing of this outbreak, it is not yet possible to know the nature and extent of long-term memory responses, but lessons may again be learned from other human coronaviruses. in the case of the human coronavirus e, specific igg and nabs are rapidly induced but wane in some individuals around a year after infection with some residual protection to reinfection (callow et al., ; reed, ) . the life span of the humoral response following sars-cov- infection is also relatively short, with the initial specific igg and nab response to sars-cov- diminishing - years after infection and nearly undetectable in up to % of individuals (cao et al., ; liu et al., ) . a long-term study following sars-cov- infected healthcare workers over a years period also found that virus-specific igg declined after several years, but the authors observed detectable virus-specific igg years after infection . in the case of mers-cov, antibodies were detected in of volunteers tested years after infection (payne et al., ) . igg specific to sars-cov- trimeric spike protein was detectable in serum up to days after symptom onset, but igg titers began decreasing by weeks post-symptom onset (adams et al., ) . long term protection from reinfection may also be mediated by reactive memory b cells. a study that analyzed sars-cov- s protein-specific igg memory cells at , , and months post-infection found that s-specific igg memory b cells decreased progressively about % from to months after infection (traggiai et al., ) . a further retrospective study of individuals found no evidence of circulating sars-cov- -specific igg + memory b cells years after infection (tang et al., ) . this is in contrast to the memory t cell response, which was robustly detected based on induced ifn-γ production (tang et al., ) . studies of common coronaviruses, sars-cov- and mers-cov indicate that virus specific antibody responses wane over time, and, in the case of common coronaviruses, result in only partial protection from reinfection. these data suggest that immunity to sars-cov- may diminish following a primary infection and further studies will be required to determine the degree of long-term protection (figure ) . several studies have demonstrated that high virus-specific antibody titers to sars-cov- are correlated with greater neutralization of virus in vitro and are inversely correlated with viral load in patients ( figure ) wölfel et al., ; zhao et al., a) . despite these indications of a successful neutralizing response in the majority of individuals, higher titers are also associated with more severe clinical cases okba et al., ; zhao et al., a; zhou et al., a) , suggesting that a robust antibody response alone is insufficient to avoid severe disease ( figure ). this was also observed in the previous sars-cov- epidemic, where neutralizing titers were found to be significantly higher in deceased patients compared to patients who had recovered . this has led to concerns that antibody responses to these viruses may contribute to pulmonary pathology, via antibody-dependent enhancement (ade) (figure ). this phenomenon is observed, when non-neutralizing virus-specific igg facilitate entry of virus particles into fc-receptor (fcr) expressing cells, particularly macrophages and monocytes, leading to inflammatory activation of these cells (taylor et al., ) . a study in sars-cov- -infected rhesus macaques found that anti-s-igg contributed to severe acute lung injury (ali) and massive accumulation of monocytes/macrophages in the lung . furthermore, serum containing anti-s ig from sars-cov- patients enhanced the infection of sars-cov- in human monocyte-derived macrophages in vitro (yip et al., ) . ade was also reported with a monoclonal antibody isolated from a patient with mers-cov . somewhat reassuringly, there was no evidence of ade mediated by sera from rats vaccinated with sars-cov- rbd in vitro (quinlan et al., ) , nor in macaque immunized with an inactivated sars-cov- vaccine candidate (gao et al. ) . as of now, there is no evidence that naturally developed antibodies towards sars-cov- contribute to the pathological features observed in covid- . however, this possibility should be considered when it comes to experimental design and development of therapeutic strategies. importantly, in all of the descriptions of ade as it relates to coronavirus, the fcr was necessary to trigger the antibody-mediated pathology. high-dose intravenous immunoglobulin (ivig), which may blunt ade, has been trialed in covid- patients shao et al., ) , but further studies are needed to determine the extent to which ivig is safe or beneficial in sars-cov- infection. vaccine trials will need to consider the possibility of antibody-driven pathology upon antigen re-challenge; strategies using f(ab) fragments or engineered fc monoclonal antibodies may prove particularly beneficial in this setting (amanat and krammer, ) . with the rapidly growing number of cases in the first few months, numerous reports on predictors of covid- severity with small cohorts were released. these offered clinicians and immunologists the first understanding of the clinical course and pathological processes that are associated with the novel sars-cov- infection. this section highlights key findings from those studies, with a major focus on the immune factors associated with disease risk or severity. there are currently limited known risk factors for susceptibility to covid- , although this has been evaluated in several studies. zhao et al. compared the abo blood group distribution in a cohort of covid- patients to that of healthy controls from the corresponding regions . they found blood group a to be associated with a higher risk for acquiring covid- , when compared to non-a blood groups; blood group o had the lowest risk for the infection. another study demonstrated an identical association (zietz and tatonetti, ) , and similar results have been previously described for other viruses (lindesmith et al., ) , including for sars-cov- (cheng et al., a) . several large collaborative efforts are currently underway to generate, share and analyze genetic data to understand the links between human genetic variation and covid- susceptibility and severity, the most prominent of which is the covid- host genetics initiative (covid hg.org). these studies are supported by previous observations on sars-cov- that followed the outbreak, which have identified significant associations between genetic variants and immune phenotypes (chan et al., ; wang et al., ; zhao et al., ) . although identifying such polymorphisms and their associated genes and pathways for sars-cov- will require large cohorts, several studies have already highlighted genetic polymorphisms that may potentially impact susceptibility, which remain to be tested in clinical trials. these studies have focused on genetic variants that may impact the expression or function of genes important in viral entry, namely ace (sars-cov- receptor) and tmprss (spike protein activator) (asselta et al., ; cao et al., c; renieri et al., ; stawiski et al., ) . cao et al. identified variants that are potentially expression quantitative trait loci (eqtl) of ace (i.e. they may potentially alter ace gene expression) and analyzed their frequencies in different populations (cao et al., c) . stawiski et al. listed variants that may be critical in ace binding and thereby its function, and compared the frequencies of these variants within different populations (stawiski et al., ) . while there are several limitations to these studies, the major question is whether the utility of these biomarkers is replicable in large populations with covid- clinical outcomes data and in targeted or large-scale genomic analyses that are currently underway. in addition, these studies will reveal the potential associations between genetic variants and susceptibility in a gene or loci agnostic fashion. several routine blood and serological parameters have been suggested to stratify patients who might be at higher risk for complications to aid in allocation of healthcare resources in the pandemic (table ). serologic markers from routine blood work were reported, by comparing patients with mild/moderate symptoms to those with severe symptoms. this includes different acute phase proteins, such as saa (serum amyloid protein) and c-reactive protein (crp) . interestingly, elevations in crp appear to be unique to covid- patients, when compared to other viral infections. other consistently reported markers in non-survivors are increased procalcitonin (pct) and il- levels , as well as increased serum urea, creatinine, cystatin c, direct bilirubin, and cholinesterase . overall, inflammatory markers are common in severe cases of covid- and appear to correlate with the severity of the symptoms and clinical outcome. moreover, the extensive damage that occurs in specific organs of severe covid- patients is possibly related to differences in the expression of ace ( figure ) . lymphopenia is the most frequently described prognostic marker in covid- (table ) , and it appears to predict morbidity and mortality even at early stages (fei et al., ) . tan et al. proposed a prognostic model based on lymphocyte counts at two time points: patients with less than % lymphocytes at days - from the onset of symptoms and less than % at days - had the worst outcomes in this study (tan et al., a) . wynants et al. compared predictors of disease severity across studies (> patients), highlighting crp, neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (n/l) and lactate dehydrogenase (ldh) as the most significant predictive biomarkers . furthermore, a meta-analysis of covid- studies with a total of patients also attempted to identify early-stage patients with poor prognosis . the most consistent findings across the different studies were elevated levels of crp, ldh and d-dimer, as well as decreased blood platelet and lymphocyte counts zhou et al., d) . systemic and pulmonary thrombi have been reported with activation of the extrinsic coagulation cascade, involving dysfunctional endothelium and monocytic infiltration (poor et al., ; varga et al., ) ; thrombocytopenia and elevated d-dimer levels may be indicative of these coagulopathies in covid- patients with important therapeutic implications (fogarty et al., ; poor et al., ) . immunological biomarkers are particularly important, as immunopathology has been suggested as a primary driver of morbidity and mortality with covid- . several cytokines and other immunologic parameters have been correlated with covid- severity (table ) . most notably, elevated il- levels were detected in hospitalized patients, especially critically ill patients, in several studies, and are associated with icu admission, respiratory failure, and poor prognosis (chen et al., f; huang et al., b; liu et al., f) . increased il- r, il- , il- , and gm-csf have been associated with disease severity as well, but studies are limited and further studies with larger cohorts of patients are needed to indicate predictive power zhou et al., b) . conflicting results regarding il- β and il- have been reported gong et al., ; wen et al., ) . although elevated cytokine concentrations have been widely described in covid- patients, the vast majority (including il- , il- , il- , ctack, ifn-γ) do not seem to have prognostic value, because they do not always differentiate moderate cases from severe cases (yang et al., b) . this stratification was possible with ip- , mcp- , and il- ra. while there are reports that levels of il- at first assessment might predict respiratory failure (herold et al., ) , other publications with longitudinal analyses demonstrated that il- increases fairly late during the disease's course, consequently compromising its prognostic value at earlier stages . liu et al. developed a web-based tool using k-means clustering to predict prognosis in terms of death or hospital discharge of covid- patients using age, comorbidities (binary), and baseline log helper t cell count (th), log suppressor t cell count (ts), and log th/ts ratio . total t cell, helper t cell, and suppressor t cell counts were significantly lower, and the th/ts ratio was significantly higher in patients who died from infection, as compared to patients who were discharged. importantly, most serological and immunological changes observed in severe cases are associated with disease severity, but can not necessarily serve as predictive factors, as they may not have utility in early identification of patients at higher risk. discovery of truly predictive biomarkers and potential drivers of hyper-inflammatory processes requires comprehensive profiling of asymptomatic and mild cases and longitudinal studies which are limited to date. confounding variables including age, gender, comorbidities may dramatically affect associations observed. in addition, direct correlation with patient viral load will be important to provide a greater understanding of underlying causes of morbidity and mortality in covid- and the contribution of viral infectivity, hyperinflammation and host tolerance (medzhitov et al., ) . in summary, lymphopenia, increases in proinflammatory markers and cytokines and potential blood hypercoagulability characterize severe covid- cases with features reminiscent of cytokine release syndromes. this correlates with a diverse clinical spectrum ranging from asymptomatic to severe and critical cases. during the incubation period and early phase of the disease, leukocyte and lymphocyte counts are normal or slightly reduced. after sars-cov- binds to ace overexpressing organs, such as the gastrointestinal tracts and kidneys, increases in non-specific inflammation markers are observed. in more severe cases, a marked systemic release of inflammatory mediators and cytokines occurs, with corresponding worsening of lymphopenia and potential atrophy of lymphoid organs, impairing lymphocyte turnover (terpos et al., ). antivirals are a class of small molecules that function as inhibitors of one or more stages of a virus life cycle. because of similarities between different virus replication mechanisms, some antivirals can be repurposed against various viral infections. currently, most of the available antiviral drugs tested against sars-cov- are smallmolecules previously developed against sars-cov- , mers-cov, or other rna and dna viruses. a number of small molecules with known antiviral activity against other human rna viruses are being evaluated for efficacy in treating sars-cov- . the ribonucleoside analog β-d-n -hydroxycytidine (nhc) reduced viral titers and lung injury in mice infected with sars-cov- via introduction of mutations in viral rna (sheahan et al., ) . further, an inhibitor of host dhodh, a rate-limiting enzyme in pyrimidine synthesis, was able to inhibit sars-cov- growth in vitro with greater efficacy than remdesivir or chloroquine xiong et al., ) . merimepodib, a non-competitive inhibitor of the enzyme inosine- ′-monophosphate dehydrogenase (impdh), involved in host guanosine biosynthesis, is able to suppress sars-cov- replication in vitro . finally, n-( -hydroxypropyl)- -trimethylammonium chitosan chloride (htcc), which was previously shown to efficiently reduce infection by the less pathogenic human coronavirus hcov-nl , was also found to inhibit mers-cov and pseudotyped sars-cov- in human airway epithelial cells (milewska et al., ) . much of the antiviral computational and experimental data currently available for sars-cov- focus on targeting the cl or main protease (mpro). two prominent drug candidates targeting the sars-cov- mpro were designed and synthesized, by analyzing the substrate binding pocket of mpro (dai et al., ) . the x-ray crystal structures of the novel inhibitors in complex with sars-cov- mpro were resolved at . Å. both compounds showed good pharmacokinetic activity in vitro, and one exhibited limited toxicity in vivo (dai et al., ) . multiple studies also aimed to repurpose protease inhibitors to reduce sars-cov- titers. nine existing hiv protease inhibitors (nelfinavir, lopinavir, ritonavir, saquinavir, atazanavir, tipranavir, amprenavir, darunavir, and indinavir) were evaluated for their antiviral activity in vero cells infected with sars-cov- (yamamoto et al., ) and nelfinavir was the most potent at inhibiting viral replication. the coronavirus rna-dependent rna polymerase (rdrp) catalyzes the synthesis of viral rna making it essential for viral replication and a prime target for antiviral inhibitors. remdesivir, an adenosine triphosphate analog, inhibits rdrp by binding to rna strands and preventing additional nucleotides from being added, thereby terminating viral rna transcription ( figure a ) (agostini et al., ) . remdesivir has been previously shown to be effective against mers-cov and sars-cov- infections in animal models (sheahan et al., ; de wit et al., ) . similarly, a study investigated the efficacy of remdesivir treatments on rhesus macaques with sars-cov- infections (williamson et al., ) . macaques treated with remdesivir showed a reduction in lung viral loads and pneumonia symptoms, but no reduction in virus shedding. this study does provide evidence that if administered early enough, remdesivir may be effective at treating sars-cov- infections. a large number of clinical trials using experimental antiviral drugs are currently underway. a small proportion of them are aimed at repurposing existing antivirals including: arbidol (umifenovir), a broad-spectrum antiviral that blocks viral fusion; lopinavir/ritonavir (lpv/r), a combination of anti-hiv protease inhibitors; favipiravir, an rdrp inhibitor used to treat severe influenza infections (hayden and shindo, ) ; and remdesivir ( figure a ). chen et al. conducted a multicenter, randomized priority trial on patients with confirmed covid- infection to test favipiravir or arbidol . favipiravir was suggested to significantly improve symptom relief. however, the interpretation of this study is limited by a short clinical recovery window of days, only of patients with confirmed covid- , and the lack of a control group. lpv/r has previously shown efficacy in treating sars-cov- (chu et al., ) , prompting an early sars-cov- clinical trial . patients were enrolled in a trial investigating the efficacy and safety of lpv/r (n= patients), arbidol (n= ), or control (n= ) as treatment for mild-to-moderate covid- . at day of treatment, . %, . % and . % of patients had a positive to negative conversion in the lpv/r, arbidol, and control groups, respectively, with no statistical significance between groups. a randomized controlled trial (rct) with severe covid- patients did not observe a significant benefit of lpv/r either (cao et al., a) . however, a study that looked at the impact of earlier administration of (lpv/r) treatment showed that when treatment of lpv/r was started within days of symptom onset, a shorter duration of virus shedding was observed. thus, timing of lpv/r administration may be critical to its efficacy . in a multicenter clinical study assessing the compassionate use of remdesivir in severe covid- patients, patients across several countries were treated with remdesivir for days (grein et al., ) . % of the patients who received remdesivir showed clinical improvement assessed through improved oxygen-support/extubations. without a proper control group, limited conclusions can be drawn with regards to the efficacy of remdesivir from this study. the measured % clinical improvement may be in line with average clinical improvement across patients treated with standard of care . a small rct in china with severe covid- patients randomized : to remdesivir vs. placebo demonstrated no significant benefit in time to clinical improvement . almost simultaneously, preliminary results from a larger niaid rct with more than patients were announced with remdesevir to be associated with quicker time to recovery: days compared with days (ledford, ) . a non-significant benefit in mortality was also noted and the trial was stopped early to allow access to remdesivir in the placebo arm. complete safety data and full publication are awaited but this study offers encouraging results and have resulted in an fda emergency use authorization for remdesivir in hospitalized covid- patients. chloroquine (cq) and its derivative hydroxychloroquine (hcq) have gained traction as possible therapeutics for covid- . both drugs are used as antimalarial agents and as immunomodulatory therapies for rheumatologic diseases. however, the application of cq and hcq to covid- stems for their past use as antivirals (savarino et al., ) , including for sars-cov- (keyaerts et al., ; vincent et al., ) . cq and hcq interfere with lysosomal activity and have been reported to have immuno-modulatory effects. cq augments antigen processing for mhc class i and ii presentation, directly inhibits endosomal tlr and tlr , and enhances the activity of regulatory t cells (garulli et al., ; lo et al., ; schrezenmeier and dörner, ; thomé et al., a thomé et al., , b . early studies involving in vitro infection of host cells with sars-cov- demonstrated that both cq and hcq significantly impact endosomal maturation, resulting in increased sequestration of virion particles within endolysosomes. however, there has been conflicting evidence whether cq is more potent than hcq in reducing viral load yao et al., a) . notably, one group reported that treatment of infected cells with hcq before and during infection significantly reduced viral load, suggesting that combined prophylactic and therapeutic hcq use yields maximum efficacy (clementi et al., ) . to better understand host immune responses to treatment, one group compared bulk transcriptomic changes in primary pbmcs treated with hcq for hours to pbmcs from confirmed sars-cov- positive patients and controls, followed by a comparison of hcq treated primary macrophages to bal and postmortem lung biopsies from covid- patients (corley et al., ) . across all comparisons, there was minimal overlap between host differential gene expression and genes altered by in vitro hcq treatment. thus, the potential mechanistic action of hcq in the context of sars-cov- remains poorly defined. despite the apparent widespread use of hcq and cq to treat covid- ( figure b ), few controlled clinical trials have been performed so far and thus the potential benefits of these drugs for covid- remains controversial. one of the earliest trials ( - - ) was a single-arm, open label trial of mg daily hcq in covid- patients. they reported that hcq alone, or in combination with the antibiotic azithromycin (az), reduced viral load by day (gautret et al., a) . a follow up trial in patients treated with hcq + az reported that % of patients had a negative pcr result on day of treatment, and . % were discharged within days of treatment. however, it is important to note that both trials had no control arms (gautret et al., b) . rigorous statistical analyses by others that accounted for the patients excluded from the original analysis found limited evidence for hcq monotherapy (hulme et al., ; lover, ) . a double blind rrct assessed hcq monotherapy in the treatment of mild covid- (chictr ) . a total of patients were enrolled; the treatment arm received mg hcq daily over days. by day , patients who received hcq had clinical resolution on average one day earlier than controls; no patients progressed to severe disease compared to patients in the control arm. in a smaller rct treated patients with mild covid- (nct ) with mg hcq for days, there were no significant differences in the number of patients with negative pcr results on day (all but one positive), median duration of hospitalization, time to fever resolution, or progression of disease on chest ct . the largest rct to date enrolled patients with mild covid- across centers in an open label trial of hcq + standard of care (chictr ). there were no significant differences between groups in conversion to negative sars-cov- rt-pcr result on day or rate of symptom resolution; there were significantly more adverse events in the hcq arm, though largely non-serious; they reported some evidence for faster normalization of c-reactive protein in the patients who received hcq plus standard of care, but this finding was not significant (tang et al., b) . a metaanalysis including most of the studies described here found no clinical benefits to patients receiving standard of care plus an hcq regimen (shamshirian et al., ) . two studies have assessed hcq efficacy in severe covid- . in a prospective study of patients who had received mg hcq over days with az on days - , there were several patients with worsening clinical status and one death; / patients had a positive pcr result on day ( molina et al., ) . an ongoing double blind rct of patients with severe covid- (nct ) randomized patients into high dose hcq ( mg x/d for days) or low dose ( mg/day for days) treatment groups (borba et al., ) . recruitment into the high dose arm was halted prematurely due to poor safety outcomes. there was no significant difference in negative pcr results on day or need for mechanical ventilation on day . taken together, the clinical trials performed thus far to evaluate the efficacy of hcq ± az for covid- have not demonstrated clear evidence of clinical benefit in patients with severe disease. a search of clinicaltrials.gov on april , found clinical trials investigating hcq. this number is rapidly growing, indicating the heightened interest in this therapeutic and pressing need for evidence-based recommendations. because of their anti-inflammatory activity, corticosteroids (cs) are an adjuvant therapy for ards and cytokine storm. however, the broad immunosuppression mediated by cs does raise the possibility that treatment could interfere with the development of a proper immune response against the virus. a meta-analysis of , patients with mers-cov, sars-cov- , or sars-cov- infection found that cs treatment was associated with higher mortality . a more recent meta-analysis of only sars-cov- infection assessed , patients and found no mortality difference associated with cs treatment, including in a subset of patients with ards (gangopadhyay et al., ) . other studies have reported associations with delayed viral clearance and increased complications in sars and mers patients (sanders et al., ) . in fact, the interim guidelines updated by the who on march , advise against giving systemic corticosteroids for covid- (world health organization, a) . yet, new data from covid- are conflicting. one group reported no significant difference in time to viral clearance between patients who received methylprednisolone orally (mild disease) or iv (severe) and those who did not . retrospective studies from groups in china report that patients who were transferred to the icu were less likely to have received cs and that patients with ards who received methylprednisolone had reduced mortality risk . in contrast, another retrospective analysis found that patients who received cs were more likely to have either been admitted to the icu or perished, although the cs treated group also had significantly more comorbidities . a smaller observational study of patients found no association between corticosteroid treatment and time to viral clearance, length of hospital stay, or symptom duration (zha et al., ) . a larger study of adjuvant cs in patients with critical covid- found no association with -day mortality; subgroup analysis of patients with ards found no association between treatment with cs and clinical outcomes . they also found that increased dosage was significantly associated with increased mortality risk. a retrospective review of patients, of whom received iv methylprednisolone, found that early, low-dose administration significantly improved spo and chest ct, time to fever resolution, and time on supplemental oxygen therapy (wang et al., h) . others have published perspectives in support of early and short-term, low dose administration based on anecdotal evidence, but not clinical trials. most of the current data on cs use in covid- are from observational studies, and support either modest clinical benefit or no meaningful effects. larger rcts are necessary to understand the risks and benefits of cs for these patients; there are trials evaluating various corticosteroids registered on clinicaltrials.gov as of april , . one of the first defenses of the human body against rna viruses like sars-cov- is the release of type i and iii ifns. it is important to note that type i ifn (ifnα/β) receptors are ubiquitously expressed, so ifnα/β signaling can result in not only antiviral effects, but also in the activation of immune cells that potentially exacerbate pathogenesis. in contrast, type iii ifn (also known as ifnλ) signals mainly in epithelial cells, as well as in a restricted pool of immune cells. because type iii ifns have immunomodulatory functions, subsequent signaling could induce a potent antiviral effect without enhancing pathogenic inflammation (andreakos et al., ; prokunina-olsson et al., ) . recently, there has been a growing interest in the potential therapeutic impact of modulating the ifn response to disable covid- pathogenesis. before the current pandemic, groups have studied the role of ifns in other betacoronavirus infections. one study of patients with sars-cov- infection described unresolved elevated type i ifns and ifn-stimulated genes (isgs) in those with poor outcomes (cameron et al., ) . others report that exogenous type i ifn does not improve outcomes when given with ribavirin in patients with mers-cov infection (arabi et al., ) , suggesting that the role of ifn as a therapeutic or prophylactic option may be strain-or species-specific (sheahan et al., ) . interestingly, a recent study by mount sinai virology groups revealed that type i ifn signaling is impaired in the early response to sars-cov- ; in vitro, sars-cov- may be more susceptible to type i ifn than sars-cov- (blanco-melo et al., ) . based on additional evidence that ifn responses to betacoronaviruses are altered as compared to other respiratory viruses (blanco-melo et al., ; channappanavar et al., ; okabayashi et al., ) , trials of ifn-i/iii administration have been initiated (nct , nct ). hyperinflammatory responses and elevated levels of inflammatory cytokines, including interleukins (il)- , , and , have been shown to correlate with covid- severity diao et al., ; gong et al., ; moore and june, ; wan et al., a; xu et al., b) . the drivers of this cytokine storm remain to be established, but they are likely triggered initially by a combination of viral pamps and host danger signals. the heterogeneous response between patients suggests other factors are involved, possibly including the sars-cov- receptor, ace (hirano and murakami, ) . several studies have begun to report the cellular programs that may contribute to the cytokine storm detected in covid- patients. one group reported that in the context of generalized lymphopenia, certain subsets of cd t cells that express gm-csf and il- are more abundant in severe covid- patients than in covid- patients who do not require intensive care . reports that other major proinflammatory cytokines (tnf-α, ifn-ɣ, il- ) and chemokines (ccl , ccl , ccl ) are elevated underscore a potentially pathogenic t h / program in covid- (diao et al., ; giamarellos-bourboulis et al., ) . histological and single-cell analyses identified monocytes/macrophages as other potent sources of inflammatory cytokines in covid- cytokine storm giamarellos-bourboulis et al., ; law et al., ; moore and june, ; zhou et al., b) . studies of other betacoronavirus infections, including sars-cov- and mers-cov, have also identified similar hyperactivation of monocytes, macrophages, and dendritic cells as a driver of cytokinemediated immunopathology in humans chien et al., ; huang et al., c; konig et al., ; wang et al., ; wong et al., ; xu et al., b; zhou et al., b) . following preliminary reports of il- as a critical cytokine in covid- -associated cytokine release syndrome (crs), monoclonal antibodies that target the il- signaling pathway have been proposed as therapeutic candidates (moore and june, ) ( figure c ). the commercial anti-il- r antibodies tocilizumab (actemra) and sarilumab (kevzara), and the anti-il- antibody siltuximab (sylvant), are now being tested for efficacy in managing covid- crs and pneumonia in ongoing clinical trials (table ). to date, only one group has reported preliminary results from a cohort of covid- patients treated with a single administration of tocilizumab ( mg, iv), along with lopinavir, methylprednisolone, and oxygen therapy (chictr ) . the single observation study found recuperated lymphocyte counts in / patients and resolution of lung opacities in / patients on chest ct; / patients were discharged. all patients experienced an improvement in symptoms, and no subsequent pulmonary infections were reported. a second report described an association between use of tocilizumab and reduced likelihood of icu admission and mechanical ventilation. still, in declining patients with severe covid- pneumonia, this retrospective study did not report significant improvement in mortality on weighted analysis (roumier et al., ) . nevertheless, these studies are encouraging but like other treatment approaches, larger rcts are needed. in addition to the il- signaling pathway, other cytokine-/chemokine-associated elements, including il- r, gm-csf and the chemokine receptor ccr , have been proposed as potential targets for blockade to manage covid- crs ( figure c ). finally, complement activation was shown to be over-activated in lungs of covid- patients. although results from the randomized trial are not yet published, anti-c a monoclonal antibody therapy showed benefits in two critically-ill covid- patients . while vaccines are being developed to educate a person's immune system to make their own nab against sars-cov- , there is interest in using adoptive transfer of nab as a therapeutic approach ( figure d ). this strategy has already proven to be effective against sars-cov- (cao et al., ; ho et al., ; ter meulen et al., ; sui et al., ; zhu et al., ) and mers-cov (forni et al., ; jia et al., ; ying et al., ) . in the case of sars-cov- , these efforts are primarily centered on identifying nab made during natural infections or generating nab through animal vaccination approaches. patients who have recovered from sars-cov- infection are one potential source of nabs (ju et al., ; walls et al., ; wölfel et al., ; ye et al., ; yuan et al., ) . in an effort to obtain these nabs, scientists sorted rbd specific memory b cells and cloned their heavy and light variable region to express recombinant forms of the corresponding antibodies (ju et al., ; ye et al., ) . four of the antibodies produced in these studies ( b , d , p c- f p c- f ) showed high neutralizing potential in vitro, and all inhibited ace /rbd binding. successful antibody-mediated neutralization of sars-cov- seems to be dependent on the inhibition of ace /rbd binding. however, ye et al. showed that nearly all antibodies derived from serum of recovered patients bound to s and rbd, with only actually inhibiting ace /rbd binding . of note, a sars-cov- derived neutralizing antibody ( d ) and a single chain antibody against sars-cov- (n ) have also been shown to neutralize sars-cov- without inhibiting ace /rbd binding. thus, blocking this interaction may not be a prerequisite for an effective sars-cov- nab. the generation of a hybridoma producing a monoclonal nab against sars-cov- provides the potential for a therapeutic ab that can be directly administered to patients to block ongoing infection and potentially even as a prophylactic ( figure d ). sars-cov- and sars-cov- consensus sequences share about % identity (tai et al., ) . thus, a wide range of sars-cov- nabs have been tested for crossreactivity with sars-cov- , as they could help speed up the development of potential covid- treatments. in a recent study, antibodies were isolated from the memory b cells of an individual who recovered from sars-cov- infection. while out of isolated antibodies could bind sars-cov- s protein, one of them (s , see table ) also neutralizes sars-cov- (pinto et al., ) . the combination of s with a weakly neutralizing antibody that could bind another rbd epitope led to enhanced neutralization potency. in addition, cr (table ) was found to bind sars-cov- rbd , but this antibody did not neutralize sars-cov- . computational simulations identified amino-acids that could be modified on cr to enhance its binding affinity with sars-cov- rbd (corrêa giron et al., ) , potentially augmenting its neutralization potential. animal models represent another tool to generate nabs against sars-cov- (table ) . in one study, the authors developed a protocol to synthetize human nanobodies, smaller antibodies that only contain a heavy variable (vh) chain as first described in camelids (figure d ). another antibody isolated from camelids immunized with sars-cov- and mers-cov s proteins then fused to a human fc fragment showed neutralization potential against sars-cov- (vhh- -fc) (wrapp et al., ) . genetically modified mice with humanized antibody genes can also be used to generate therapeutic monoclonal antibodies, as successfully experimented against ebola virus (levine, ) . similar studies are now focused on the use of sars-cov- or derivatives to generate highly effective nab in animal models, which can be directly given to infected patients, and efforts are already underway with estimates of clinical trials of pooled antibody cocktails beginning in early summer by regeneron. finally, another approach to nab development is to fuse ace protein and the fc part of antibodies as they would bind rbd and potentially be cross reactive among other coronaviruses ( figure d ). indeed, an ace -fc as well as an rbd-fc have been shown to neutralize both sars-cov- and sars-cov- in vitro. although recombinant nabs could provide an effective treatment, they will require a significant time investment to develop, test, and bring production to scale before becoming widely available to patients. a faster strategy consists of transferring convalescent plasma (cp) from previously infected individuals that have developed high titer nabs that target sars-cov- ( figure d ). despite the current lack of appropriately controlled trials, cp therapy has been previously used and shown to be beneficial in several infectious diseases such as the influenza pandemic (luke et al., ) , h n influenza (hung et al., ) , and sars-cov- (arabi et al., ) . thanks to the development of serological tests (amanat et al., ; cai et al., ; xiang et al., b; zhang et al., d) , recovered covid- patients can be screened to select plasma with high antibody titers. some studies and case reports on cp therapy for covid- have evaluated the safety and the potential effectiveness of cp therapy in patients with severe disease (ahn et al., ; duan et al., ; pei et al., ; shen et al., ; zhang et al., b) (table ). these studies were neither controlled nor randomized, but they suggest that cp therapy is safe and can have a beneficial effect on the clinical course of disease. further controlled trials are needed to determine the optimal timing and indication for cp therapy. cp therapy has also been proposed for prophylactic use in at-risk individuals, such as those with underlying health conditions or health care workers exposed to covid- patients. the fda has approved the use of cp to treat critically ill patients (tanne, ) . determining when to administer the cp is also of great importance, as a study in sars-cov- patients showed that cp was much more efficient when given to patients before day day of illness (cheng et al., b) , as previously shown in influenza (luke et al., ) . this study also showed that cp therapy was more efficient in pcr positive, seronegative patients. the amount of plasma and number of transfusions needed requires further investigation (table ) . overall, cp therapy seems to be associated with improved outcomes, and appears to be safe, but randomized clinical trials are needed to confirm this. several clinical trials are currently in progress worldwide (belhadi et al., ) the devastating effects of the pandemic spread of sars-cov- in a globally naïve population has resulted in unprecedented efforts to rapidly develop, test, and disseminate a vaccine to protect against covid- or to mitigate the effects of sars-cov- infection. although vaccination has a long and successful history as an effective global health strategy, there are currently no approved vaccines to protect humans against coronaviruses (andré, ) . previous work after the sars-cov- and mers-cov epidemics has provided a foundation on which many current efforts are currently building upon, including the importance of the s protein as a potential vaccine. diverse vaccine platforms and preclinical animal models have been adapted to sars-cov- , facilitating fast-moving and robust progress in creating and testing sars-cov- vaccine candidates. a number of vaccine candidates are already being tested in clinical trials and more are continuing to progress towards clinical testing. since sars-cov- first emerged, the s protein has been favored as the most promising target for vaccine development to protect against coronavirus infection. this particular viral protein has important roles in viral entry and in stimulating the immune response during natural infection and in vaccination studies of both sars-cov- and mers-cov (du et al., ; song et al., ; zhou et al., ) , which has also been confirmed for sars-cov- . the s protein has been found to induce robust and protective humoral and cellular immunity, including the development of nabs and t cell-mediated immunity (du et al., ) . in animal models, correlates of protection against sars-cov- infection appear to be induction of nabs against the s protein, although antibodies to other proteins have been detected such as those against nucleoprotein (n) and orf a (qiu et al., ; sui et al., ) . nabs are also believed to protect against infection by blocking receptor binding and viral entry, which has been shown with pseudovirus-based neutralization assays nie et al., a) . studies of sars-cov- indicate that t cell responses, which were targeted to the s protein after natural infection, included cd + t cell responses against the membrane (m) and n proteins, may also be a correlate of protection and that memory t cell responses can persist even years after infection (li et al., ; ng et al., ) . rbd-specific antiviral t cell responses have also been detected in people who have recovered from covid- , further validating its promise as a vaccine target (braun et al., ; dong et al., ) . although the antibodies targeting the rbd of the s protein have greater potential for providing cross-protective immunity, other fragments of the s protein and additional viral proteins have been investigated as target epitopes, especially for t cells. researchers have taken advantage of the genetic similarity between sars-cov- and sars-cov- and mers-cov and bioinformatics approaches to rapidly identify b and t cell potential epitopes in the s and other proteins, with many studies providing data regarding antigen presentation and antibody binding properties and one study looking into the predicted evolution of epitopes (ahmed et al., ; baruah and bose, ; bhattacharya et al., ; fast et al., ; grifoni et al., ; lon et al., ; zheng and song, ) . while the s protein has been found to be the most immunodominant protein in sars-cov- , the m and n proteins also contain b and t cell epitopes, including some with high conservation with sars-cov- epitopes . for sars-cov- and mers-cov, animal studies and phase i clinical trials of potential vaccines targeting the s protein had encouraging results, with evidence of nab induction and induction of cellular immunity martin et al., ; modjarrad et al., ) . these findings are being translated into sars-cov- vaccine development efforts, hastening the progress drastically. the who provided a report earlier in april that reported sixty-three vaccine candidates in preclinical testing and three in clinical testing (world health organization, b) . a recent search on may , , on clinicaltrials.gov revealed ten registered vaccine candidates (table ). the university of pittsburgh is also looking to move their microneedle array vaccine candidate containing a codon-optimized s subunit protein into clinical trials . sanofi and glaxosmithkline (gsk) have recently reported their intent to collaborate and bring together sanofi's baculovirus expression system, which is used to produce the influenza virus vaccine, flublok, to create an s protein vaccine adjuvanted with gsk's as . the purified inactivated sars-cov- virus vaccine candidate (picovacc) of sinovac biotech ltd. will also be starting a clinical trial in china after finding that their candidate protected rhesus macaques from viral challenge without signs of detectable immunopathology . although some of these vaccine candidates are based on platforms that have been used or tested for other purposes, there remain questions regarding their safety and immunogenicity, including the longevity of any induced responses, that will require continual evaluation. although the development of a vaccine to protect against sars-cov- infection has progressed at an unprecedented rate and produced an impressive volume of candidates for testing, many challenges lie ahead. the prior knowledge gained after sars-cov- was first discovered in and the subsequent emergence of mers-cov in provided a significant jumpstart, but the progress of sars-cov- vaccine development has already far outstripped the point of the blueprint created before covid- became a pandemic. while a variety of platforms are simultaneously being innovated or adapted, they each have strengths and limitations, many of which relate to the delicate balance between safety and immunogenicity. many shortcuts have been taken and will continue to be taken due to the urgency of the ongoing covid- pandemic, but significant concerns need to be addressed. one such concern involves the accumulating data supporting the initial assessment that covid- is disproportionately severe in older adults. in conjunction with the large body of work related to immune-senescence, these findings indicate that vaccine design should take into consideration the impact of aging on vaccine efficacy (nikolich-Žugich, ). furthermore, questions remain regarding the possibility of antibody-dependent enhancement of covid- , with in vitro experiments, animal studies, and two studies of covid- patients supporting this possibility (cao, ; tetro, ; zhao et al., a) . assuming vaccine candidates are identified that can safely induce protective immune responses, additional major hurdles will be the production and dissemination of a vaccine. for some types of vaccines, large-scale production will not be as much of an issue and infrastructure already in place to produce current good manufacturing practice (cgmp)-quality biologics can be repurposed, but this will only be applicable to a subset of the candidates (thanh le et al., ) . in order to address the urgent need and stem the covid- pandemic, regulatory agencies need to continue to support rapid testing and progression of vaccine candidates, companies need to disseminate important findings directly and openly, and researchers need to investigate correlates of protection using in-depth immune monitoring of patients with a broad range of clinical presentations and clinical trial participants. the newly announced accelerating covid- therapeutic interventions and vaccines (activ) is designed to bring together numerous governmental and industry entities to help address this need. the rapid spread of sars-cov- and the unprecedented nature of covid- has demanded an urgency in both basic science and clinical research, and the scientific community has met that call with remarkable productivity. within months, there has been a significant generation of scientific knowledge that has shed some light on the immunology of sars-cov- infections. studies of past coronavirus outbreaks, involving sars-cov- and mers-cov, have provided a foundation for our understanding. the pathology of severe cases of covid- do indeed resemble certain immunopathologies seen in sars-cov- and mers-cov infections, like crs. however, in many other ways, immune responses to sars-cov- are distinct from those seen with other coronavirus infections. the emerging epidemiological observation that significant proportions of individuals are asymptomatic despite infection, not only reflects our current understanding that sars-cov- has a longer incubation period and higher rate of transmission than other coronaviruses, but also speaks to significant differences in the host immune response. therefore, it is imperative that immune responses against sars-cov- and mechanisms of hyperinflammation-driven pathology are further elucidated to better define therapeutic strategies for covid- . here, we reviewed the recent literature and highlighted hypotheses that interrogate mechanisms for viral escape from innate sensing; for hyper-inflammation associated with crs and inflammatory myeloid subpopulations; for lymphopenia marked by t cell and nk cell dysfunction; and for correlates of protection and their duration, among others. still, additional studies are needed to address how these immune differences across patients or between different types of coronavirus infections dictate who succumbs to disease and who remains asymptomatic. existing studies of sars-cov- and mers-cov and ongoing studies of sars-cov- will likely provide a robust framework to fulfill that unmet need. overview of innate immune sensing (left) and interferon signaling (right), annotated with the known mechanisms by which sars-cov- and mers-cov antagonize the pathways (red). [based on data from preliminary covid- studies and earlier studies in related coronaviruses] il- , il- β and ifn-i/iii from infected pulmonary epithelia can induce inflammatory programs in resident (alternate) macrophages while recruiting inflammatory monocytes as well as granulocytes and lymphocytes from circulation. sustained il- , and tnf-ɑ by incoming monocytes can drive several hyperinflammation cascades. inflammatory monocyte-derived macrophages can amplify dysfunctional responses in various ways (listed in top left corner) . the systemic crs-and shlh-like inflammatory response can induce neutrophilic netosis and microthrombosis, aggravating covid- severity. other myeloid cells such as pdcs are purported to have an ifn-dependent role in viral control. monocyte-derived cxcl / / might recruit nk cells from blood. preliminary data suggest that the antiviral function of these nk cells might be regulated through cross-talk with sars-infected cells and inflammatory monocytes. a decrease in peripheral blood t cells associated with disease severity and inflammation is now well documented in covid- . several studies report increased numbers of activated cd and cd t cells which display a trend towards an exhausted phenotype in persistent covid- , based on continuous and upregulated expression of inhibitory markers as well as potential reduced polyfunctionality and cytotoxicity. in severe disease, production of specific inflammatory cytokines by cd t cells has also been reported. this working model needs to be confirmed and expanded on in future studies to assess virus-specific t cell responses both in peripheral blood and in tissues. in addition, larger and more defined patient cohorts with longitudinal data are required to define the relationship between disease severity and t cell phenotype. abbreviations: il, interleukin; ifn, interferon; tnf, tumor necrosis factor; gm-csf, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor; gzma/b, granzyme a/granzyme b; prf , perforin. virus-specific igm and igg are detectable in serum between and days after the onset of symptoms. viral rna is inversely correlated with neutralizing antibody titers. higher titers have been observed in critically ill patients, but it is unknown whether antibody responses somehow contribute to pulmonary pathology. the sars-cov- humoral response is relatively short lived, and memory b cells may disappear altogether, suggesting that immunity with sars-cov- may wane - years after primary infection. the gastrointestinal tract, kidneys and testis have the highest ace expressions. in some organs, different cell types have remarkably distinct expressions, e.g. in the lungs, alveolar epithelial cells have higher ace expression levels than bronchial epithelial cells; in the liver, ace is not expressed in hepatocytes, kupffer cells nor endothelial cells, but is detected in cholangiocytes, which can explain liver injury to some extent. furthermore, ace expression is enriched on enterocytes of the small intestine compared to the colon. ace , angiotensin-converting enzyme ; bnp, b-type natriuretic peptide; crp, creactive protein; il, interleukin; n/l, neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio; pt, prothrombin time; aptt, activated partial thromboplastin time. a. rdrp inhibitors (remdesivir, favipiravir), protease inhibitors (lopinavir/ritonavir), and anti-fusion inhibitors (arbidol) are currently being investigated in their efficacy in controlling sars-cov- infections. b. cq and hcq increase the ph within lysosomes, impairing viral transit through the endolysosomal pathway. reduced proteolytic function within lysosomes augments antigen processing for presentation on mhc complexes and increases ctla expression on tregs. c. antagonism of il- signaling pathway and of other cytokine-/chemokine-associated targets has been proposed to control covid- crs. these include secreted factors like gm-csf that contribute to the recruitment of inflammatory monocytes and macrophages. d. several potential sources of sars-cov- neutralizing antibodies are currently under investigation, including monoclonal antibodies, polyclonal antibodies, and convalescent plasma from recovered covid- patients. abbreviations: gm-csf, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor; cq, chloroquine; hcq, hydroxychloroquine; rdrp, rna-dependent rna polymerase. tai, w., he, l., zhang, x., pu, j., voronin, d., jiang, s., zhou, y., and du, l. 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immunogenicity of a recombinant adenovirus type- vector-based ebola vaccine in healthy adults in sierra leone: a single-centre, randomised, double-blind potent cross-reactive neutralization of sars coronavirus isolates by human monoclonal antibodies sars-cov- receptor ace is an interferon-stimulated gene in human airway epithelial cells and is enriched in specific cell subsets across tissues testing the association between blood type and covid- infection, intubation, and death. medrxiv. lymphocyte count predicted the disease severity and the outcomes of hospitalized patients prognostic value was confirmed in numerous studies decreased continuously in non-surviving patients were reported to be more likely to develop severe illness and to require intensive care unit (icu) admission on admission a risk factor for short-term progression of patients with moderate pneumonia to severe pneumonia confirmed to be of prognostic value in covid- in several studies even in early stages, crp levels were positively correlated with lung lesions and reflected disease severity confirmed in numerous studies predicted the risk of acute myocardial injury ldh (lactate dehydrogenase) higher in severe cases than in mild cases we apologize to all authors whose work we could not cite due to space limitations. trainee (phd and md/phd or postdocs) and faculty contributing authors are listed in alphabetical order. illustrations by jill k gregory and used with permission of ©mount sinai health system. we would like to acknowledge funding sources including fastgrant (mm), nci cancer center support grant supplement (mm, rms) burroughs wellcome fund (rms), nih director's early independence award (rms) and nih r ai (nv, nb, bdg) purpose ro uti ne bl oo dw or k predicted severity independently of other variables . elevated levels and disseminated intravascular coagulation are found in non-survivors . identified patients at risk for acute cardiac injury . other coagulation parameters such as fibrin degradation product levels, longer prothrombin time and activated partial thromboplastin time, were also associated with poor prognosis (tang et al., a) . saa (serum amyloid protein) saa was proposed to be used as an auxiliary index for diagnosis as it was elevated in % of the patients in a small cohort . nt-probnp (n terminal pro b type natriuretic peptide) nt-probnp was an independent risk factor of in-hospital death in patients with severe covid- . high platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio is associated with worse outcome (qu et al., ) . thrombocytopenia is associated with poor outcome and with incidence of myocardial injury in covid- (liu et al., h; shi et al., ) . im mu nol ogi cal cd +, cd + and nk cell counts lower cd +, cd + and nk cells in pbmc correlated with severity of covid- (nie et al., b) . validated by several studies zheng et al., b) . pd- and tim- expression on t cells increasing pd- and tim- expression on t cells could be detected as patients progressed from prodromal to overtly symptomatic stages (diao et al., ) .expression was higher in infected patients versus healthy controls and in icu versus non-icu patients in both cd and cd t cells . phenotypic changes in peripheral blood monocytes the presence of a distinct population of monocytes with high forward scatter (cd b+, cd +, cd +, cd +, cd +, cd +, cd + which secrete il- , il- and tnf-alpha) was identified in patients requiring prolonged hospitalization and icu admission . cd +cd +il- + monocytes are increased in icu patients . ip- , mcp- , and il- ra ip- , mcp- , and il- ra were, among examined cytokines, the only ones that closely associated with disease severity and outcome of covid- in a study by yang et al. (yang et al., b) . associated with disease severity (hospitalization and icu admission) and poor prognosis (chen et al., f; huang et al., b; liu et al., b . increase levels were associated with higher risk of respiratory failure (yao et al., b) . il- positively correlated with disease severity (chen et al., d; gong et al., ) , with severe cases showing the highest il- levels. increased in severe or critical patients as compared to mild patients zhou et al., d ) without a statistically significant difference between severe and critical cases . associated with disease severity in a study that, amongst other cytokines, also associated ferroprotein levels, pct levels, and eosinophil counts with covid- severity . il- β cd +il- β+ monocytes are abundant in early recovery patients as shown in a single-cell rna-seq analysis and thought to be associated with cytokine storm . il- β did not correlate with disease severity in a cross-sectional study with mild, severe and critical patients . il- il- was associated with impaired lung lesions , but some reports point to a potential mediator effect . in modeling immune cell interaction between dc and b cells in late recovery covid- patients, il- was found to be important in b cell production of antibodies, which suggests its importance in recovery . gm-csf (granulocytemacrophage colony-stimulating factor) gm-csf+ifn-γ+ t cells are higher in icu than non-icu patients, cd +cd +gm-csf+ monocytes are higher in covid- patients as compared to healthy controls .il- and ifn-γ il- and ifn-γ levels were shown to be increased in severe cases . anti-sars-cov- antibody levels prolonged sars-cov- igm positivity could be utilized as a predictive factor for poor recovery . higher anti-sars-cov- igg levels and higher n/l were more commonly found in severe cases . between and days after hospital admission.-body temperature normalized within days in of patients -clinical improvement -viral loads became negative within d after the transfusion -neutralizing antibody titers increased severe patients ( - yo)median . dpo.-disappearance of clinical symptoms after d -chest ct improved -elevation of lymphocyte counts in patients with lymphocytopenia.-increase in sao in all patients -resolution of sars-cov- viremia in patients increase in neutralizing antibody titers in patients (ahn et al., ) key: cord- -xo ruswo authors: new, r.r.c.; moore, b.d.; butcher, w.; mahood, r.; lever, m.s.; smither, s.; o'brien, l.; weller, s.a.; bayliss, m.; gibson, l.c.d.; macleod, c.; bogus, m.; harvey, r.; almond, n.; williamson, e.d. title: antibody-mediated protection against mers-cov in the murine model() date: - - journal: vaccine doi: . /j.vaccine. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: xo ruswo murine antisera with neutralising activity for the coronavirus causative of middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) were induced by immunisation of balb/c mice with the receptor binding domain (rbd) of the viral spike protein. the murine antisera induced were fully-neutralising in vitro for two separate clinical strains of the mers coronavirus (mers-cov). to test the neutralising capacity of these antisera in vivo, susceptibility to mers-cov was induced in naive recipient balb/c mice by the administration of an adenovirus vector expressing the human dpp receptor (ad -hdpp ) for mers-cov, prior to the passive transfer of the rbd-specific murine antisera to the transduced mice. subsequent challenge of the recipient transduced mice by the intra-nasal route with a clinical isolate of the mers-cov resulted in a significantly reduced viral load in their lungs, compared with transduced mice receiving a negative control antibody. the murine antisera used were derived from mice which had been primed sub-cutaneously with a recombinant fusion of rbd with a human igg fc tag (rbd-fc), adsorbed to calcium phosphate microcrystals and then boosted by the oral route with the same fusion protein in reverse micelles. the data gained indicate that this dual-route vaccination with novel formulations of the rbd-fc, induced systemic and mucosal anti-viral immunity with demonstrated in vitro and in vivo neutralisation capacity for clinical strains of mers-cov. the middle east respiratory disease syndrome (mers) first emerged in in saudi arabia [ , ] . since then, there have been an estimated laboratory-confirmed cases with deaths, reported from a total of countries in the eastern mediterranean region and from countries elsewhere [ ] . saudi arabia, however, remains the main focus of infection and a disease outbreak in south korea involving cases was traced back to an index case who had travelled from saudi arabia. whilst the incidence of mers cases in saudi arabia peaked in , there are still a significant number of cases reported from the country and in the period september -may , there were cases including deaths with a case fatality rate of . % [ ] . mers coronavirus (mers-cov) is a member of the betacoronavirus genus [ ] and as for other betacoronaviruses, bats may provide a natural reservoir for the virus [ , ] , but high levels of antibodies to mers-cov in dromedary camels [ ] suggest that the dromedary camel is the principal source for animal-to-human transmission of mers-cov [ ] . however, evidence of human-to-human transmission comes from the reporting of outbreaks in countries remote from saudi arabia such as the uk, europe, usa, and china where small outbreaks have also occurred [ ] . mers-cov is an enveloped, positive-sense, single-stranded rna virus [ ] . the virus possesses an envelope-anchored trimeric spike protein which binds to the human receptor dipeptidyl peptidase (dpp or cd ) and gains host cell entry by the fusion of viral and host membranes [ ] . the spike protein comprises an s sub-unit and a membrane fusion s sub-unit. in the coronaviruses, the s sub-units are further divided into n-terminal and c-terminal subdomains and for mers-cov, it is the c-terminal sub-domain that comprises the receptor-binding domain (rbd) [ ] . the rbd also incorporates a receptor-binding motif at its c-terminal and the crystal structures of mers-cov rbd [ ] and of the rbd bound to the extracellular domain of human dpp have been reported [ ] . the rbds of the coronaviruses represent vaccine and therapeutic targets and the rbd of mers-cov as a vaccine antigen has been demonstrated to induce neutralising antibody [ ] and to protect mice transduced with a viral vector expressing hdpp , or nonhuman primates from viral challenge [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . there are significant ongoing efforts to develop vaccines for mers-cov infection, predominantly involving live attenuated viral vectors such as adenovirus, modified vaccinia ankara or measles [ ] to induce anti-viral immunity and some of these vaccines are already in clinical trials. here, we were interested to determine the relative importance of inducing systemic and/or mucosal immunity in vaccination to protect against mers-cov, an infection predominantly of the respiratory tract and lungs. to this end, we have used a dual route immunisation regimen in balb/c mice to induce both systemic and mucosal immunity, to generate rbd-specific murine antisera. initially, we immunised balb/c mice sub-cutaneously (s.c.) with rbd-fc in the mf adjuvant to induce rbd-specific igg. subsequently, we have immunised further groups of balb/c mice by s.c. priming and per oral (p.o.) boosting with the rbd-fc, to induce both systemic igg and mucosal iga responses. to do this, we have used novel formulations of rbd-fc coated onto microcrystals formed from histidine or glutamine and also incorporating calcium phosphate for sub-cutaneous priming [ ] , whilst the formulation for oral boosting comprised rbd-fc in reverse micelles dispersed in a self-emulsifying oil phase, which has been optimised from previous formulations [ , ] . the advantages of these formulations are that they are very stable under extremes of temperature [ ] . furthermore, on translation to the clinic, only one injected priming dose would be required, followed by a p.o. booster dose; the latter could be self-administered in capsule form. we have compared the relative abilities of the two sources of antiserum to neutralise clinical isolates of mers-cov in vitro. to do this, we have used two clinical strains of mers-cov (erasmus medical center or emc and london - :), each of which were derived from severely-ill individuals who had contracted the virus in the middle east in . subsequent sequencing of the polymerase gene from these isolates indicated them to be newly-emerged members of the betacoronavirus genus with a close sequence homology and phylogenetic relationship to the bat coronaviruses hku and hku- [ , ] . mice are not naturally susceptible to mers-cov infection, but susceptibility can be induced by the administration of an adenovirus vector which induces expression of the human receptor (hdpp /cd ) for the virus in vivo for a limited time, providing a non-lethal murine model of the disease [ ] . we have used this transduced mouse model to test the capacity of the antiserum derived from the dual route immunisation to neutralise mers-cov in vivo, by passive transfer prior to challenge with the emc strain and we have demonstrated a significant reduction in viral load in lung tissue in transduced mice. the rbd was synthesised and expressed according to methods adapted from du et al. [ ] . in brief, a single dna fragment containing an in-frame fusion of the coding sequences for the human il signal peptide, the rbd and human igg -fc was synthesised. this was transferred into the plasmid pef-dest (invitrogen) so that the target sequence was expressed as a secreted protein with a c-terminal human igg fc tag. this construct was transfected by cationic transfection into human embryo kidney (hek) cells in suspension (fshek) or adherent hek cells stably expressing the sv large t antigen ( ft), using serum-free media and incubated for - days. small scale purifications of rbd-fc were performed using protein a chromatography. for this, medium from the transfected cells was treated with ammonium sulphate to precipitate the protein, prior to dialysis and resuspension in buffers for binding to protein a beads. the latter were washed and eluted with buffer containing m urea. protein concentration was determined by uv absorbance spectroscopy and purity was estimated by sds-page with coomassie staining and subsequent optical densitometry using a syngene g:box imaging system. the rbd-fc was incorporated on glutamine calcium phosphate (cap) microcrystals for s.c. immunisation, using methodology adapted from [ ] . briefly, aqueous mixtures of rbd-fc with sodium orthophosphate and glutamine were precipitated as cap protein-coated microcrystals (cap-pcmc), by addition to of a fold excess of isopropanol containing dissolved calcium chloride. the resultant suspension contained self-assembled microcrystals comprising a glutamine core with the rbd-fc protein embedded in a thin surface layer of cap (now termed rbd-fc-pcmc). the pcmc were isolated by vacuum filtration and dried to a powder. protein content and integrity was determined by elisa and sds-page. for oral dosing, the rbd-fc was incorporated in mineral oil with added excipients using methodology adapted from [ , ] . the oral formulation comprised rbd-fc with the mucosal adjuvant cholera toxin b sub-unit (ctb), retinoic acid (ra), vitamin d, e and trehalose debehenate (tdb), a synthetic analog of the mycobacterial trehalose dimycolate [ ] and imiquimod, a tlr / agonist [ ] . specific pathogen-free female balb/c mice ( - weeks of age) were obtained from a commercial breeder and used throughout this study. on receipt, mice were randomised for allocation to cages and given free access to food, water and environmental enrichment. mice were fully acclimatised to the animal housing facility for at least five days prior to any procedure. all animal procedures were performed in accordance with uk legislation as stated in the uk animal (scientific procedures) act . the institutional animal care and use committee approved the relevant project licence. naïve mice were randomised for allocation to a treatment group (typically per group) and immunised in one of two regimens: either with a s.c. priming dose followed by two s.c. doses, given at and days after the prime; alternatively, mice received a s.c. priming dose followed by an oral or s.c. booster dose days after the prime (table ) . for s.c. immunisation, mice received . lg of rbd-fc-pcmc in . ml pbs injection volume, whereas for all per oral (p.o.) dosing, mice received lg of rbd-fc in a total volume of . ml mineral oil (mo), by oral gavage. where rbd-fc was administered s.c. in the conventional adjuvants mf or alhydrogel, mf (novartis, us) was used in a : ratio by volume with rbd-fc in pbs, whilst alhydrogel (brenntag biosector, denmark) was used in a : ratio with rbd-fc by volume in pbs. at selected intervals after dosing, mice were blood-sampled from the tail vein for assay of specific antibody titre. at the end of the immunisation schedule, individual mice were terminally anaesthetised for collection of blood by cardiac puncture, then culled prior to removal of small and large intestines for collection of faecal pellets for extraction of iga. titres of rbd-fc-specific antibody in serum samples were determined by elisa. in brief, test sera were bound to microtitre plates pre-coated with rbd-fc and antibody binding was detected with an hrpo-labelled secondary antibody to mouse igg, igg , igg a or iga (bio-rad). a standard curve for calibration comprising the relevant murine ig isotype (sigma) captured with an anti-fab reagent, was included on each plate. plates were developed by the addition of , -azino-bis( -ethylbenzothiazoline- -sulfonic acid) diammonium salt (abts) substrate (sigma) and optical density (od) was read at nm (multiskan plate reader). for assay of antibody in faecal samples, faecal pellets were extracted in supplemented pbs as described previously [ ] . in brief, ml of cold pbs was prepared, supplemented with tablet of complete mini protease inhibitor cocktail (sigma) and ll tween were added. to . g faecal pellets, ml of supplemented pbs was added and left at room temperature for min. samples were vortexed for approximately s, incubated on ice for a further min. and then centrifuged ( , g, min.). supernatants were retained and stored at À °c pending assay. the faecal extracts were assayed for specific igg and iga content, by elisa, as for serum samples. antibody concentrations in all samples were determined from the relevant standard curves using ascent software with fourparameter logistic curve-fitting and reported in ng/ml or lg/ml serum or faecal extract, as appropriate. to determine if the antibody induced by immunisation with to rbd-fc was neutralising for mers-cov in vitro, plaque assays were performed. for this, two strains of mers-cov were used: london - (genbank accession number kc . ) [ ] and erasmus medical center (emc genbank accession number jx ) ( ) . the london - strain was obtained from the national collection of pathogen viruses, phe porton, salisbury, uk and the emc strain was kindly provided by the erasmus university medical center rotterdam, the netherlands. both strains were prepared in serum-free media (gibco) at a multiplicity of infection (moi) of . , equivalent to plaque-forming units (pfu). the murine antiserum for testing was prepared at a dilution range from undiluted to : in pbs. virus was incubated overnight ( °c) with murine antiserum, negative control antibody (nibsc, uk) or media, prior to infection of a confluent monolayer of vero e cells (ecacc, salisbury uk) with ll of the mixture. the neutralising ability of the murine antiserum was tested in duplicate or triplicate at each dilution. after incubation ( h, °c), an overlay comprising a : dilution of carboxymethyl cellulose with serum-free media was added to the cells and incubation continued for a further days ( °c) prior to fixing ( . % formaldehyde) and staining ( . % crystal violet) with enumeration of the number of plaques per ml. mice are not naturally susceptible to infection with mers-cov, since they lack the human dpp receptor. to induce transient susceptibility in balb/c mice, we used an ad construct (oxford genetics) to express the human dpp receptor (ad hdpp ), as previously described ( ) . mice were administered the ad hdpp construct ( .  pfu in ll) by the intra-nasal (i.n.) route under light sedation with inhalational isofluorane and then monitored by serial blood sampling for serum levels of hdpp /cd by elisa (thermoscientific). at peak levels of expression of hdpp (days - ), mice were lightly sedated as before and challenged by the i.n. route with mers-cov (emc strain) at pfu in ll per mouse. mice were weighed prior to challenge on each subsequent day to monitor changes in body weight during infection. to test the in vivo neutralising capacity of murine antiserum raised to the rbd-fc construct, naïve mice (n = per treatment group) were passively immunised by the i.p. route at h. prior to i.n. challenge with the mers co-v (emc strain), as described above. the murine antiserum, pooled from mice who had been primed with rbd-fc pcmc and boosted orally (regimen , treatment group ), was delivered at a dilution of : in pbs and delivered in a total volume of ll per mouse. a further group of mice received a purified polyclonal human igg at a single dose level ( lg/mouse in ll i.p.), which had been raised to inactivated mers-cov. control mice received a non-specific human igg at a single dose-level ( lg/mouse in ll, i.p.). both sets of human igg (specific and non-specific) were raised in a bovine transchromosomal model and purified prior to use. a further group of negative control mice were included, which received pbs in place of either the ad dpp construct or the mers-cov-specific antibody, and were also challenged i.n. with mers-cov (emc strain) at pfu/mouse. to determine the protection afforded by the passive immunisation, pairs of mice from each treatment group were culled on days - after challenge and their lungs were removed and weighed and then rapidly frozen (À °c) prior to the determination of viral load. pairs of lungs from each of mice per treatment group were individually thawed and homogenised in serum-free media ( ml). rna was extracted from ll of each homogenate using the qiaamp viral rna kit (qiagen), following the manufacturers' instructions. real-time pcr was conducted on duplicate ll the amount of virus in tested samples was determined in duplicate using the standard curve and reported as pfu/g lung tissue. all data were analysed using graph pad prism software v. and expressed as mean ± s.e.m. statistical comparisons were made using one-way anova or unpaired t-test. the rbd-fc protein was expressed in both adherent ft and suspension human embryo kidney (hek) cells, but with greater expression in adherent cells (fig. ) . purification of protein from adherent cells with protein a was very effective, yielding protein which was > % pure, with molecular weight of approximately kda (fig. a) . the use of m urea for elution was optimum, as it was sufficient to solubilise the protein without denaturing it, yielding rbd-fc in optimum yield ( . mg/ml) and predominantly in a dimeric form (fig. b) . this method of protein purification was therefore selected for forward use. rbd-fc, formulated for either sub-cutaneous (s.c.) or per oral (p.o.) immunisation, was tested for immunogenicity and the formulations optimised in an iterative approach. initially, a s.c. dosing regimen was used in which rbd-fc was formulated in either alhydrogel or mf to deliver . lg of protein on each of three occasions at , and days. mice were monitored for days after the final boost and igg titre determined ( fig. a) . at day , the total igg titres achieved with rbd-fc in alhydrogel or mf did not differ significantly. to determine if the presentation of rbd-fc in either alhydrogel or mf influenced the ability to develop virus-neutralising antibody, antisera were selected from mice in each immunisation group and tested in a plaque assay for neutralisation of both the emc and london - strains of mers-cov ( fig. b and c) . all four sera gave some neutralisation of viral activity, although at a : dilution, sera and were most potent, against both viral strains. sera and were derived from the treatment group immunised with mf adjuvanted rbd-fc, whereas sera and were derived from alhydrogel-adjuvanted rbd-fc ( fig. a) . based on this pilot data, we subsequently used mf as the conventional adjuvant for rbd-fc, to compare with some novel formulations. having demonstrated to proof-of-principle that the rbd-fc, when delivered in mf can induce a high titre of antibody with neutralising activity, we next investigated how to tailor an rbd-fc vaccine optimally to induce both systemic and mucosal immunity, with the aim also of reducing to a -dose immunisation regimen and increasing functional antibody. for this, we selected novel formulations in which rbd-fc protein was presented as rbd-fc-pcmc for s.c. priming and incorporated into mineral oil (mo) for p.o. boosting. we compared the serum igg response achieved from this -dose dual route immunisation with that induced to rbd-fc delivered in mf in a -dose s.c. regimen (fig. ) . at month after the booster dose, at day , there was no significant difference in the serum igg titres achieved, so that the -dose dual-route immunisation with rbd-fc-pcmc for s.c. priming and incorporated in mo with excipients for p.o. boosting, was just as immunogenic as the -dose s.c. immunisation with rbd-fc in mf (fig. a) . at day , the serum response to rbd-fc in the dual-route regimen was predominantly igg biased, whereas s.c. dosing with rbd-fc in the presence of mf induced both igg and igg a (fig. b) . since dual route immunisation effectively induced serum igg to rbd-fc, it was of interest to determine whether it could also effectively induce mucosal immunity. in this study, the rbd-fc-specific iga response was determined in serum and in faecal pellet extracts from individual animals on day . in this case, the rbd-specific iga responses of mice immunised in the -dose dual route regimen were compared with that of mice immunised by the oral route twice, and with mice immunised by the s.c. route in mf twice, on exactly the same days ( , ) (fig. ) . this comparison showed that s.c. immunisation in mf did not induce serum iga. however s.c. priming with rbd-fc-pcmc with p.o. boosting effectively induced rbd-fc-specific iga and was not inferior to oral priming and boosting in this effect in either serum (fig. a ) or faecal extracts (fig. b ). however mice primed and boosted orally did not develop rbd-specific systemic igg (data not shown). additionally, day sera from mice in all treatment groups were tested for their ability to neutralise either strain of mers-cov in vitro (table ) . from this it can be seen that sera from out of mice in the dual route regimen were fully neutralising neutralisation of mers-cov in vitro. in in vitro for both strains (emc and london - ), when tested at : dilution ( fig. a and b) . in order to test whether the in vitro neutralising activity translated into viral neutralisation in vivo, sera from these mice (highlighted in table ) were pooled in equal aliquots at : dilution to enable a subsequent passive transfer study. in order to design the passive transfer study, it was necessary to define the duration of expression of cd in murine lungs in vivo, following induction with the ad hdpp construct. mice dosed with ad hdpp i.n. at t were culled in pairs and lung homogenates prepared and assayed for cd expression. cd in lung tissue was expressed in a time-dependent manner, with levels peaking at day and declining to day (fig. a) , setting a sufficient window to use the model for the determination of the protection against viral challenge afforded by the passive transfer of mers-specific antibody. to determine the protection afforded by the passive transfer of murine antiserum raised in the dual route immunisation regimen, against infection, susceptibility to mers-cov was induced at t with i.n. administration of ad hdpp to groups of mice. passive transfer by the i.p. route of the pooled serum sample derived from the mice highlighted in table , which had previously been shown to be neutralising in vitro (table ) was conducted days later and mice were challenged after a further h with mers-cov emc . additional groups of mice, which had been transduced with ad hdpp , were passively immunised with a mers-cov specific human igg and a non-specific human igg. at - days after challenge, pairs of mice were culled for the determination of viral load in lungs, which was determined to peak at days p.i. (data not shown). at days p.i., the pooled murine antiserum significantly reduced viral titres in lungs, to the same extent as the specific human igg, and contrasting with the negative control human igg, demonstrating significant in vivo neutralising activity (fig. b ). fig. . a. expression of cd was induced in lung tissue by the administration of ad hdpp ( .  pfu) to mice by the i.n. route at t . subsequently, mice were culled in pairs on the days shown and their lungs assayed for the expression of cd . the plot shows the time-course of cd expression from to days post-induction. all data points were normalised for background values from control mice. b: content of mers-cov (emc strain) in murine lungs (pfu/g tissue) determined by rt-pcr at day post-infection, (equivalent to day after passive transfer with murine antisera to rbd-fc which had previously been shown to neutralise the emc strain in vitro). mice received either a mers-cov-specific human igg ( lg) or non-specific human igg ( lg) in ll /mouse i.p.; or murine antisera to rbd-fc, which had been pooled from murine donors and which was delivered at : dilution ( ll/mouse i.p.). negative control mice received pbs in place of ad hdpp or antiserum all mice were challenged with mers-cov emc i.n. at pfu/mouse. statistical significance was determined at the p < . level by one way anova and unpaired t-test. no significant differences in body weight were detected between treatment groups challenged with mers-cov, which was attributed to the short time period of the study. mers is a serious endemic respiratory infectious disease for which there is no licensed vaccine, although there are several vaccines in clinical trial currently including adenovirus-vectored delivery of the spike protein and sub-units [ ] , dna vaccines and nanoparticle-delivered sub-unit approaches [ ] . we were interested in determining the advantage of r a vaccine which could induce mucosal as well as specific systemic immunity to the key target, the rbd protein, in order to achieve optimum protective efficacy. vaccination to induce effective immunity at mucosal surfaces, should prime the immune system to respond rapidly to invading pathogens such as mers-cov. previous studies have used adenovirus delivery of the mers spike protein with intra-muscular (i.m.) or intra-gastric (i.g.) delivery to induce neutralising systemic igg, but not iga; further, whilst i.m. delivery also induced specific t-cell immunity, i.g. delivery did not [ ] . others have shown that intra-nasal delivery of a live attenuated adenovirus-vectored subunit vaccines does induce specific mucosal as well as systemic immunity, although translation of this approach to the clinic may raise safety issues [ ] . here, we have relied on novel formulations of a sub-unit protein to enable dual route vaccination (parenteral and oral) to induce mucosal as well as systemic immunity. in this study, we have achieved the expression and purification of a recombinant rbd-fc protein in milligram quantities. we have also demonstrated that when formulated as a sub-unit vaccine, the construct induced murine antibody which effectively neutralised two different clinical strains of mers-cov in vitro. additionally, we have shown that these murine antisera, when passively transferred into naïve mice transduced to express the hdpp /cd receptor, conferred protection against viral challenge in the recipients, with significantly reduced viral loads in the lung tissue of the recipient mice. whilst the use of conventional adjuvants such as mf or alhydrogel to formulate the rbd-fc protein resulted in high titres of specific igg in serum, the mf formulation did not induce specific iga in serum. in order to promote both systemic and mucosal immunity to rbd-fc, we have formulated this protein for injected priming and p.o. boosting, entailing the optimisation of the cap pcmc and of the reverse micelles in oil emulsion, respectively. this has enabled the achievement of a vaccination regimen comprising only two doses and rapidly inducing rbd-fc-specific systemic and mucosal immunity. whilst the pcmc formulation of rbd-fc was as effective as rbd in mf in inducing a primary igg response, we have shown that an oral formulation of rbd-fc in mineral oil with selected immunostimulants was as effective as mf when used as a booster immunisation. additionally, we have shown that non-invasive oral priming and boosting is as effective at inducing a specific mucosal response, measured as specific iga in serum and faeces, as is injected priming with rbd-fc in the pcmc formulation together with oral boosting, leading to the exciting concept of a potential orally-dosed sub-unit vaccine for mers. whilst both alhydrogel and the combination of pcmc and oral formulations are th -polarising, as evidenced by the predominantly igg titres raised to rbd-fc, the influence of mf on the response to rbd-fc was a mixed th- /th effect, with a significant induction of specific igg and igg a. to counter a viral infection, it would be expected that a th response would be most appropriate. however, the fact that neutralising antibody to rbd-fc was raised under either th or th -polarising influences, suggests that either isotype can be protective and primes the immune system sufficiently and would allow for cross-presentation to occur on subsequent exposure to the virus [ ] . in this study, we have not examined the induction of a cell-mediated memory response to the rbd-fc protein, although this will play a significant role in protection against the virus. currently, we are presenting the rbd protein in our formulations with an fc tag, derived from human igg and useful in purifying the protein. the fc tag may contribute additional adjuvantising activity by engaging antigen-presenting cells in the vaccinee [ ] and it may aid mucosal immunity since the fc receptor, an mhc transmembrane protein, is also expressed at mucosal surfaces e.g. in the respiratory tract [ ] . vaccination of the zoonotic host, the dromedary camel, may also effectively curb outbreaks of mers in endemic regions and limit the risk of viral recombination [ ] and significant progress with an orthopox-vectored vaccine for mers has recently been reported [ ] . the potential use of a sub-unit vaccine for mers in camel vaccination could be aided by varying the sequence of the rbd protein [ ] and substituting the human fc tag with an alternative tag recognised by the camel, to design approaches tailored for animal vaccination, bearing in mind that a single dose vaccine would be ideal in this context. however, future work in our laboratory will also address the value of retaining or removing the fc tag from the rbd protein for clinical or veterinary iterations of the vaccine. in this study we have determined vaccine efficacy by demonstrating in vitro and in vivo neutralising ability of murine antisera raised in the dual route two-dose regimen against two virulent clinical strains of mers-cov which have greater than % genome sequence homologyy. in future work, it will be worthwhile to test the efficacy of this approach against other clinical isolates of mers-cov. this is the first report of a dual route dosing regimen applied to a sub-unit vaccine for mers-cov. future development of this approach would require the direct testing of efficacy in the immunised transduced mouse model. as well as giving a direct readout of vaccine efficacy, this will enable the identification of the immune correlates of protection, ready for transitioning this candidate vaccine into more extensive pre-clinical testing and clinical development. the authors declare that all the data supporting the findings of this study are available within the paper. ksa mers-cov investigation team. hospital outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus genomic characterization of a newly discovered coronavirus associated with acute respiratory distress syndrome in humans mers-cov origin and 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rhesus macaques against middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus challenge mers-cov spike protein: targets for vaccines and therapeutics toward developing a preventive mers-cov vaccine-report from a workshop organized by the saudi arabia ministry of health and the international vaccine institute protein coated microcrystals formulated with model antigens and modified with calcium phosphate exhibit enhanced phagocytosis and immunogenicity a new oil-based antigen delivery formulation for both oral and parenteral vaccination reverse micelle-encapsulated recombinant baculovirus as an oral vaccine against h n infection in mice dual route vaccination for plague with emergency use applications genomic characterization of a newly discovered coronavirus associated with acute respiratory distress syndrome in humans severe respiratory illness caused by a novel coronavirus rapid generation of a mouse model for middle east respiratory syndrome real-time reverse transcription-pcr assay panel for middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus cutting edge: mincle is essential for recognition and adjuvanticity of the mycobacterial cord factor and its synthetic analog trehalose-dibehenate the tlr agonists imiquimod and gardiquimod improve dc-based immunotherapy for melanoma in mice chadox and mva based vaccine candidates against mers-cov elicit neutralising antibodies and cellular immune responses in mice novel chimeric virus-like particles vaccine displaying mers-cov receptor-binding domain induce specific humoral and cellular immune response in mice systemic and mucosal immunity in mice elicited by a single immunization with human adenovirus type or vector-based vaccines carrying the spike protein of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus a tetravalent dengue vaccine based on a complex adenovirus vector provides significant protection in rhesus monkeys against all four serotypes of dengue virus intracellular recycling and cross-presentation by mhc class i molecules fc-fusion proteins: new developments and future perspectives fc-fusion proteins and fcrn: structural insights for longer-lasting and more effective therapeutics co-circulation of three camel coronavirus species and recombination of mers-covs in saudi arabia an orthopoxvirus-based vaccine reduces virus excretion after mers-cov infection in dromedary camels recombinant receptor-binding domains of multiple middle east respiratory syndrome coronaviruses (mers-covs) induce cross-neutralizing antibodies against divergent human and camel mers-covs and antibody escape mutants the authors acknowledge with thanks the expert technical assistance of lin eastaugh, louise thompsett and vicky roberts. this work was supported by sbri awards and from innovate uk to rrcn and na, respectively and on independent research commissioned from na and funded by the nihr policy research programme, [ ]. the views expressed in the publication are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the nhs, the nihr, the department of health, 'arms' length bodies or other government departments. the authors declare no conflict of interests. supplementary data to this article can be found online at https://doi.org/ . /j.vaccine. . . . key: cord- -bm nogig authors: su, shuo; wong, gary; liu, yingxia; gao, george f; li, shoujun; bi, yuhai title: mers in south korea and china: a potential outbreak threat? date: - - journal: lancet doi: . /s - ( ) - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: bm nogig nan first reported in september, , human infections with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) can result in severe respiratory disease, characterised by life-threatening pneumonia and renal failure. countries with primary infections of mers-cov are located in the middle east, but cases have been occasionally exported in other countries (fi gure). human-to-human infections of mers-cov are rare and confi rmed cases are usually traced back to contact with camels, an intermediate host species for mers-cov. as of may , , worldwide, a total of cases and deaths (case fatality rate · %) have been reported, according to who. there is no approved vaccine or treatment. on may , , a -year-old male in south korea developed symptoms and sought medical care at a clinic between may - , before admittance into hospital on may . the patient had been travelling between april -may through bahrain, the united arab emirates, saudi arabia, and qatar. he was asymptomatic upon return to south korea on may , but tested positive for mers-cov on may , along with two additional cases: his -year-old wife, and a -year-old male who was a fellow patient. concerns of further mers-cov spread were confirmed when a -year-old male fellow patient, the daughter of the -year-old case, and two medical staff developed symptoms and were diagnosed with mers-cov infection (appendix). as of may , , south korea has laboratoryconfirmed cases of mers-cov, and more than additional contacts under surveillance. on may , a -year-old male traveller from south korea to huizhou, china was admitted into hospital. mers-cov infection was confi rmed on may , marking the fi rst laboratoryconfirmed case in china (appendix), and the patient was immediately put in isolation. this patient was the son of the -year-old south korean patient. he had visited his father in the hospital on may , developed symptoms on may , and travelled to hong kong by plane on may before arriving by road into mainland china via shenzhen. in response, the chinese health authorities promptly placed high-risk contacts under surveillance, but it is not known whether additional contacts exist and further mers-cov infections in china remains a possibility. this series of events highlighted issues with the current surveillance system put in place to prevent the importation of infectious diseases. the diagnosis for mers-cov infection was made on may for the -year-old patient. his -year-old son should have been monitored as a close contact of the laboratory-confi rmed case, with provisional quarantine and testing upon development of symptoms and isolation upon a positive diagnosis. such a high-risk case should not be travelling until after the incubation period, which is between - days for mers-cov. non-compliance by the patient regarding travel advice likely contributed to this scenario. these events serve as a timely reminder that natural geographical barriers against pathogens can now be easily overcome through trade and travel, and marks the fi rst mers-cov import case that did not come directly from the middle east. these developments are worrisome given favipiravir-a prophylactic treatment for ebola contacts? since the ebola outbreak began in march, , cases of ebola have been reported. to control spread of ebola in west african communities, vaccination campaigns have been proposed. however, the efficacy of candidate ebola vaccines for primary prevention has not been proven. furthermore, in communities in which ebola transmission might be ongoing, an important question is: how will such a vaccination be perceived if a vaccinated person develops ebola? such a scenario is possible in people who contract ebola virus before vaccination. if a person is infected with ebola virus before vaccination, the vaccine might have a post-exposure prophylactic effect. however, how effective this prophylaxis might be is unknown. moreover, if someone is infected more than h before vaccination, the post-exposure prophylactic eff ect is likely to be insuffi cient, leading to possible development of ebola after vaccination. this scenario is likely to result in serious issues relating to community trust and acceptance of an ebola vaccine. how to exclude ebola among people presenting with post-vaccination fever is also an issue. we make a case for the study of favipiravir (toyama chemical, japan), administered as directly observed therapy for contacts of patients with ebola. favipiravir has increased benefit in patients with low ebola viraemia compared with patients with high viraemia. as such, this drug could have a post-exposure prophylactic effect among recently infected contacts and a pre-exposure prophylactic eff ect among contacts exposed to, but not yet infected by, ebola virus. additionally, fever has not been reported as a side-effect of favipiravir (clinicaltrials.gov, nct ). furthermore, oral administration of prophylactic favipiravir gives people the choice to interrupt treatment if wanted. additional effects of prophylactic favipiravir might include increased openness of communities to use alert systems and to support contact tracing services (ie, contacts might be receptive to daily follow-up visits). finally, to reduce incidence of malaria, prophylactic artesunateamodiaquine could be administered to the contacts of patients with ebola. one disadvantage of proposed favipiravir prophylaxis might be the need to exclude pregnant women. to mitigate this problem, pregnancy tests could be included as a routine part of the favipiravir prophylaxis package. finally, prophylactic favipiravir could be field tested by measurement of incidence of ebola among contacts of patients with ebola before and after favipiravir is introduced. we declare no competing interests. that hong kong airport is a major international transport hub, and thus any potential infections can travel worldwide in a short time. after dealing with several pandemic threats over the past years, notably severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov) in , h n influenza in , and ebola virus in - , authorities now have ample experience in outbreak response compared with past years. in addition to the need for increased vigilance from health authorities, compliance by the public is crucial for the eff ective implementation of outbreak responses. everyone is responsible for upholding the principles of public health, and must play their part to minimise the chances of disease transmission across borders. middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: a case-control study of hospitalized patients middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: another zoonotic betacoronavirus causing sars-like disease evidence for camel-to-human transmission of mers coronavirus middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov)-republic of korea international society for infectious diseases. mers-cov ( ): south korea middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov)-china we declare no competing interests. key: cord- -row mn authors: chan, jasper fuk-woo; lau, susanna kar-pui; woo, patrick chiu-yat title: the emerging novel middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: the “knowns” and “unknowns” date: - - journal: j formos med assoc doi: . /j.jfma. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: row mn a novel lineage c betacoronavirus, originally named human coronavirus emc/ (hcov-emc) and recently renamed middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov), that is phylogenetically closely related to tylonycteris bat coronavirus hku and pipistrellus bat coronavirus hku , which we discovered in from bats in hong kong, has recently emerged in the middle east to cause a severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars)-like infection in humans. the first laboratory-confirmed case, which involved a -year-old man from bisha, the kingdom of saudi arabia (ksa), who died of rapidly progressive community-acquired pneumonia and acute renal failure, was announced by the world health organization (who) on september , . since then, a total of cases, including fatalities, have been reported in the middle east and europe. recent clusters involving epidemiologically-linked household contacts and hospital contacts in the middle east, europe, and africa strongly suggested possible human-to-human transmission. clinical and laboratory research data generated in the past few months have provided new insights into the possible animal reservoirs, transmissibility, and virulence of mers-cov, and the optimal laboratory diagnostic options and potential antiviral targets for mers-cov-associated infection. introduction: the "new sars"? ten years after the devastating epidemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) caused by sars coronavirus (sars-cov), which resulted in a total of deaths among more than confirmed cases in over countries, the world is facing a new challenge posted by a "sars-like" infection caused by another novel coronavirus emerging from the middle east, which was originally named human coronavirus emc/ (hcov-emc) and recently renamed by the coronavirus study group of the international committee for taxonomy of viruses as middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov). e the complete genome of the virus was sequenced and released in october after the isolation of the virus from two patients with severe community-acquired pneumonia in bisha, the kingdom of saudi arabia (ksa), and doha, qatar, first announced by the world health organization (who) on september . as of may , , the total number of laboratory-confirmed cases of mers-cov infection has increased to with deaths, including two cases confirmed retrospectively from a jordanian cluster of severe respiratory disease reported by the ministry of health of jordan in april (table ) . , , e although the number of laboratory-confirmed cases remains limited, the severe clinical manifestations with an unusually high mortality rate of over %, the spread of the infection beyond the geographical confinement in the middle east, and the epidemiological evidence of human-to-human transmission arising from the recent clusters of cases in a family in the united kingdom (cases to ), and in hospitals in ksa (cases to , and ) and france (cases and ), have raised significant concerns on the possible emergence of another sars-like epidemic in the near future. in anticipation of the potential spread of this highly pathogenic virus from the middle east and europe to other parts of the world, especially the densely populated southeast asia, an updated review of the latest research findings on mers-cov and their implications on the clinical management of mers-cov infection is essential. viral genomic studies reveal the first lineage c betacoronavirus associated with human infection mers-cov belongs to the genus betacoronavirus in the family coronaviridae under the order nidovirales. coronaviruses are enveloped viruses with positive-sense singlestranded rna genomes. studies in their biodiversity, comparative genomics and phylogeny in the past years have improved our understanding of this family of viruses. e according to the most recent classification by the coronavirus study group of the international committee for taxonomy of viruses, there are four genera in coronaviridae, namely alphacoronavirus, betacoronavirus, gammacoronavirus, and deltacoronavirus. , the genus alphacoronavirus contains two human coronaviruses, hcov- e and hcov-nl , which are associated with the common cold. no human coronavirus has been discovered in gammacoronavirus and deltacoronavirus, which mainly contain avian coronaviruses with just a few mammalian coronaviruses. the genus betacoronavirus is comprised of four lineages (a, b, c and d) which contain four coronaviruses associated with human infections: hcov-oc and hcov-hku (lineage a), sars-cov (lineage b), and mers-cov (lineage c). mers-cov is the first known lineage c betacoronavirus associated with human infection and is phylogenetically closely related to the other lineage c betacoronaviruses including tylonycteris bat cov hku (ty-batcov-hku ) and pipistrellus bat cov hku (pi-batcov-hku ), which were discovered in lesser bamboo bats (tylonycteris pachypus) and japanese pipistrelle bats (pipistrellus abramus), respectively, captured in hong kong, china. , , analysis of the genome of mers-cov revealed that it has a genome size of , bases with the rdrp and s genes having over % and around % amino acid identities with those of ty-batcov-hku and pi-batcov-hku . , molecular clock analysis using the rdrp gene showed that mers-cov might have diverged from the most recent common ancestor of lineage c betacoronaviruses in year w ad ( bc to ad). it is postulated that the emergence of mers-cov represents another series of interspecies transmission events in coronaviruses, from bats to possibly other animals and then to humans, a scenario similar to the sars epidemic. epidemiology reports and cell line susceptibility studies suggest possible animal reservoirs and human-to-human transmissions epidemiological linkage with animals, including camels, goats, sheep, and farm animals or their caretakers before symptom onset in some of the reported cases supported the hypothesis of mers-cov being a zoonotic agent (table ) . furthermore, in vitro data from cell line susceptibility studies showed that the virus had a broad species tropism and was able to replicate in bat, primate, porcine, rabbit, and civet cell lines. , as in the case of sars-cov, which likely emerged from its natural animal reservoir the horseshoe bats (rhinolophus sp.), and jumped to other mammals during their caging in the wild life markets of south china and then to humans, mers-cov might have also originated from bats to these susceptible animal species before adapting to humans. , , in addition to pipistrellus bats, which are the natural hosts of the closely related pi-batcov-hku and are also found in the middle east, rousettus, rhinolophus, myotis, and carollia bat cell lines are also susceptible to mers-cov infection in vitro. active surveillance of different bat and animal species predominantly found in the middle east would help to delineate the natural bat reservoir and the evolutionary pathway of mers-cov among other susceptible animal species. indeed, a recent study showed that a number of different bat species in ghana and europe are infected with coronaviruses, which also share close homologies with mers-cov. determination of the virus' animal hosts might in turn facilitate the control of the outbreak as in sars, where closure of the wet markets likely contributed to the cessation of the epidemic. human-to-human transmission represents a new stage in the evolution of mers-cov infection. there are, so far, six the seroprevalence and transmissibility of mers-cov remain undetermined, although animal-to-human and human-to-human transmissions both appear to be limited at this stage (fig. ) . among persons seeking medical attention in a hospital in jeddah, ksa, none had mers-covspecific igg detectable by indirect immunofluorescence assay, suggesting that the current situation is likely to be different from those of other human coronaviruses which are endemic in humans. , the lack of secondary cases among nearly contacts of cases and who did not practice optimal infection control measures before the diagnosis of mers-cov infection was confirmed, implied that this novel virus might be less efficient than sars-cov in human-tohuman transmission. , , however, the findings of these studies should be interpreted with cautions for two reasons. first, only a relatively small number of subjects ( / in case and / in case ) were tested by reliable laboratory tests. second, the timing of testing was not clearly described and might be suboptimal for the purpose of excluding the diagnosis. it has been proposed that a second test should be performed in symptomatic patients with initially negative results by reverse transcriptionpolymerase chain reaction (rt-pcr), within the first days of symptom onset, based on the observation in sars where viral load peaked at day of symptom onset. , e therefore, the apparently limited spread of mers-cov at present might be an underestimation and ongoing transmission of the virus should be cautiously monitored. unlike its close relatives in bats, mers-cov is highly pathogenic in humans. the most common clinical presentation among the laboratory-confirmed cases of mers-cov infection is acute severe community-acquired pneumonia with acute renal failure following an estimated incubation period of e days (table ) . , this is unusual among human infections caused by coronaviruses, in which severe pneumonia with respiratory failure is seldom seen, except in sars. the other human coronaviruses, namely hcov- e, hcov-nl , hcov-oc , and hcov-hku , predominantly cause acute self-limited upper respiratory tract infections, and only occasionally cause lower respiratory tract infections in the elderly and immunocompromized populations. only two of patients (cases and ) had a self-limiting, mild, influenza-like illness not requiring hospitalization. asymptomatic or mild infections have otherwise not been detected among the other contacts of confirmed cases by rt-pcr of upper respiratory tract specimens and/or serological tests, saudi residents in jeddah by indirect immunofluorescent antibody testing of archived sera, and french hajj pilgrims with upper respiratory symptoms and rt-pcr of prospectively collected nasal swabs. , , , the other ( . %) patients, many of whom had no underlying medical condition, developed rapid clinical deterioration with lower respiratory tract involvement and respiratory failure requiring ventilator support within a few days to week after initial systemic symptoms of fever, myalgia, and malaise, and upper respiratory tract symptoms such as rhinorrhea and sore throat. this correlated with the finding in our recent cell line susceptibility study, which showed that mers-cov replicated much better in the lower respiratory tract cell lines including calu- (polarized airway epithelium), a (lung adenocarcinoma), and hfl (embryonic lung fibroblasts), than the upper respiratory tract cell line hep- (laryngeal epidermoid carcinoma). another in vitro study also showed that pseudostratified human bronchial epithelium cultures are highly permissive to mers-cov infection. in ex vivo organ cultures, mers-cov productively replicated in both human bronchial and lung tissues, whereas sars-cov only productively replicated in lung tissue. recently, a macaque model showed that mers-cov caused acute, localized to widespread pneumonia, resulting in mild to moderate clinical disease resembling the illness observed in humans. radiologically, pneumonia is evident by focal consolidations involving single or multiple lobes, with progressive involvement of bilateral lung fields, especially the lower zones. in case , thoracic computed tomography scans revealed mediastinal hilar lymphadenopathies, airspace opacities with air bronchograms, scattered ground-glass opacities, interstitial septal thickenings, and nodularities in the upper lobes without significant pleural and pericardial effusions. acute renal failure was the other dominant clinical feature in mers-cov infection and is seen in at least six of the reported cases. many of the remaining severe cases probably also developed renal impairment, although their clinical details were not available. this was unusual, even when compared to sars in which . % of the patients had abnormal urinalysis and detectable viral load by quantitative rt-pcr in urine, but only . % developed acute renal failure with histological evidence of acute tubular necrosis and most did not require renal replacement therapy. this clinical presentation correlates with the in vitro finding of efficient replication of mers-cov in kidney cell lines, including hek , vero, llc-mk , and p. , , more importantly, the presence of renal involvement appeared to be a poor prognostic factor, as those with renal failure either died or required renal replacement therapy, while two cases without renal impairment survived ( table ). the lack of extrapulmonary lesions observed in the macaque model of mers-cov infection suggested that acute renal failure was more likely due to hypoxic damage than a direct viral cytopathic effect. other clinical, laboratory and microbiological findings reported in mers-cov infection included pericarditis, disseminated intravascular coagulation, leukocytosis with neutrophilia and lymphopenia, thrombocytopenia, anemia, hyponatremia, hypoalbuminemia, elevated liver enzymes, lactate dehydrogenase, c-reactive protein, and procalcitonin levels, possible secondary bacterial pneumonia caused by klebsiella pneumoniae, staphylococcus aureus, and acinetobacter sp., and coinfection with other respiratory viruses, including influenza a(h n )pdm and type parainfluenza virus. , , e , it is interesting to note the absence of watery diarrhea in the acute phase of mers-cov infection, despite the in vitro finding of viral replication in the colonic cell line caco- (colorectal adenocarcinoma), in contrast to sars in which around % of patients developed enterocolitis. , it remains to be seen in future case cohorts whether this is due to under-reporting, or a genuine difference in clinical presentations between the two diseases. together with severe acute respiratory and renal failure, these clinical features underscore the success of the innate immune evasion mechanisms of mers-cov in humans, leading to overwhelming infection and possible cytokine dysregulation, as reflected by the lack of interferon through inhibition of interferon regulatory factor family (irf- ). , the discovery of dipeptidyl peptidase (dpp ), a multifunctional -amino-acid-long type-ii transmembrane glycoprotein exopeptidase expressed on human non-ciliated bronchial, renal, enteric, hepatic and prostatic epithelial cells, which is important in the regulation of hormone and chemokine bioactivity, glucose metabolism, t-cell activation, chemotaxis modulation, cell adhesion, apoptosis and regulation of tumorigenicity, as a functional receptor for mers-cov, provides further insights into the unique pattern of organ involvement and unusually severe clinical presentation of this emerging infection. clinical utility and practical concerns of published laboratory diagnostic options several laboratory methods are available for establishing a virological diagnosis of mers-cov infection. the most definitive tests are viral culture from respiratory, fecal, urine, or tissue specimens, and/or a fourfold rise in the serum neutralizing antibody titers taken at to days apart. the first clinical isolate of mers-cov was cultured on monkey kidney cells, like vero and llc-mk , which showed cytopathic effects of syncytium formation, rounding and detachment of cells. subsequent studies have identified various human cell types, including bronchial epithelial, colonic, hepatic, renal, and neuronal cells, monocytes and histiocytes that support the replication of mers-cov. however, the use of viral culture is limited by the requirement of a biosafety level three setting, which is not available in most clinical microbiology laboratories. a serum neutralizing antibody test has the disadvantage of requiring convalescent sera and is therefore mainly used for diagnosis in the convalescent instead of acute phase. , furthermore, the sera of sars patients may contain lowtiter cross-reactive neutralizing antibodies against mers-cov, which may lead to the wrong serodiagnosis, especially in countries where the general population had previous exposure. it remains to be seen whether neutralizing antibodies against mers-cov might also crossreact with other closely related lineage c betacoronaviruses, like ty-batcov-hku and pi-batcov-hku . in most of the laboratory-confirmed cases, diagnosis was established by the detection of nucleic acid by rt-pcr of respiratory tract samples, including combined nose and throat swab, sputum, tracheal aspirate, bronchoalveolar lavage, and/or urine taken between day (cases and ) and day (case ). two highly sensitive real-time rt-pcr assays targeting regions upstream of the e gene (upe), with sensitivity of up to . rna copies per reaction and within an open reading frame (orf) b, with sensitivity of up to rna copies per reaction, have been proposed for screening and confirmation of mers-cov infection, respectively, and are available in about half of the countries in the who european region. , additional testing of other gene targets with partial or whole genome sequence analysis may also be used for confirmation. , for example, pan-coronavirus rt-pcr targeting the rdrp gene was used in case and a real-time quantitative rt-pcr assay targeting the n gene has been used in in vitro studies, and may also be useful for clinical diagnosis, although further evaluations are needed. other potential diagnostic options which might be used in areas without rt-pcr are n or s protein-based enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays, which were shown to be highly sensitive and/ or specific for the diagnosis of sars. of note, the detection of other respiratory viruses in the respiratory tract specimen does not preclude the need for specific mers-cov testing in patients with epidemiological risk factors, or unusually severe disease, despite antiviral treatment as exemplified by the presence of coinfections in cases e . the exceptionally high crude mortality rate of % in mers-cov infection is partly due to the lack of specific anticoronavirus treatment and effective vaccine. in most of the cases, intensive supportive treatment with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, renal replacement therapy, and empirical broad-spectrum antibacterial and antiviral agents were used. case , who is still in a critical condition nearly months after symptom onset, also received a corticosteroid in the initial phase of treatment, but its efficacy is unknown. its use might be limited by serious side effects and the availability of ecmo for organ support during the critical phase. alternatively, type i interferons appear to be promising therapeutic options, as mers-cov has been shown to be much more sensitive than sars-cov to the antiviral action of interferon in vitro. the replication of mers-cov was shown to be reduced in human lung ex vivo organ cultures treated with type i interferons. a recent study showed that while both interferon-a b and ribavirin reduced the replication of mers-cov in vero and llc-mk cells, the combination of the two drugs achieved the same endpoints at a much lower concentration, which might facilitate their clinical applications. other potential specific antiviral targets include type ii transmembrane serine proteases (tmprss ) and endosomal cathepsins, which are responsible for mers-cov s protein activation required for virus-cell fusion and entry of the virus into host cells. the identification of dpp , but not angiotensinconverting enzyme (ace ), aminopeptidase n, and carcinoembryonic antigen-related cell adhesion molecule (ceacam ), as a functional receptor for mers-cov implies that in vivo manipulation of dpp levels and development of inhibitors against the s domain-dpp interface might have potential therapeutic roles in mers-cov infection, as with ace analogues in the case of sars. finally, the recognition of the predicted receptor-binding domain /critical neutralizing domain at residues to in the mers-cov s protein might facilitate vaccine development for this emerging infection. in the past few months, following the who's announcement of the first two cases of mers-cov infection on september , , clinicians and scientists worldwide have collaborated closely in an attempt to prevent a sars-like epidemic from happening again. the discovery of certain important characteristics of mers-cov including its genome arrangement, phylogenetic relatedness with other coronaviruses, in vitro tissue and species tropism, and functional receptor, enhanced our understanding of the clinical presentation, pathogenesis, epidemiology, and design of diagnostic and therapeutic options of this emerging novel human coronavirus. however, key questions concerning the definitive animal reservoirs of the virus, evolutionary process, transmissibility, and the prognostic factors and optimal treatment modalities of the infection, remain elusive. more importantly, the increasing number of laboratory-confirmed cases in the middle east, and the recent evidence of human-tohuman transmission in europe are suggestive of continuing viral adaptations in humans, which might precede a largescale epidemic. indeed, as of june , after the acceptance of the article, the total number of laboratoryconfirmed cases have increased to with fatalities. additional clusters of cases involving household and/or hospital contacts were reported in ksa, italy, and tunisia. collaborations between global and local health authorities and their sustained support for further research on mers-cov are crucial to control this "new sars". severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus as an agent of emerging and reemerging infection coronavirus as a possible cause of severe acute respiratory syndrome the severe acute respiratory syndrome relative rates of non-pneumonic sars coronavirus infection and sars coronavirus 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coronavirus emc compared to those of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus world health organization. global alert and response: novel coronavirus infectione update. geneva: who dipeptidyl peptidase is a functional receptor for the emerging human coronavirus-emc assays for laboratory confirmation of novel human coronavirus (hcov-emc) infections crossreactive antibodies in convalescent sars patients' sera against the emerging novel human coronavirus emc ( ) by both immunofluorescent and neutralizing antibody tests the spike-protein of the emerging betacoronavirus emc uses a novel coronavirus receptor for entry, can be activated by tmprss and is targeted by neutralizing antibodies detection of a novel human coronavirus by real-time reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction laboratory capability for molecular detection and confirmation of novel coronavirus in europe inhibition of novel b coronavirus replication by a combination of interferon-a b and ribavirin a predicted receptor-binding and critical neutralizing domain in s protein of the novel human coronavirus hcov-emc global alert and response (gar): middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) e update key: cord- -axbyav m authors: kimball, ann marie title: emergence of novel human infections: new insights and new challenges date: - - journal: international encyclopedia of public health doi: . /b - - - - . - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: axbyav m novel human infections have continued to emerge over the past decade. their presentation, epidemiology, and microbiology have shifted the paradigms of traditional science. in particular insights into nongenetic or paragenetic mechanisms (plasmid mediated), modes of infection have challenged biology. in reviewing the new challenges posed by these emergent events, new technologies promise some answers; however, global health security against pandemic threats, particularly given the uneven distribution of global resources for prevention, detection, and response, remains a critical area of challenge. new human infections have continued to come forth over the last decade. this discussion will focus on the period from to . given the importance of the severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) as the harbinger of coronaviruses such as the middle east respiratory syndrome (mers), some discussion of sars is also included. the phenomenon of emerging infections has been constant with the majority of human infections reflecting the introduction into humans of zoonotic pathogens. over the last decade, great progress has been made in defining more fully how emergence occurs. in fact the emergence of new infections has expanded the paradigms of microbiology in a number of ways, which will be highlighted here. specifically: ( ) it is now well appreciated that influenza can migrate directly from avian sources to humans, and the appreciation of the actual directness of 'species jumping' has moved forward; ( ) new infections have also introduced uncertainty in transmission dynamics with emphasis on super-spreader events as well as nosocomial transmission; ( ) infectious particles are not confined to those organisms which contain genetic material; ( ) a new paradigm such as 'planetary health' may be necessary for defining these trends; and ( ) global preparedness and response is not in place for the next pandemic. for further background information, the reader is referred to the original article on this phenomenon (kimball, ) . a general discussion of antimicrobial resistance and xenotransplantation is not included in this discussion as they were thoroughly covered in the original article. antimicrobial resistance will be covered in detail in another article of this volume. nonetheless they continue to be important considerations. while it has long been appreciated that the majority of human pathogens arise from zoonotic sources, the directness of the path from animal to human has become clear. ideally detecting pathogens in animals could be seen as a harbinger for human outbreaks. in fact this has been a working hypothesis of major us agency for international development (usaid) funding to their pandemic agents program. however, recent outbreaks of influenza, sars, and mers coronavirus (cov) demonstrate how emerging infections are shifting this longstanding paradigm. they lend further urgency to this area of research. in addition, these outbreaks have challenged our understanding of transmission dynamics. empirical observation has shown that there is not a single transmission force 'number' which completely characterized the spread of infectious diseases. this further complicates efforts to control infection within populations. in , a cluster of high mortality influenza cases was detected in mexico. an observational study of patients hospitalized in mexico between late march and june showed that pandemic (h n ) disproportionately affected young people. fifty-eight patients ( . % of those hospitalized) became critically ill, with complications including severe acute respiratory distress syndrome and shock. among those who became critically ill, the mortality rate was % (domínguez-cherit et al., ) . the pandemic and its management have been the subject of an in-depth analysis commissioned by the world health organization (who), and that analysis proved prescient in more recent global outbreak events such as ebola (who, ) . this cluster heralded a global pandemic and the declaration by who of a public health emergency of international concern (phiec). it occurred in the context of a decade of planning for a potential h n outbreak, which included who updating its pandemic guidance (pandemic influenza preparedness and response, ). in a small but lethal cluster of influenza occurred in children in a hong kong nursery. of the cases, died (mounts et al., ) . science shifted its understanding of influenza and recognized that flu could come directly from birds to humans. in fact h n , which emerged in , acquired the popular moniker of 'bird flu.' the outbreak was curtailed through active surveillance, changes in practice, and poultry culling of live markets in hong kong. however, the outbreak proved a harbinger of more widespread recognition of 'bird flu.' h n was identified through active surveillance of poultry and wild birds; waterfowl were particularly affected. human cases were sporadic but carried a very high mortality rate (estimated at %) (webster et al., ) . although the virus proved difficult to transmit to humans, case fatality was high. as of february , about laboratory-confirmed human cases had been reported to the who from countries; about % of reported cases were fatal. the spread of h n was geographically broad with extension into nigeria and throughout southern and se asia in waterfowl and in domestic fowl. extensive planning for a potential pandemic was put into place given the apparent proximity of the threat and the high mortality in humans. veterinary and human health collaboration was a central precept of this planning in the 'one health' concept (heymann and dixon, ) . the h n threat did not materialize despite the high level of circulation in birds. preparedness in se asia in particular included tabletop exercises, culling of birds through rapid response, and at least one joint investigation carried out between laos and thailand. in this setting, h n ran its course, with a milder clinical syndrome (although it is estimated that the global death toll was ). the pandemic of h n precipitated some confusion as well as competition for access to antivirals and vaccines. in the aftermath of these contentious discussions, new policy initiatives were put into place. this included the 'pandemic influenza preparedness' (pip) (who) plan which took some years to negotiate. it balances access to new viral strains for vaccine production with access to these vaccines for poor countries. the fineberg commission to examine an 'after action' performance of the international health regulations (ihr) was central to potential reform as well. this will be more fully discussed below. in a new influenza virus, h n , was isolated from patients in the people's republic of china. isolates were both from birds and from humans. although cases occurred globally with deaths, international spread was limited to two countries. the national response to this epidemic was very strong which is a key to control (discussed below). the influenza pandemic also followed another global respiratory emergency, sars. the etiology of sars (a new coronavirus) was not known in late when cases and deaths began to occur in guangdong province of the people's republic of china. initially misdesignated as a chlamydial pneumonia early in the course, public alarm mounted as antibiotics proved futile in treatment. between november and july , a total of probable sars cases were reported from countries with deaths for a mortality rate of . % (mmwr, ) . sars effectively demonstrated the potential mobility of respiratory pathogens. while sars was declared poorly transmissible, it effectively jumped continents in travelers and infiltrated populations through nosocomial spread. in contrast to influenza, which is highly transmissible, sars still requires direct exposure to bodily fluids for transmission. however, sars shifted the scientific paradigm of zoonotic transmission more fullywith incrimination of wet markets vending civet cats initially thought to be the source. this initial assessment has proved less robust in terms of 'reservoir' for new human pathogens as discussed below. sars also challenged our understanding of transmission dynamics. for reasons that remain unclear, a single infected person who spent a single night in a hotel in kowloon resulted in geographically broad transmission. the concept of a 'superspreader' was popularized (lloyd-smith et al., ) . this phenomenon was also described in a second scenario in beijing (shen et al., ) . traditionally infection has been characterized by a 'reproductive rate' which is essentially the rate at which an infectious case replaces itself. if the rate is , then there will be no spread, as the infection will simply stay the same absolute number as the index case recovers. however, if the rate is higher (i.e., > ), then spread into the population will occur as a single case infects multiple individuals so the number of cases increases. super-spreaders seem to have high infection rates although the overall rate for the pathogen in question may be low. this has, of course, changed our assumptions for modeling disease spread in populations. following the h n pandemic (and the avian influenza emergence of ) and the sars pandemic of , a new virus emerged on the arabian peninsula. mers-cov is a new human pathogen that also causes pneumonia and respiratory distress. the story of mers is less history and more present in terms of defining its epidemic potential. it reinforces the need for 'one health' collaboration between veterinarians, clinicians, and public health specialists, making use of their relative expertise. mers was first reported in as a case report of a patient in an icu with severe respiratory disease from jordan (hijawi et al., ) . at the time of this writing, cases and deaths have been reported to the who, with an average case fatality ratio of %. in one epidemiological analysis, the case fatality ratio for primary cases was % ( % ci, - ), whereas for secondary cases, it was % ( % ci, - ) (alsolamy, ) . like its coronavirus cousin, sars, mers-cov has demonstrated agile spread within hospitals (oboho et al., ) and across continents. in a large outbreak occurred in south korea (cowling et al., ) . that outbreak was characterized by a mortality rate of about % among cases, were fatal. it also featured 'superspreading' events. in fact a single case housed in the emergency room with persistent cough was linked to cases in one hospital (kucharski, ) . to summarize, the recent episodes of respiratory infectious diseases related to influenza, sars-cov, and mers-cov have demonstrated increasingly direct links between animal and human infections, agile intercontinental geographic spread, and complex transmission dynamics including 'superspreader' events. transmission within health-care settings has also been a prominent feature. these characteristics have challenged traditional assumptions about the pathogenesis and epidemiology of infectious diseases. traditionally microbiology has held that microbes (bacteria, viruses, protozoa, fungi, etc.) are organisms that replicate through genetic mechanisms. that replication is a major factor in the illness in humans these agents cause. recent emerging infectious events have brought an additional complexity into that decades' old assumption. a new form of a human neurodegenerative disease that emerged in britain in the s was linked to the emergence of bovine spongiform encephalitis (bse) in cattle ('mad cow disease'). this link was demonstrated through multiple casecontrol studies. the biological proof of a common etiology came somewhat later (hill et al., ) . prions are not microbial life in the traditional sense. they are 'autocatalytic proteins' or proteins that make change. in the instance of 'transmissible spongiform encephalopathies' (tses) of mad cow disease (bse), sheep 'scrapie,' elk chronic wasting disease, as well as in the human diseases of creutzfeldt-jakob disease (cjd), new variant creutzfeldt-jakob disease (vcjd) and kuru, these changes occur in the central nervous system. while the new vcjd epidemic related to ingestion of infected beef from bse-affected cows has waned due to enhanced global surveillance and animal husbandry practices, research into prion disease continues. it appears that despite their lack of genetic material, prions do undergo mutation and strain diversification in response to selective pressures (collinge et al., ) . soberingly, it is believed that some humans (estimated in britons) silently carry pathogenic prions for many years. this risk persists and creates safety concerns for blood transfusions and organ transplantation. the story of bse demonstrated the limitation of the traditional assumption that genetic reproduction of pathogens is necessary for infection as outlined above. the uk beef industry had historically been a relatively stable one when fragmented among many smaller farms across the british isles. to protect this industry, the government maintained a tariff on the imports of competing products from abroad. with the explosion of global trading in beef after world war ii, coincident with refrigerated transport, and the movement toward global free trade, the united kingdom negotiated a timetable under the general agreement on tariffs and trade to scale down tariffs on beef, which heightened competition in the uk beef industry and increased pressure for more efficient and less costly production methods. against this backdrop, innovation in rendering was introduced into the slaughterhouses of the united kingdom. the rendering or processing of carcasses of cows and other animals after the edible and usable bits of flesh and meat have been cut away has been done for centuries. and for decades, uk farmers used the meat and bone meal from rendering as a protein source for beef cattle. historically, the rendering process was similar to pressure cookingapplying very high temperatures for very long times so eventually even the bones broke down into powder. it was an expensive, fuel-consuming, and timeconsuming process. when a new cold vacuum extraction method of rendering was introduced requiring lower temperatures (i.e., less energy) and less time, it seemed a win-win situation considering the increasing pressure on the uk beef industry in the face of global competition. but sometime after the new rendering practice was introduced into the united kingdom, the prion disease known as mad cow disease emerged. the new process, discovered by uk beef industry, was not effectively disinfecting for prions. existence of prion disease was unknown prior to its dramatic emergence, first in cows and then in people. the context is important to appreciate. somehow the streamlining of the rendering process played a role. british scientists tested the new process by deliberately introducing animals with mad cow disease and assaying the resulting meat and bone meal product. they found that the newer rendering process does not remove the infection, whereas the older process did. zika virus emerged in sub-saharan africa in the late s. it is a close cousin of dengue virus and in the same family as yellow fever. all of these viruses are transmitted to humans through the bite of a mosquito. all of these diseases are clinically mild, but occasionally severe causing fever, rash, and joint pain. unfortunately all of these diseases have become globally distributed. zika is the most recent arrival in the americas. it has circulated in asia for some time (chen and hamer, ) . while clinically relatively mild, epidemiologic studies in brazil have suggested a link between zika virus and severe birth defects in newborns. viral infection in early pregnancy appears to be associated with microcephaly, which is associated with profound brain injury in newborns. again, the emergence of a new infectious disease is pushing the boundaries of biomedical knowledge. in the absence of certain prevention or treatment options, the government of brazil has gone as far as advising women not to become pregnant (mcneil, ) . the emergence of antimicrobial resistance has continued to be a major concern. in a new enzyme in gram-negative bacteria was detected which caused broad antibiotic resistance. this enzyme was produced by mobile genes that travel on plasmids. plasmids are small circular dna (genetic) packages, which are distinct from the dna of the bacteria itself. these are mobile, with the ability to be taken in across classes of bacteria if and when they confer a selective advantage for survival, as in the case of antimicrobial resistance. the new enzyme ndm- (new delhi metalloproteinase- ) was traced to an infection that occurred in patients who had been treated in india. a more complete study of the epidemiology of this enzyme in gram-negative bacterial isolates from the subcontinent suggested a broad range of gram-negatives were affected (kumarasamy et al., ) . this new biology, which was first described for extended spectrum beta lactamase (esbl) resistance in the s, has provoked renewed concern in antimicrobial resistance. was declared by the who as the year to address antimicrobial resistance. the pharmaceutical pipeline is bereft of new antibiotics to address this challenge. chillingly another new panresistant plasmid has been reported from china, which is resistant even to the last line of defense, the polymixin class of antimicrobials (liu et al., ) . this report included isolates from pigs at slaughter, retail pig and chicken meat, and humans. again, the specter of intensive agriculture fostering new biological threats calls for careful study. the isolates were largely from areas of intensive porcine agriculture in china. figure indicates sites sampled for polymixin plasmid resistance. the question of where new infections lurk in nature has been an active area of research. as noted above, the initial reservoir for sars coronavirus was thought to be civet cats which are domestically raised for food in china. however, further investigation has suggested that there may be a single host involved in many emergent diseases. in an elegant demonstration of interdisciplinary research, han et al. ( ) have recently published a persuasive article on the role of bats in emerging infections. whether or not the theses of the article prove true with further research, the work provides additional evidence of how extremely powerful interdisciplinary research can be toward solving the puzzles of emergent diseases in humans. in discussing the spillover of viruses from bats to humans, the authors write: factors that contribute to the intrusion of bats into human living environment can be summarized into a 'push' and a 'pull' (brüssow, ) . a 'push' refers to the enormous demand for more space and resources brought by the human population explosion, which leads to the destruction of bat habitats and shortage of food. natural environmental changes, such as typhoons and droughts, can also place stresses on bats. a 'pull' involves the living environments built by humans, characterized by urbanization, intensive agriculture and food animal breeding, which attracts bats into human living environments for an abundant of food supply. so coming full circle, this discussion highlights the critical importance of further understanding these events of 'species jumping' or 'spillovers,' given the pressures will only augment rather than abate. infections potentially housed in bats as their natural reservoir (from han and colleagues) is shown in table . it is an impressive array, which brings us to consider how indispensible further understanding in these interactions is to gain insight into emergent human infections. so what explains the apparent increased pace of emergence of new human infections? is it simply that we are more able, with our new technologies, to detect them? or are there forces at work that are fostering this trend? the stories of bse and nvcjd recounted above were outlined because the united kingdom, although a small country, has excellent epidemiologic, statistical, laboratory, and clinical acumen. while cases of bse and nvcjd were not confined to the united kingdom, the origin of emergence was tracked and described relatively efficiently. but, what of influenza? the potential contribution of intensive poultry and swine agriculture to the emergence of influenza a emergence was outlined in my earlier article for this publication. research over the past decade has continued to provide evidence of this risk. as intensive practices have spread to developing countries, the assurance of biosecurity has become less sure as noted in the discussion (above) of polymixin resistance through plasmids in pigs and humans. while many new strains of influenza arise in wild birds (particularly waterfowl), the link to human populations appears to be through domestic poultry (leibler et al., ) . however, other anthropogenic mechanisms are also at play. without the global 'mobile' environment of travel and trade, emergence would remain a largely local phenomenon. however, as we saw with the influenza discussion above that is not the case. nor was it the case with sars or with mers-cov. international tourism surpassed . billion arrivals in according to the world bank (world bank international tourism). after a slump in global trade during the global recession exports of food in reached nearly $ . trillion in value for selected countries where data were available. this, of course, does not include all of global trade, which has surpassed $ trillion in value (merchandise trade by product). guarding against transcontinental transmission in food or through human travel is a complex undertaking, with safeguards at the source the most likely answer. however, research, testing, and demonstration of effective measures remain wanting. finally, climate change, largely attributed to human activity, seems to be readjusting the boundaries of mosquito borne diseases. the recent incursion of zika into brazil is attributed to the el niño weather pattern now in force in that geography. while el niño oscillation is not directly attributable to human activity, the shifting of such natural oscillations and their severity may well be. in his landmark book planetary overload: global environmental change and the health of the human species, anthony j. mcmichael outlines the human-generated stress on natural systems (mcmichael, ) . he posits that food will become increasingly scarce for the human community. the macroecologic effects of human activity on climate, water, food, agriculture, pollution, and human health are well described, but the systematic link between the macrolevel (what we can see) and what is occurring on the microlevel remains an important area of research. to address the emergence of new pathogens, we need more precise knowledge about the mechanisms that form the critical pathway to emergence. a follow-up report to the landmark iom report, emerging infections, microbial threats to health: emergence detection and response was published in (smolinski et al.) (microbial threats to health) . additional factors of emergence were examined in this report: human susceptibility to infection, climate and weather, changing ecosystems, poverty and social inequity, war and famine, the lack of political will, and intent to harm. thus the original factors grew to . while enriching the discussion and description of emergence, this proliferation of factors also created overlapping domains within factors; for example, climate and weather are an integral physical science aspect of ecosystems, the failure of political will is integral to the neglect of public health systems, and so forth. from an analytic point of view, the need for in-depth study of factors and how they actually work has become critical for scientific insight into public health protection. mcmichael has suggested the term 'the anthropogenic epoch' to describe our contemporary situation. in other words, human kind is changing the nature of our environment in unprecedented ways. more recently the rockefeller-lancet commission has suggested the new scientific discipline of 'planetary health' as a unifying concept to bring the disparate strands of life sciences, and ecology more closely together to foster interdisciplinary research and insight (the rockefeller foundation, ). the key to success will require intense investment in transdisciplinary research which brings in disparate databases and talents into risk analysis. while a full discussion is beyond the scope of this discussion, a number of new tools have come into use that allow more rapid diagnosis and response to newly emergent outbreaks. a few will be highlighted here. in addition to formal disease surveillance reporting a number of informal diseases, surveillance networks have arisen among countries which share common borders or work within a common economic bloc. these networks facilitate the flow of information across borders and allow collaborative investigations, tabletop exercises, and resource sharing on an ongoing basis. in postconflict areas such as the mekong basin, they contribute to health security (gresham et al., ) . increasing sophistication of bringing disparate data sets together and creating models to understand possible scenarios has brought additional insight into prevention and control efforts for emerging diseases. prediction of where outbreaks are most likely to occur remains a very imperfect science (jones et al., ) . retrospective niche modeling has brought additional insight into how different factors may interact to foster outbreaks (daszak et al., ) . laboratory diagnosis of unknown agents has also advanced. during the sars outbreak, the who convened an informal network approach to fully sequence the new agent in -month time (david, ) . one group has put forward a vision of bringing full genomic sequencing into the laboratories of developing countries (aarestrup et al., ) . clearly the ability to quickly diagnose new agents without the necessity of culture would be an important advance. as importantly the integration of informatics linking genomic analyses to phylogenetic metadata would allow global tracking of agents. as the boundaries of microbiology are stretched with new insights from emergent diseases, the ability of the people of the world to protect against pandemics is more important than ever. global traffic and trade continue to grow, confounding national approaches with their international span. in (following sars) the who adopted the ihr (international health regulations). this is the only law with the force of an international treaty, which is in place to govern the conduct of countries during global security emergencies. the ihr outline 'core capacities' for national-level protection. it is not the optimal level for an emergent pandemic, but it is the minimum considered essential for global health security. the ihr implementation was to have been completed by all member countries by . however, implementation has languished with only one-third of countries implementing and many not disclosing their status of implementation to the who in . after the influenza pandemic, an independent expert panel was convened to assess how the ihr functioned. that panel, lead by dr harvey fineberg, then president of the institute of medicine, was explicit in outlining the gaps in global health security. the world is ill-prepared to respond to a severe influenza pandemic or to any similarly global, sustained and threatening public-health emergency. beyond implementation of core public-health capacities called for in the ihr, global preparedness can be advanced through research, reliance on a multisectoral approach, strengthened health-care delivery systems, economic development in low and middle-income countries and improved health status. fineberg ( ) . in , ebola (a known infection) emerged in guinea. at the time of its appearance, none of the countries in sub-saharan africa had implemented the core capacities of the ihr (kimball and heymann, ) . the outbreak went on to create pandemonium in the three most affected countries (guinea, liberia, and sierra leone) killing over people (and afflicting more than ) (ebola-situation). infection was introduced in other countries, but onward transmission was limited. following ebola, the international systems are again under review. initial observations remain distressingly similar to those made in . with reform of the un and who, once again underway, it will be important to follow through. of particular importance as highlighted above is the interdisciplinary (and in the case of the un interagency) nature of prevention, detection, and response to emergent threats. despite the new technological tools, the ecological factors in emergence are ever gathering force. clearly additional efforts are required. emerging infections remain an intersectoral challenge with every indication they will continue to be with us over the coming decades. integrating genome-based informatics to modernize global disease monitoring, information sharing, and response middle east respiratory syndrome: knowledge to date zika virus: rapid spread in the western hemisphere preliminary epidemiological assessment of mers-cov outbreak in south korea interdisciplinary approaches to understanding disease emergence: the past, present, and future drivers of nipah virus emergence the international response to the outbreak of sars in critically ill patients with influenza a(h n ) in mexico pandemic preparedness and responsedlessons from the h n influenza of creating a global dialogue on infectious disease surveillance: connecting organizations for regional disease surveillance (cords). emerg bats as reservoirs of severe emerging infectious diseases the value of the one health approach: shifting from emergency response to prevention of zoonotic disease threats at their source epidemiological findings from a retrospective investigation the same prion strain causes vcjd and bse global trends in emerging infectious diseases ebola, international health regulations and global safety factors influencing the emergence of new (and "old") disease, international encyclopedia of pubic health superspreading in mers emergence of a new antibiotic resistance mechanism in india, pakistan and the uk: a molecular, biological and epidemiological study industrial food animal production and global health risks: exploring the ecosystems and economics of avian influenza emergence of plasmid-mediated colistin resistance mechanism mcr- in animals and human beings in china: a microbiological and molecular biological study superspreading and the effect of individual variation on disease emergence planetary overload global environmental change and the health of the human species zika virus, a mosquito-borne infection, may threaten brazil's newborns global health microbial threats to health: emergence, detection, and response by committee on emerging microbial threats to health in the st century update: severe acute respiratory syndrome -worldwide u.s case-control study of risk factors for avian influenza a (h n ) disease, hong kong mers-cov outbreak in jeddah-a link to health care facilities a who guidance document. world health organization the rockefeller foundation-lancet commission on planetary health safeguarding human health in the anthropocene epoch: report of the rockefeller foundation-lancet commission on planetary health h n outbreaks and enzootic influenza report of the review committee on the functioning of the international health regulations the author wishes to thank ms kellie creamer for her assistance in preparing this manuscript.see also: antimicrobial resistance in a one health and one world perspective -mechanisms and solutions; arboviruses; ebola and other viral hemorrhagic fevers; global health law: international law and public health policy; influenza. key: cord- -mswb q authors: zumla, alimuddin; dar, osman; kock, richard; muturi, matthew; ntoumi, francine; kaleebu, pontiano; eusebio, macete; mfinanga, sayoki; bates, matthew; mwaba, peter; ansumana, rashid; khan, mishal; alagaili, abdulaziz n.; cotten, matthew; azhar, esam i.; maeurer, markus; ippolito, giuseppe; petersen, eskild title: taking forward a ‘one health’ approach for turning the tide against the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus and other zoonotic pathogens with epidemic potential date: - - journal: int j infect dis doi: . /j.ijid. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: mswb q the appearance of novel pathogens of humans with epidemic potential and high mortality rates have threatened global health security for centuries. over the past few decades new zoonotic infectious diseases of humans caused by pathogens arising from animal reservoirs have included west nile virus, yellow fever virus, ebola virus, nipah virus, lassa fever virus, hanta virus, dengue fever virus, rift valley fever virus, crimean-congo haemorrhagic fever virus, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus, highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses, middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus, and zika virus. the recent ebola virus disease epidemic in west africa and the ongoing zika virus outbreak in south america highlight the urgent need for local, regional and international public health systems to be be more coordinated and better prepared. the one health concept focuses on the relationship and interconnectedness between humans, animals and the environment, and recognizes that the health and wellbeing of humans is intimately connected to the health of animals and their environment (and vice versa). critical to the establishment of a one health platform is the creation of a multidisciplinary team with a range of expertise including public health officers, physicians, veterinarians, animal husbandry specialists, agriculturalists, ecologists, vector biologists, viral phylogeneticists, and researchers to co-operate, collaborate to learn more about zoonotic spread between animals, humans and the environment and to monitor, respond to and prevent major outbreaks. we discuss the unique opportunities for middle eastern and african stakeholders to take leadership in building equitable and effective partnerships with all stakeholders involved in human and health systems to take forward a ‘one health’ approach to control such zoonotic pathogens with epidemic potential. benefit the large majority of affected people. some foreign aid workers and researchers were not familiar with local cultural and medical services norms and aroused local anxieties. the evd epidemic highlighted the need for developing more comprehensive local, national, international, and global surveillance, as well as epidemic and outbreak preparedness response infrastructures. multiple animal, human, and environmental factors are obviously playing a critical role in the evolution, transmission, and pathogenesis of zoonotic pathogens, and these require urgent definition to enable appropriate interventions to be developed for optimal surveillance, detection, management, laboratory analysis, prevention, and control in both human and animal populations. an important need exists for establishing long-term, sustainable, trusting and meaningful and equitable collaborations between the animal, human, ecosystem, and environmental health sectors at the local, national, and international levels. these should include sustainable political and funder support for developing human and laboratory capacity and training that enables effective human-animal health cooperation leading to proactive surveillance, early detection of potential pandemic pathogens, and rapid initiation of public health prevention and control guidelines and interventions. whilst a long list of pathogens with epidemic potential are on the radar of the world health organization (who), ideally 'prevention is better than cure' and new pathogens should be dealt with at the animal source, tackling the drivers and triggers of pathogen evolution and emergence. this requires close cooperation between human and animal health systems and an appreciation of human impacts on the environment at all levels and easy access to adequate laboratory facilities. on december , an expert panel convened by who prioritized a list of emerging pathogens ''considered likely to cause severe outbreaks in the near future, and for which no, or insufficient, preventive and curative solutions exist''. , the list of the top includes the new viral zoonotic pathogen of humans mers-cov, , which was first isolated from a patient who died of a severe respiratory illness in a hospital in jeddah, saudi arabia in june . the emergence of mers-cov in was the second time (after sars-cov ) that a highly pathogenic coronavirus of humans emerged in the st century. a strong link between human cases of mers-cov and dromedary camels has been established through several studies. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] mers-cov is endemic in the camel populations of east africa and the middle east , , and presents a constant threat to human health in both regions. retrospective studies using stored serum from different geographical locations have indicated that mers-cov has been circulating for several decades. as of may , , there have been laboratoryconfirmed cases of mers reported to the who, with a mortality of % ( cases died). whilst most mers cases have been reported from the middle east (a large proportion from saudi arabia), mers cases have been reported from countries in all continents. the who has held nine meetings of the emergency committee (ec) for mers-cov. since evidence of sustained human-to-human transmission of mers-cov in the community is lacking, the who currently does not recommend travel restrictions to the middle east. however, mers-cov remains a major global public health threat with continuing reports of new human mers cases in saudi arabia, where millions of pilgrims from over countries travel throughout the year. furthermore, a more intensive farm-based camel livestock system has emerged and there is a large, wellestablished trade in camels between countries at the horn of africa and countries in the middle east. this has increased significantly, particularly following the lifting of the ban on live animal imports from somalia by saudi arabia in / . somalia now exports some five million live animals every year to the gulf arab states (including camels), making it the single biggest exporter of live animals in the world. the positive experience of reviving somalia's livestock export industry through increased investment in animal disease prevention and control strategies highlights how effective the 'one health' approach can be. most of the african countries do not have the resources, expertise, or capacity, including laboratory facilities, to have active surveillance for mers-cov in place. in light of this, the need for increased vigilance and watchful surveillance for mers-cov in sub-saharan africa has been highlighted previously. such an initiative could be supported through investments by countries that import large numbers of camels and other livestock from the region. the epidemic potential of mers-cov was recently illustrated by a large outbreak in hospitals in seoul, the republic korea, in mid- : mers-cov was imported by a traveller to the middle east (an agriculture businessman), resulting in mers cases with deaths. the first case was reported on may , and over the ensuing weeks, the number of secondary, tertiary, and perhaps quaternary cases of mers from this single patient rose rapidly, resulting in the largest mers case cluster occurring outside the middle east. the unprecedented outbreak was attributed to poor infection control measures at the hospitals. sequencing studies of the mers-cov isolate showed genetic recombination of mers-cov in the case exported from korea to china. however, recombination is a frequent event in mers-cov and the korean outbreak is unlikely to represent a special form of the virus. nonetheless, the potential evolution of mers-cov into a more virulent form needs to be monitored closely. research on sequencing seems to have stagnated and there have been no further sequences published from new human mers cases reported from the middle east. furthermore, the genetic evolution of mers-cov strains infecting humans over the past year remains unknown. there is an urgent need for more sequencing studies on mers-cov evolution in camels and humans, with the development of appropriate local capacity for these studies. the kingdom of saudi arabia has kept proactive watchful mers-cov surveillance with regular reports to the who of mers-cov cases. the who and ministries of health of middle eastern countries continue watchful surveillance of the mers-cov situation, and the watchful anticipation is that mers-cov may disappear with time like sars-cov. however, with the continuing, regular reports of community cases of mers-cov from saudi arabia, there are no signs of this happening in the near future and lessons must be learnt from the korean outbreak. whilst there is a growing camel livestock industry in the region, elimination of the virus is unlikely in the short term. several animal, human, and environmental factors are obviously playing a critical role in the repeated movement of mers-cov from camels to humans. the disease ecology remains largely unknown. urgent definition is required to enable appropriate interventions to be developed for optimal surveillance, laboratory detection, management, prevention, and control in both human and animal populations. whilst several ad hoc research studies have been conducted and findings published over the past years, more comprehensive investments in tackling mers-cov have not been forthcoming. there remain huge knowledge gaps on mers-cov. much of the information that we have about the source of mers-cov infections is based on small local studies and it is difficult to develop general country-wide policies without a clear understanding of the zoonotic problem. questions remain, for example are new local mers outbreaks in saudi arabia always seeded by the same type of human exposure to camels? are there particular regions of africa that provide infected camels to saudi arabia? or is there a general risk from all regions? is there a way to efficiently control the entry of infected camels? are animal vaccination strategies economically viable given the large number of imported animals and the frequency of the infection? a clear policy in which full virus genome sequences are generated from every outbreak in the country and in which virus from subsets of imported camels is routinely screened and sequenced after years, would provide incredibly useful information about the transmission patterns of the virus and how to stop it. certainly the resources and expertise to perform this sequence monitoring are available and only governmental support is needed to run such a survey. the cost of such a survey would be far less than the management costs and grief associated with a single hospital outbreak. numerous priority research questions regarding mers-cov (basic science, epidemiology, management, and development of new diagnostics, biomarkers, treatments, and vaccines) in both humans and camels, highlighted years ago by the who mers expert groups and by others, remain unanswered. these have again been raised recently, highlighted by calls from saudi arabian health care staff and scientists , and by yet another who mers expert group, which has defined a ''roadmap for research and product development against mers-cov''. in the who set up the global outbreak alert and response network (goarn) for better coordination of surveillance efforts across the globe. it networks institutions and partner agencies, with cooperation with other agencies such as public health england and the us centers for disease control and prevention (cdc) and consortia such as the international severe acute respiratory and emerging infection consortium (isaric). recent consortia such as glopid-r aim to bring together research funding organizations on a global scale to facilitate an effective research response within h of a significant outbreak of a new or re-emerging infectious disease with pandemic potential. the past years has seen outbreaks of ebola virus, zkv, and mers-cov, [ ] [ ] [ ] which indicate that the global community needs to seriously reflect on what is critically missing from current political, scientific, and public health agendas, and how to delineate what is required at the national, regional, and global levels to prevent future epidemics. the factors and operating conditions that promote the emergence and geographical spread of zoonoses are complex and may be related to a single event or chain of multiple events influenced by the genetic evolution of the pathogen, environmental and climate changes, anthropological and demographic changes, and movement and behaviour of humans, animals, and vectors. with animal, human, and environmental factors playing a critical role in its evolution, mers-cov requires more close collaboration between human and animal health systems and university academics to reduce the risk of pandemic spread. moreover, a better understanding of the agricultural dynamics involved in its persistence and spread in camels and studies on interactions between hosts in the environment are urgently needed. the intermittent detection and reporting of mers cases in the community and sporadic nosocomial mers-cov outbreaks will require a more coordinated response plan to study clinical cases, conduct translational basic science and clinical trials research, and perform longitudinal sequencing studies from human and camel mers-cov isolates. a more collaborative mers-cov response plan is required to better define mers-cov epidemiology, transmission dynamics, molecular evolution, laboratory capacity, optimal treatment and prevention measures, and development of vaccines for humans and camels. a better understanding of the prevailing disease ecology and investigations into the dynamics of infectious agents in wildlife could act as a better means of preventing outbreaks in livestock and people at source. the 'one health' concept is an important concept that focuses on the relationship and interconnections between humans, animals, and the environment, and recognizes that the health and wellbeing of humans is intimately linked to the health of animals and their environment (and vice versa). [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] a balanced ecological approach improves understanding of the true threat of novel pathogens and helps to avoid costly, poor, and inappropriate responses to new diseases. in many cases, solutions can be found through altered development pathways and are not inevitably requiring of costly, unsustainable technical and pharmaceutical interventions. thus it is ideally suited to the mers-cov situation in which camels, humans, and environmental factors are central to its persistence and evolution. since the kingdom of saudi arabia is host to millions of pilgrims each year travelling from all continents, tackling the threat of mers and other infectious diseases with epidemic potential will require enhanced closer cooperation between those who provide human health, animal health, and environmental health services, locally, nationally, regionally, and internationally: the middle eastern, european, african, asian, and american governments, veterinary groups, the who, the food and agriculture organization (fao), the african union, the united nations international children's emergency fund (unicef), the world bank, office international des epizooties (oie), cdc, public health england, the newly formed africa cdc, and funding agencies among others. they should now demonstrate increased commitment towards local, national, and global multidisciplinary collaborative efforts to secure optimal health for people, animals, and the environment. global efforts need to be focused on establishing the capability for and strengthening of surveillance systems in developing countries, particularly in africa where emerging and re-emerging zoonoses are a recurrent problem. a prime emphasis should be on developing awareness and response capacity in all countries and on promoting interdisciplinary collaboration and coordination. critical to the establishment of a well-functioning 'one health' platform is the creation of a multidisciplinary team with a range of expertise, including public health officers, physicians, veterinarians, animal husbandry specialists, agriculturalists, ecologists, vector biologists, viral geneticists, and researchers, with easy access to adequate laboratory facilities, who will collaborate in order to learn more about zoonotic spread between animals, humans, and the environment and to monitor, respond to, and prevent major outbreaks. there is an urgent and critical need to build a sustainable public health programme and rapid response capability for outbreaks of zoonotic pathogens in the middle east and in low-income countries, especially in africa. importantly there is a need for capacity development programmes designed to strengthen research training and build career pathways for the best and brightest post-doctoral researchers, including phd and masters students working at the interface of humans, animals, and environment. these should include national or regional laboratory facilities, as surveillance requires laboratory support to be meaningful. the development of human and animal health research leaders will create a critical mass of local research capacity and the development of self-funding research environments in african universities and research institutes. this capacity growth could be facilitated through the further development and support of a geographical network of equitable and enduring south-south and north-south partnerships. . need for more effective political and scientific engagement to eradicate the threat of mers-cov and other zoonotic diseases the persistence of mers-cov years since its first discovery has created major opportunities for each of the middle eastern and african countries to take leadership of the 'one health' approach with a view to bringing this under regional and global umbrellas, to tackle new emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases with epidemic potential. this will also devolve current dominance of the global health agenda by western groups and consortia and allow equitable partnerships to be established with long-term sustainability. the past year has seen some progress in research into mers-cov, but there remains a need for a more effective, coordinated, and multidisciplinary 'one health' consortium to take forward mers-cov research on priority areas already defined by saudi scientists , and the who mers committee. the establishment of regional 'one health' centres of excellence in the middle east (under the league of arab states) and at specific geographical locations in west, central, east, and southern africa could make an important difference in mitigating the risks and factors that pose a risk to both human and animal health. furthermore, any operational plan developed will contribute to strengthening the sentinel surveillance systems in sub-saharan africa in the preparedness and response to potential outbreaks. regional centres should be sufficiently empowered to manage the spectrum of 'one health' approaches to zoonotic disease control in humans and animals, from behaviour change and social interventions for prevention to surveillance of infections and antimicrobial resistance, and preparedness and response to outbreaks. a model for the major syndromes (respiratory, neurological, haemorrhagic, gastro-enteric, and sepsis-like presentations) should be developed so that clinical protocols may be adapted rapidly for any major outbreak during mass gatherings. this should include the development and introduction of innovative and smart platforms for data sourcing, sample collection, and analysis, in order to give clinicians and public health workers continuously updated information on which clinical decisions may be based. there is a pressing need to develop and strengthen the national ethics and medicines regulatory frameworks in sub-saharan africa in order to strike a balance between the public health interest, the interests of the pharmaceutical industry, and ethical values. parallel initiatives across africa and the tropics could be harmonized to create regional networks that can serve as a repository for expert 'one health' advice on agriculture, sustainable livestock, and the links to human development. there are several ongoing important initiatives on developing 'rapid response' and broader 'one health' capacity development groups in europe, asia, and the americas to assist in the surveillance and response to emerging infectious disease threats. the public health systems of west african countries failed with the ebola epidemic, and the response from the who and the international community was very slow and uncoordinated. this led to thousands of people, including over health care workers, losing their lives. the factors governing the appearance and disappearance of new coronaviruses affecting humans are complex and it has been over years since the first patient died of mers-cov. mers cases continue to be reported throughout the year from the middle east. there is a large mers-cov camel reservoir and there is no specific treatment or vaccine. the precise pathway from infected camel to the recurring mers hospital outbreaks needs to be understood in order to devise effective control measures. with million people visiting saudi arabia every year for umrah and/or hajj and the increasing importation of live animals from sub-saharan africa, the potential risk of global spread will be everpresent, especially if mutations or recombinations in mers-cov occur. a major 'one health' initiative to tackle mers-cov at source in animal populations is thus required. middle eastern and african governments should now work more closely together and increase collaborative efforts with international partners and global public health authorities if we are to prevent yet another global zoonotic pandemic. conflict of interest: all authors have a specific interest in 'one health'. the authors declare no conflicts of interest. there was no financial support. emerging and re-emerging infectious threats in the st century world health organization. ebola virus disease outbreak world health organization. zika virus be prepared: europe needs ebola outbreak consortium ethics for pandemics beyond influenza: ebola, drug-resistant tuberculosis, and anticipating future ethical challenges in pandemic preparedness and response ebola: missed opportunities for europe-africa research rapid spread of zika virus in the americas-implications for public health preparedness for mass gatherings at the brazil olympic games lessons from the ebola outbreak: action items for emerging infectious disease preparedness and response challenges in controlling the ebola outbreak in two prefectures in guinea: why did communities continue to resist? world health organization. who publishes list of top emerging diseases likely to cause major epidemics world health organization. a research and development blueprint for action to prevent epidemics middle east respiratory syndrome 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research on the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in riyadh, ksa knowledge gaps in therapeutic and non-therapeutic research on the middle east respiratory syndrome world health organization. a roadmap for research and product development against middle east respiratory syndrome-coronavirus (mers-cov) international severe acute respiratory and emerging infection consortium. the website for the international severe acute respiratory and emerging infection consortium (isaric) global research collaboration for infectious disease preparedness website emerging infectious diseases and pandemic potential: status quo and reducing risk of global spread development of medical countermeasures to middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus what is one health? one health global network one health: a new professional imperative. one health initiative task force one world, one health. oie-world organisation for animal health sharing responsibilities and coordinating global activities to address health risks at the animal-human-ecosystems interfaces. a tripartite concept note international organization for standardization. who develops iso standards. geneva: who towards a one health approach to controlling zoonotic diseases key: cord- - ef u mz authors: alsolamy, sami; arabi, yaseen m title: infection with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus. date: journal: can j respir ther doi: nan sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ef u mz nan t he middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) was first recognized as a new febrile respiratory illness in saudi arabia in june . as of september , , the who reported laboratory-confirmed cases, including at least related deaths. cases have been reported in countries; however, the majority of cases have occurred in saudi arabia ( %) and south korea ( %) ( ) . mers-cov infection has been documented in dromedary camels; evidence suggests that they are the most common source of animal-to-human transmission ( ) . although the exact mode of transmission from camels is unknown, the presence of high viral loads in the upper respiratory system of infected camels suggests that transmission occurs through close contact ( ) . humanto-human transmission of mers-cov has been demonstrated among close household contacts ( ). however, sustained community transmission has not been observed. in a cross-sectional serosurveillance study involving , individuals in saudi arabia, positive serology was documented in only . % of individuals sampled ( ) . transmission within health care settings has been a predominant feature of mers-cov infection, and has been attributed to breaches of infection prevention and control practices ( ) . coronaviruses are a family of single-stranded rna viruses. mers-cov is the sixth coronavirus and the first lineage c betacoronavirus known to infect humans. severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus is of lineage b ( ). mers-cov enters cells via a common receptor, the dipeptidyl peptidase- , and it infects type i and type ii alveolar cells ( ) . the virus has primarily been detectable in respiratory secretions, with the highest viral loads in the lower respiratory tract ( ) . the median incubation period of mers-cov infection is . days, but it can be as long as days ( ) . the most severe cases of mers-cov infection have been reported in adult patients with underlying comorbidities, including diabetes mellitus, ischemic heart disease, end-stage kidney disease or immunosuppression ( , ) . however, severe infection may also occur among younger patients, especially health care workers. the disease spectrum ranges from asymptomatic infection to rapidly progressive multiorgan failure. the most common clinical features in severe cases are fever ( %), cough ( %), dyspnea ( %) and gastrointestinal symptoms ( %) ( ) . laboratory abnormalities commonly associated with severe mers-cov infection include leukopenia, lymphocytopenia and thrombocytopenia, in addition to elevated serum levels of creatinine, lactate dehydrogenase and liver enzymes ( ) . initial chest radiographs are abnormal in the majority of symptomatic patients. findings range from minimal abnormality to extensive bilateral infiltrate consistent with acute respiratory distress syndrome patterns ( ) . respiratory samples in suspected patients should be tested using real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. lower respiratory tract specimens have been found to be more sensitive than upper respiratory tract specimens for the detection of mers-cov ( ) . rapid progression to hypoxemic respiratory failure requiring mechanical ventilation usually occurs within the first week and it is notable that it has been associated with acute kidney failure ( ) . the management of patients with mers-cov infection entails early case recognition, appropriate patient isolation, strict implementation of infection prevention and control measures, and supportive treatment. the who has issued interim guidance for the management of suspected and confirmed mers-cov infection ( ) . early supportive management includes supplemental oxygen to all patients with signs of hypoxemia or respiratory distress, conservative fluid management, early endotracheal intubation in patients with laboured breathing or persistent hypoxemia, and a lung-protective ventilation strategy ( ) . other adjunctive hypoxemic rescue therapies, such as early prone positioning and neuromuscular blockade, may be considered in patients with moderate-to-severe acute respiratory distress syndrome ( ) . in addition, systematic corticosteroids should generally be avoided unless there is another indication. high-flow oxygen and noninvasive ventilation should be used with caution because of the potential to generate aerosols ( ) . a systematic review to assess the risk for transmission of respiratory pathogens to health care workers through aerosol-generating procedures found that the following procedures were associated with an increased risk for pathogen transmission: endotracheal intubation, noninvasive ventilation, tracheotomy and manual ventilation ( ) . to date, there are no clinical trials involving humans for virusspecific therapies for mers-cov infection. data regarding ribavirin, interferon and convalescent plasma are limited ( ) . other medications, such as mycophenolic acid, chloroquine, chlorpromazine, loperamide and lopinavir, have shown an inhibitory effect on mers-cov replication in vitro; however, in the absence of clinical data, these drugs are not recommended for clinical use outside clinical trials ( ) . there is ongoing work investigating monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies against mers-cov, but no clinical data to date ( ) . the overall case-fatality rate of mers-cov infection is %, but the mortality rate of mechanically ventilated patients reaches % to % ( ) . given the potential for transmission in the health care setting, compliance with infection control measures is critical. according to who guidelines, droplet precautions should be added to the standard precautions when providing care to all patients with symptoms of acute respiratory infection. contact precautions and eye protection should be added when caring for probable or confirmed cases of mers-cov infection, and airborne precautions should be applied when performing aerosol-generating procedures with mers-cov patients ( ) . the centers for disease control and prevention (georgia, usa), on the other hand, recommends using airborne precautions with mers-cov patients at all times ( ) . hospitals should develop an infectious disease emergencies response plan. after more than three years since the first mers-cov patient was identified, this virus continues to be a significant global threat because of its high fatality rate and the gaps in our knowledge about the disease. this open-access article is distributed under the terms of the creative commons attribution non-commercial license (cc by-nc) (http:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/ . /), which permits reuse, distribution and reproduction of the article, provided that the original work is properly cited and the reuse is restricted to noncommercial purposes. for commercial reuse, contact reprints@pulsus.com middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) -saudi arabia: disease outbreak news evidence for camelto-human transmission of mers coronavirus family cluster of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections presence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus antibodies in saudi arabia: a nationwide, cross-sectional, serological study mers-cov outbreak in jeddah -a link to health care facilities genomic characterization of a newly discovered coronavirus associated with acute respiratory distress syndrome in humans emerging human middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus causes widespread infection and alveolar damage in human lungs clinical features and viral diagnosis of two cases of infection with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: a report of nosocomial transmission middle east respiratory syndrome: knowledge to date association of higher mers-cov virus load with severe disease and death, saudi arabia an appropriate lower respiratory tract specimen is essential for diagnosis of middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) clinical course and outcomes of critically ill patients with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection clinical management of severe acute respiratory infection when middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infection is suspected -interim guidance hypoxaemic rescue therapies in acute respiratory distress syndrome: why, when, what and which one? aerosol generating procedures and risk of transmission of acute respiratory infections to healthcare workers: a systematic review repurposing of clinically developed drugs for treatment of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection development of human neutralizing monoclonal antibodies for prevention and therapy of mers-cov infections infection prevention and control recommendations for hospitalized patients with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov). cdcgov key: cord- -ms zrrnd authors: bhatnagar, tarun; murhekar, manoj v.; soneja, manish; gupta, nivedita; giri, sidhartha; wig, naveet; gangakhedkar, raman title: lopinavir/ritonavir combination therapy amongst symptomatic coronavirus disease patients in india: protocol for restricted public health emergency use date: - - journal: indian j med res doi: . /ijmr.ijmr_ _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ms zrrnd as of february , , more than , cases of coronavirus disease (covid- ) have been reported from china and other countries with , deaths. on january , , the first laboratory-confirmed case of covid was reported from kerala, india. in view of the earlier evidence about effectiveness of repurposed lopinavir/ritonavir against severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) and middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) coronavirus (cov), as well as preliminary docking studies conducted by the icmr-national institute of virology, pune, the central drugs standard control organization approved the restricted public health use of lopinavir/ritonavir combination amongst symptomatic covid- patients detected in the country. hospitalized adult patients with laboratory-confirmed sars-cov- infection with any one of the following criteria will be eligible to receive lopinavir/ritonavir for days after obtaining written informed consent: (i) respiratory distress with respiratory rate ≥ /min or spo( ) of < per cent; (ii) lung parenchymal infiltrates on chest x-ray; (iii) hypotension defined as systolic blood pressure < mmhg or need for vasopressor/inotropic medication; (iv) new-onset organ dysfunction; and (v) high-risk groups - age > yr, diabetes mellitus, renal failure, chronic lung disease and immunocompromised persons. patients will be monitored to document clinical (hospital length of stay and mortality at , and days), laboratory (presence of viral rna in serial throat swab samples) and safety (adverse events and serious adverse events) outcomes. treatment outcomes amongst initial cases would be useful in providing guidance about the clinical management of patients with covid- . if found useful in managing initial sars-cov- -infected patients, further evaluation using a randomized control trial design is warranted to guide future therapeutic use of this combination. wuhan, hubei, china, with clinical presentations greatly resembling viral pneumonia. deep-sequencing analysis from lower respiratory tract samples indicated a novel cov (ncov) , which was named severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars)-cov- . since december , and as of february , , a total of , cases of cov disease (covid - ) have been reported, including , deaths. of the total deaths reported, , were in people's republic of china (prc). other than china, confirmed cases have been reported from countries . as per the statement of the who emergency committee, covid- had a case-fatality ratio (cfr) of four per cent; however, recent reports suggested it to be between and per cent [ ] [ ] [ ] . the published studies from china indicated that most cases with sars-cov- -infected pneumonia were aged above yr (median age: - yr), predominantly men ( - %) and had chronic medical conditions ( . - %). the common symptoms included fever, fatigue, dry cough, myalgia, dyspnoea, expectoration and diarrhoea [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the common laboratory abnormalities amongst patients were lymphopenia [lymphocyte count, . × /l (interquartile range iqr, . - . ), . %], prolonged prothrombin time [pt, . sec (iqr, . - . ), %] and elevated lactate dehydrogenase [ u/l (iqr, - ), . %] . unilateral ( %) or bilateral ( %) pneumonia and multiple mottling and ground-glass opacities ( %) were the common findings on chest x-ray/computed tomography (ct) scan , . patients were treated with antivirals including oseltamivir, ganciclovir and lopinavir and ritonavir, antibiotics and glucocorticosteroids , . no antiviral treatment for sars-cov- infection has been proven to be effective. a few historical control studies or case reports indicate the effectiveness of combination of lopinavir/ritonavir against sars-cov and mers-cov infections. ritonavir-boosted lopinavir was approved for use amongst hiv-infected individuals in september by the u.s. food and drugs administration . the drug has been used for over years in india. heat stable version of the medicine that is based on malt-extrusion technology meltrex™ technology was launched in india in . lopinavir is metabolized by cytochrome p a (cyp a) isoenzyme in the liver. lopinavir is always used with ritonavir to reduce the dose of lopinavir and increase the plasma levels of lopinavir as ritonavir inhibits cyp a isoenzyme. lopinavir and ritonavir are antiretroviral protease inhibitors used in combination as a second-line drug for the treatment of hiv- infection in children and adults and have limited side effects , . as per the naco (national aids control organization) guidelines, lopinavir/ritonavir is used as a second-line drug in the treatment of hiv in combination with nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (nrtis). it is also recommended by naco in post-exposure prophylaxis in hiv for days. it is also part of the first-line regimen for patients with hiv- infection . the drug has been used extensively in the management of paediatric hiv infection, especially amongst infants. thus, there is a long period of experience of its use in india. a systematic review suggested no safety or efficacy concerns for use of standard-dose lopinavir/ritonavir amongst pregnant women . boosted lopinavir has been used to prevent mother-to-child transmission of hiv- and hiv- infection . the main viral protease has been regarded as a suitable target for drug design against cov infection due to its vital role in polyproteins processing necessary for cov reproduction. lopinavir/ritonavir has been shown to have the highest inhibitory potency against cov amongst several anti-hiv- protease inhibitors . in a historical control study, lopinavir/ritonavir with ribavirin amongst sars-cov patients was associated with substantial clinical benefit. the adverse clinical outcome (ards or death) was significantly lower in the treatment group than in the controls who received only ribavirin ( . vs. . %, p< . ) at day after the onset of symptoms. a reduction in steroid usage and nosocomial infections was seen in patients initially treated with lopinavir/ritonavir, and these patients had a decreasing viral load and rising peripheral lymphocyte count . findings from in vitro and clinical studies, together with the availability and safety profiles of lopinavir/ritonavir and interferon beta- b (ifn-β b) suggest that the combination of these agents has potential efficacy for the treatment of patients with mers-cov. oral treatment with lopinavir/ritonavir in the marmoset model of mers-cov infection resulted in modest improvements in mers disease signs, including decreased pulmonary infiltrates identified by chest x-ray, decreased interstitial pneumonia and decreased weight loss . studies on mers patients with treatment regimens including lopinavir-ritonavir reported positive disease outcomes including defervescence, viral clearance from serum and sputum and survival [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . arabi et al in india, the first laboratory-confirmed case of covid- was reported from kerala on january , (https://pib.gov.in/pressrelesedetail. aspx?prid= ). subsequently, two more cases were reported from kerala. all cases had recently returned from wuhan, pr china, had mild illness and were managed symptomatically. more such cases can be expected amongst individuals travelling from china, and wuhan in particular, and amongst their close contacts. as covid- is an emerging virus, an effective treatment has not been developed for disease resulting from this virus. in view of the earlier evidence about the effectiveness of lopinavir/ritonavir against sars and mers-cov, the indian council of medical research (icmr) has suggested off-label emergency use of lopinavir/ritonavir combination for symptomatic covid- patients detected in the country. use of ifn-β b and ribavirin was not considered due to their reported toxicity, whereas oseltamivir was not considered due to its unproven efficacy against covs. this article describes the protocol for the administration of lopinavir/ritonavir to such patients and their clinical monitoring. this protocol is to be implemented along with the who guidelines on clinical management of severe acute respiratory infection when ncov infection is suspected: interim guidance . inclusion criteria: include ( ) adult over yr of age; ( ) laboratory confirmation of covid- infection by real-time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (qrt-pcr) from the recommended sample ( ) symptomatic patients with any one of the following: (i) respiratory distress with respiratory rate ≥ /min or spo of < per cent, (ii) lung parenchymal infiltrates on chest x-ray or ct scan, (iii) hypotension defined as systolic blood pressure < mmhg or need for vasopressor/inotropic medication, (iv) new-onset organ dysfunction (one or more of the following): (a) increase in creatinine by per cent from baseline, glomerular filtration rate (gfr) reduction by > per cent from baseline or urine output of < . ml/kg for six hours, (b) reduction of glasgow coma scale (gcs) score by two or more, and (c) any other organ dysfunction; (v) high-risk groups with age > yr, and those with hypertension, diabetes mellitus, renal failure, chronic lung disease and immunocompromised persons; (vi) informed consent from patient and caretaker. consent from legally authorized representative in case the patient is not able to provide the same due to his/her medical condition. exclusion criteria: (i) a patient with hepatic impairment [child pugh c or alanine aminotransferase (alt) over x the upper limit of normal]; (ii) use of medications that are contraindicated with lopinavir/ritonavir and that cannot be replaced or stopped, e.g., rifampicin, benzodiazepines, simvastatin, voriconazole and sildenafil; and (iii) known hiv-infected individual receiving other protease inhibitors containing regimens that cannot be replaced by lopinavir/ritonavir. mg/ mg -two tablets every h for days or for seven days after becoming asymptomatic, whichever is earlier; and (ii) for patients who are unable to take medications by mouth, mg lopinavir / mg ritonavir ml suspension every h for days or seven days after becoming asymptomatic whichever is earlier, via a nasogastric tube. all samples would be stored for future-related tests. should be monitored daily until discharge from the hospital and followed up till days; and (ii) patient should be discharged on clinical recovery and after obtaining two consecutive negative rt-pcr results at least h apart from oropharyngeal swabs (to demonstrate viral clearance). clinical outcomes: (i) hospital length of stay; (ii) intensive care unit (icu)-free days; (iii) requiring use of ventilator; (iv) mortality in the icu; (v) mortality in the hospital; and (vi) mortality at , and days. outcomes: (i) acute pancreatitis (defined as having: (a) abdominal pain radiating to the back; (b) serum amylase at least three times greater than the upper limit of normal; (c) radiological evidence, such as contrast ct/magnetic resonance imaging/ultrasonography, of acute pancreatitis); (ii) elevation of alt to more than five-fold upper normal limit; (iii) anaphylaxis; and (iv) adverse events and serious adverse events. laboratory outcomes: (i) viral rna loads and cycle threshold values in serial samples of nasopharyngeal and oropharyngeal swabs and blood, collected every third day (to document viral replication kinetics). the schedule of key investigations is given in the table. the complete clinical picture of covid- is not fully understood. the clinical manifestations in infected patients could range from mild illness to severe disease requiring icu admission and ventilatory support. the cfr of covid- is lower than that of sars (cfr: - %) and mers ( %) , . till now, no effective treatment has been recommended for covid- , except meticulous supportive care . the icmr has suggested lopinavir/ritonavir combination therapy for laboratory-confirmed covid- patients based on the observational studies of clinical benefit amongst patients with sars-cov and mers-cov [ ] [ ] [ ] , as well as the docking studies conducted by the national institute of virology, pune . the indian regulatory authority, central drugs standard control organization, has accorded approval for restricted public health emergency use of this treatment protocol. the initial treatment protocol was for administering the combination treatment to all laboratory-confirmed patients. however, the first three laboratory-confirmed patients from kerala had mild symptoms on diagnosis and had a stable course of illness. hence, lopinavir/ritonavir treatment was not administered in these patients. it is however, crucial to initiate the treatment before patient develops features of severe hbv and hcv elisa  @ hb%, total leucocyte count and differential wbc -neutrophils, lymphocytes, eosinophils, monocytes and basophils, rbc count, platelet count; # renal function test -bun, creatinine; * liver function test -albumin, bilirubin, alt, ast, alkaline phosphatase. ast, aspartate transaminase; alt, alanine aminotransferase; rbc, red blood cell; wbc, white blood cell; bun, blood urea nitrogen; hbv, hepatitis b virus; hcv, hepatitis c virus; ecg, electrocardiogram; sars-cov- , severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus ; qrt-pcr, real-time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction; pt, prothrombin time; inr, international normalized ratio; hba c , haemoglobin a c ; hb, haemoglobin illness. in view of this, the treatment protocol was subsequently amended to include additional criteria of severity as well as organ damage for initiating the combination treatment. the inclusion criteria also include high-risk group patients associated with higher risk of mortality (age > yr, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, renal failure, chronic lung disease and immunocompromised persons) for initiating the combination therapy. the treatment protocol also emphasizes the need for obtaining written informed consent and patients to be enrolled into this protocol on case-to-case basis. it is also equally important to monitor covid- patients closely to generate reliable data about clinical, laboratory, as well as safety outcomes. this treatment protocol has a limitation. the combination treatment is approved for emergency public health use, only amongst laboratory-confirmed patients with moderate degree of severity and not designed as a controlled clinical trial. however, the treatment outcomes amongst the first few cases would be useful in providing guidance about clinical management of covid- cases in future. if found useful in managing initial covid- infected patients, further evaluation using a randomized control trial design is warranted to guide future therapeutic use of this combination. clinical virology, world health organization. novel coronavirus -china. who; world health organization. who director-general's remarks at the media briefing on -ncov on novel coronavirus ( -ncov) situation as of statement-on-the-meetingof-the-international-health-regulations-( )-emergencycommittee-regarding-the-outbreak-of-novel-coronavirus sars to novel coronavirus -old lessons and new lessons european centre for disease prevention and control. severe acute respiratory syndrome -annual epidemiological report epidemiological, demographic, and clinical characteristics of cases of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus disease from saudi arabia: a descriptive study clinical features of patients infected with novel coronavirus in wuhan, china clinical characteristics of hospitalized patients with novel coronavirus-infected pneumonia in wuhan, china a major outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome in hong kong drugs@fda: fda-approved drugs product literature of ritonavir and lopinavir, conclusion of overview of literature and approvals relating to selected fixed-dose combinations arvs (such as ritonavir and lopinavir etc) efficacy and biological safety of lopinavir/ritonavir based anti-retroviral therapy in hiv- -infected patients: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials safety and efficacy of lopinavir/ritonavir during pregnancy: a systematic review lopinavir: a potent drug against coronavirus infection: insight from molecular docking study role of lopinavir/ritonavir in the treatment of sars: initial virological and clinical findings mers-coronavirus replication induces severe in vitro cytopathology and is strongly inhibited by cyclosporin a or interferon-α treatment treatment with lopinavir/ritonavir or interferon-β b improves outcome of mers-cov infection in a nonhuman primate model of common marmoset combination therapy with lopinavir/ritonavir, ribavirin and interferon-α for middle east respiratory syndrome virological and serological analysis of a recent middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection case on a triple combination antiviral regimen comparative and kinetic analysis of viral shedding and immunological responses in mers patients representing a broad spectrum of disease severity treatment of middle east respiratory syndrome with a combination of lopinavir-ritonavir and interferon-β b (miracle trial): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial clinical management of severe acute respiratory infection when novel coronavirus (ncov) infection is suspected: interim guidance world health organization. consensus document on the epidemiology of severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars). who middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov). who; perspectives for repurposing drugs for the coronavirus disease (covid- ) none. key: cord- - x ann authors: harvey, ruth; mattiuzzo, giada; hassall, mark; sieberg, andrea; müller, marcel a.; drosten, christian; rigsby, peter; oxenford, christopher j. title: comparison of serologic assays for middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus date: - - journal: emerg infect dis doi: . /eid . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: x ann middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) was detected in humans in . since then, sporadic outbreaks with primary transmission through dromedary camels to humans and outbreaks in healthcare settings have shown that mers-cov continues to pose a threat to human health. several serologic assays for mers-cov have been developed globally. we describe a collaborative study to investigate the comparability of serologic assays for mers-cov and assess any benefit associated with the introduction of a standard reference reagent for mers-cov serology. our study findings indicate that, when possible, laboratories should use a testing algorithm including > tests to ensure correct diagnosis of mers-cov. we also demonstrate that the use of a reference reagent greatly improves the agreement between assays, enabling more consistent and therefore more meaningful comparisons between results. middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) was detected in humans in . since then, sporadic outbreaks with primary transmission through dromedary camels to humans and outbreaks in healthcare settings have shown that mers-cov continues to pose a threat to human health. several serologic assays for mers-cov have been developed globally. we describe a collaborative study to investigate the comparability of serologic assays for mers-cov and assess any benefit associated with the introduction of a standard reference reagent for mers-cov serology. our study findings indicate that, when possible, laboratories should use a testing algorithm including > tests to ensure correct diagnosis of mers-cov. we also demonstrate that the use of a reference reagent greatly improves the agreement between assays, enabling more consistent and therefore more meaningful comparisons between results. s ince the emergence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in ( ), more than , laboratory-confirmed cases have been reported to the world health organization (who); approximately one third of these cases were fatal. a large proportion of mers-cov cases have been the result of human-to-human transmission in healthcare settings ( , ) ; outbreaks have occurred in several countries, with the largest outbreaks seen in saudi arabia, united arab emirates, and south korea ( ). dromedary camels are the putative reservoir hosts for mers-cov; they experience no or mild symptoms upon infection ( ) . primary infection can occur from dromedary camels to humans, and new cases with evidence of camel contact continue to occur sporadically ( ) . mers-cov is of the high-threat pathogens on the who research and development blueprint ( ) , a document that sets out a roadmap for research and development of diagnostics, preventive and therapeutic products for prevention, and early detection and response to these high-priority pathogens. the who roadmap for mers-cov lists several priority activities, including improved diagnostics and vaccines for humans and camels as well as basic and translational research ( ) . serologic assays are critical for the evaluation of the efficacy of new vaccines and patient treatment, as are diagnostic tools to confirm infections and perform serosurveillance. a variety of serologic assays have been developed globally, both commercially and in-house; however, there is no evidence supporting the quality of performance of these assays and their consistency with one another. participants at the who intercountry meeting on mers-cov in cairo, egypt, june - , , recognized this issue as a public health priority and called for a study to compare currently available serologic assays ( ) . therefore, we assembled a panel of human serum or plasma and polyclonal antibodies to compare the performance of serologic assays for mers-cov. we invited participants to use their testing algorithms to diagnose each sample as if it were a real patient sample. the assays were evaluated for sensitivity and specificity. pas et al. described in the impact that a single international standard would have on reducing interlaboratory variability for mers-cov diagnostics (albeit in this case for nat assays) ( ) . to this end, we included samples in the panel as examples of potential who international standard material, and we assessed their effectiveness in harmonization of the data from the participant laboratories. the national institute for biological standards and control (nibsc) human material advisory committee (project / mp) approved this project. the ministry of health, oman; ministry of health, saudi arabia; and korea national institute of health, south korea, donated convalescent serum and plasma samples from pcr-confirmed mers-cov-infected patients. all patient donors gave informed consent for the use of their serum or plasma, and samples were anonymized. we treated all mers-cov convalescent-phase serum and plasma with solvent detergent using a validated method ( ) to ensure there was no residual infectious virus. we stored all study samples at - °c until dispatched on ice packs to participants. we blind coded the study samples provided to the participants (table ) . we included plasma samples (samples , , , , and ) as individual patient samples. other smaller serum donations were pooled in samples (samples , , and ) based on their antibody titer, which we determined using the recombivirus human mers-cov nucleoprotein (np) antibody (igg) elisa kit (alpha diagnostic international, https:// adi.com). we categorized samples into high-, medium-, or low-positive pools ( figure ). we included mers-cov-negative serum with antibodies against other human coronavirus hcov- e, hcov-nl , hcov-oc , and hcov-hku (samples , , , , , , and ) to test specificity of the assays ( table ). co-authors a.s., m.a.m., and c.d. precharacterized and donated these samples. purified human mers polyclonal antibodies from transchromosomal (tc) cattle ( ) immunized with either recombinant spike protein or whole inactivated virus (samples , , and ) were donated by eddie j. sullivan (sab biotherapeutics, inc., sioux falls, sd, usa). we diluted the material in universal buffer ( mmol/l tris-hcl, ph . , . % human serum albumin, % trehalose) at a concentration of mg/ml. the participating laboratories (listed at the end of this article) were located in australia, china ( mainland, hong kong), germany, south korea, the netherlands, united states, and the united kingdom ( laboratories). participating organizations included national control laboratories, diagnostic laboratories, and research laboratories. participants tested the sample panel using their routine assays for mers-cov serology. we asked participants to perform independent assays on different days. we provided an excel spreadsheet (microsoft, http://www.microsoft.com) for reporting the raw data for each assay and any interpretation of the results, such as positive or negative diagnosis of the samples. we combined titers and relative potency (relative titer) estimates as unweighted geometric means (gms) for each sample and laboratory and used these laboratory gms to calculate overall unweighted gms for each sample. we expressed variability between laboratories using geometric coefficients of variation (gcv = [ s − ] × %, where s is the sd of log transformed estimates). to mitigate the effect of any potential outliers, we calculated robust estimates of s using the r package wrs ( ). we referred to all participating laboratories by code numbers, which were randomly allocated. if a laboratory returned data using different assay methods, we assayed the results separately for each method and referred to them according to their laboratory number and assay code; for example, ppnt (pseudoparticle neutralization test) and tcid ( % tissue culture infectious dose). a total of datasets were returned (table , https://wwwnc. cdc.gov/eid/article/ / / - -t .htm). data covered a range of different assay formats: neutralization assays, eli-sa, immunofluorescence tests, and microarray. in general, there was good agreement between all the assays tested in this study. in assays with a quantitative measurement, the limit of detection and titer of samples varied greatly, but overall determination of positive or negative agreed between all assays except for (laboratory tcid mn [microneutralization]), which failed to detect positive samples (samples and ) that all other tests detected as positive. the panel of negative control samples was deemed to be negative in all quantitative assays. there were instances of laboratories reporting a result above cutoff for samples in assay, but these samples were correctly diagnosed as negative overall by their testing algorithms: laboratory detected samples and as above cutoff at : dilution in assay only; laboratory detected sample as above cutoff at : and : dilutions in assay; and laboratory detected sample as above cutoff at dilution tested. participants detected pool a, the high-titer mers-cov antibody pool (sample ) in all assays (table ) . they detected pool b, the medium-titer pool (sample ), in all but of the quantitative assays, a tcid mn assay from laboratory . in all other quantitative assays, participants detected the high pool at a higher titer than the medium pool. in the qualitative assays, assays gave borderline positive or equivocal results for the medium pool; these assays were a euroimmun s elisa (https:// www.euroimmun.com) in laboratories and and an in-house immunofluorescence assay in laboratory . the low-positive pool (pool c, sample ) was only detected as positive in a single assay in the study, the alpha diagnostic international mers np elisa performed in laboratory . participants scored positive the purified igg samples from mers-cov-immunized transchromosomal bovine samples (samples and ) in all the qualitative assays, but of the quantitative assays, n elisa from laboratory and the alpha diagnostic international mers np elisa from laboratory , were unable to detect these samples. we expected these np assays to fail to detect sample because this antibody was raised against recombinant emerging infectious diseases • www.cdc.gov/eid • vol. , no. , october mers spike protein only; however, it was surprising that the assays did not detect sample , which was an antibody raised against whole inactivated virus. for the individual convalescent-phase plasma samples, we saw more variability in the results when compared with the pooled material, but despite this, of the samples (samples , , and ) were correctly identified as positive in all tests. sample was correctly diagnosed as positive in all tests but was identified as borderline positive by laboratory in a euroimmun elisa assay. sample was the most difficult individual patient plasma to detect as positive; it was negative in the tcid mn assay in laboratory ; equivocal/positive in the in-house immunofluorescence assay in laboratory ; and, in the euroimmun elisa, borderline/negative in lab , equivocal in lab , and weak positive in lab . sample was the weakest positive of the individual samples tested in the panel, as we saw from the titers in the quantitative assays that detected it as positive. we compiled the results of quantitative assays for the individual positive plasma samples ( figure ). to simplify comparison of the assays, we reported results from the different laboratories as relative to either the transchromosomal bovine igg sample raised against whole inactivated virus (sample ) or the high-positive pooled human serum (pool a, sample ). when we expressed data as a potency relative to either of the chosen potential reference preparations with an assigned arbitrary value of , , we observed improvement in the agreement between tests (table ; figure ). we saw the greatest reduction in the variation between laboratories (smaller sem in figure and smaller percentage geometric coefficient of variation [gcv] in table ) when we used pooled human serum (sample ) as standard. the transchromosomal bovine igg raised against whole virus (sample ) showed a substantial improvement in the agreement between laboratories; however, elisa methods included in this study could not identify this sample as positive. as detection of sporadic cases of mers-cov continues, development of new vaccines to combat the disease remains important, as does serosurveillance to understand exposure to the disease and the severity of illness in persons exposed to the virus ( ) . the importance of serologic assays for the diagnosis of mers cases should also be considered; the who guideline for laboratory testing for mers-cov, updated in january , specifically includes sample collection from suspected mers-cov cases for serology ( ) . the guideline lists situations in which laboratories should conduct serologic testing for mers-cov: for defining a sporadic mers-cov case if molecular testing, such as nucleic acid amplification methods, is not possible; as part of an investigation of an ongoing outbreak; or serologic surveys, such as retrospective analysis of the extent of an outbreak. in this collaborative study, we evaluated the performance of assays to detect mers-cov antibodies using a panel of serologic samples. all laboratories correctly identified the negative samples in the panel, including those containing antibodies against other coronaviruses, implying good specificity of the assays. laboratories reported the positive results correctly except for sample , which tested negative by all but assay; however, these results demonstrated the importance of a testing algorithm. we observed instances of a sample being incorrectly determined as negative or borderline/equivocal in a single test in a single laboratory (table ) . however, because each laboratory used a testing algorithm involving > method of analysis, all the samples with sporadic spurious results were correctly diagnosed as positive or negative; if they had used a single assay type, we would have found a higher proportion of incorrect results. the results for sample , which was a pool of serum samples from patients with confirmed mers-cov, highlight a lack of sensitivity in most of the assays in this study; further investigation would be needed to determine why the antibody titers in this pool were below the limit of detection in all but assay targeting n protein. it is important to understand whether there is a specific window of time in which clinical samples for serology should be taken or whether some patients do not mount a detectable antibody response against the spike protein during infection. such information may lead to further updates of who guidelines on laboratory testing for mers-cov. the raw titers reported from the laboratories performing quantitative assays varied greatly, for some samples > , -fold, between laboratories ( table ). the use of a reference material in the assays tightened the values from the laboratories for all the samples, enhanced comparability (figure ) , and reduced the gcv percentage between all laboratories (table ) , perhaps unsurprisingly, but the magnitude of reduction in gcv percentage was noteworthy. mers-cov is an example of an important emerging pathogen with potential to cause outbreaks; diagnostic tests for emerging pathogens are often developed during outbreaks without proper validation or calibration. this study showed the importance of using a standard reagent to allow better comparison of results from different laboratories or interpretation of results from different studies or clinical trials. as we continue to face emerging pathogens, which pose significant risks to human health, it is important to use the experience gained from studies such as this to improve our response to the next threat. standardizing assays is a key issue when different groups around the world are working to develop and produce novel assays and vaccine products. the need for a standard for mers-cov serology was discussed and was widely supported at the who-international vaccine institute joint symposium for mers-cov vaccine development in seoul, south korea, june - , . several potential vaccines are in development, and the immune response elicited, their efficacy, and correlates of protection must be assessed. the use of a reference such as who international standards ( ) will enable worldwide harmonization of assays and comparability of the results from different preclinical and clinical studies. assessing the specificity and sensitivity of methods is crucial to improve our understanding of the use and limitations of serologic assays for emerging diseases for which we have little knowledge of disease progression, antibody profiles, and other key information that is available for other infectious diseases. national institute for viral disease control and prevention department of viroscience high-containment microbiology isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia world health organization. who mers-cov global summary and assessment of risk scope and extent of healthcare-associated middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus transmission during two contemporaneous outbreaks in riyadh, saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) mers-cov in upper respiratory tract and lungs of dromedary camels, saudi arabia reported direct and indirect contact with dromedary camels among laboratory-confirmed mers-cov cases annual review of diseases prioritized under the research and development blueprint a roadmap for mers-cov research and product development: report from a world health organization consultation report on the intercountry meeting on the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (merscov) outbreak in the eastern mediterranean region geneva: the organization first international external quality assessment of molecular diagnostics for mers-cov robustness of solvent/detergent treatment of plasma derivatives: a data collection from plasma protein therapeutics association member companies triple immunoglobulin gene knockout transchromosomic cattle: bovine lambda cluster deletion and its effect on fully human polyclonal antibody production wrs : wilcox robust estimation and testing mers: progress on the global response, remaining challenges and the way forward world health organization. laboratory testing for middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus interim guidance recommendations for the preparation, characterization, and establishment of international and other biological reference standards (revised we thank the following institutions and organizations: universitätsklinikum, bonn, germany; charité-universitätsmedizin, berlin, germany; korea national institute of health; the central public health laboratory, ministry of health, sultanate of oman; public health department, supreme council of health, qatar; the ministry of health, public health directorate, kingdom of saudi arabia; sab biotherapeutics, south dakota, usa. we also thank humayun asghar from the who eastern mediterranean regional office for assistance obtaining the serum for the study. dr. harvey is a principal scientist at the national institute for biological standards and control, united kingdom. her research interests include influenza virus vaccines and respiratory viruses including mers coronavirus. key: cord- - ckjl w authors: kang, hee sun; son, ye dong; chae, sun‐mi; corte, colleen title: working experiences of nurses during the middle east respiratory syndrome outbreak date: - - journal: int j nurs pract doi: . /ijn. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ckjl w aims: to explore working experiences of nurses during middle east respiratory syndrome outbreak. background: since the first case of middle east respiratory syndrome was reported on may , in south korea, people, including health care workers, were infected, and died. design: a qualitative descriptive study. methods: seven focus groups and individual in‐depth interviews were conducted from august to december . content analysis was used. results: the following major themes emerged: “experiencing burnout owing to the heavy workload,” “relying on personal protective equipment for safety,” “being busy with catching up with the new guidelines related to middle east respiratory syndrome,” and “caring for suspected or infected patients with caution.” participants experienced burnout because of the high volume of work and expressed safety concerns about being infected. unclear and frequently changing guidelines were of the common causes of confusion. participants expressed that they need to be supported while caring for suspected or infected patients. conclusion: this study showed that creating a supportive and safe work environment is essential by ensuring adequate nurse staffing, supplying best‐quality personal protective equipment, and improving communication to provide the quality of care during infection outbreak. information on the new guidelines and job-related information via text messages using smartphones was helpful for the nurses. • creating a supportive work environment and providing adequate training for nurses is essential. the implications of this paper: • nurse managers and hospital administrators should establish strategies to prevent nurses from burnout and to ensure their safety during the outbreak of infectious diseases. • clear and consistent practice guidelines and effective communication methods among nurses should be developed. • increasing awareness of health care workers about infectious diseases to enhance emergency preparedness is essential. with mers on may , , which was days after his first visit (lee & ki, ; yang et al., ) . a mers outbreak in korea was caused by hospital-to-hospital transmission because patients were moved to other hospitals without appropriate quarantine (ki, ; kim et al., ) . it was exacerbated by overcrowding in the emergency room, delayed diagnosis, and lack of self-protection (balkhy, perl, & arabi, ; xia, zhang, xue, sun, & jin, ) . as more and more mers cases were reported, hospitals restricted the visitors and checked all visitors and employees for the presence of fever. additionally, for the temporary screening of mers-suspected cases, triage was set up to screen the infected or suspicious patients and to block the cross-transmission in and outside hospitals. furthermore, the government adopted the national safe hospital program to control mers infections within hospitals (korea centers for disease control and prevention, along with high risk of being infected, studies reported that health care personnel experienced occupational risks, distress, and the fear of contacting and transmitting the disease during epidemics of h n , severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars), and ebola virus (bukhari et al., ; chou et al., ; corley, hammond, & fraser, ; koh, hegney, & drury, ; speroni, seibert, & mallinson, ) . nurses also reported positive experiences of becoming more confident, mature, and broad-minded while caring for sars patients (liu & liehr, ) and positive feelings about their experience of caring for h n patients (honey & wang, ) . however, few studies have been conducted on nurses' working experiences during the mers outbreak. the aim of the study was to explore the working experiences of nurses during the mers outbreak. data were collected using focus group interviews and individual in-depth interviews from august to december until the data were saturated. focus group questions were developed based on a literature review (chou et al., ; corley et al., ) . each focus group was comprised of to participants. individual in-depth interviews were conducted for those who were not able to meet in focus groups because of time conflicts. prior to the interview, participants were informed about the reasons for doing this study and the goals of the study. the first author (hsk), who has experience with qualitative research, conducted the focus groups and the individual in-depth interviews. the focus group discussions and individual interviews were conducted in a private room at a site with convenient participant access. each session lasted for to hours. no one was present besides the participants and the researchers during the interviews. a semistructured interview guide was used. we conducted a pilot test with nurses caring for the patients with mers and refined the interview questions. the following questions guided the interviews: • what are your working experiences of caring for suspected or infected patients with mers during the outbreak? • what are the challenges of working during the mers outbreak? to ensure consistency and accuracy of our data, interviews were audio-taped with the participants' permission and transcribed verbatim. the researchers made field notes during and right after the • it's so sweaty and hard to breathe with it. it is hard to work and see clearly while wearing it (protective measures) and i feel dizzy when wearing it for long hours. • (we were) sweating, (find it) hard to breathe; it was difficult to work wearing personal protective equipment. being busy with catching up with the new guidelines for mers frequently changing guidelines • mers guidelines kept changing. at first, (we were told to) do thing this way and this is the guideline. we needed time to understand and practice a new guideline; however, guidelines kept changing without considering our adjustment to a new one. • the most difficult thing was that protocols were changed daily. working along with memorizing new protocols was very difficult. while workload increased, (we) were told this has been changed this way and that has been changed that way in shift change meetings. sharing the new information • we promptly communicated and shared updated information among nurses within the unit, through kakao talk (a free mobile instant messaging application for smartphones with free texting). • we had a notice note summarized about new information on mers. when changing shifts, we read the note and were also told what we have to be cautious because of what has been changed and it helped. it helped because we never had mers before and didn't know how we have to send the specimens and did not know how to cope with it. it worked as basic guidelines. lack of support • why do you have to do it, and what if you are infected? why? why does it have to be you? • when the patients' condition was bad and when we were having a hard time, no one showed appreciation of our hard work. identifying the best way to care for patients • after spending many days in the isolated room, we started using a messenger. we supported each other and shared information. it was very helpful for me to ask my colleagues when i was unsure about patient care. • we made a package for mers patients, a package for mers. at first, we brought water bottles to patients because they cannot come out a negative pressure room and we complained regarding this matter. next thing, we agreed to make a package for the patients in the isolation room. when a patient comes, we give this package that has water, sleeper, and disposable products that patients need. (continues) interviews to help understand the interviews. there were no repeat interviews carried out. the study was approved by the institutional review board ( - -hrsb- - ). all participants were informed about the purpose of this study and participants' right to withdraw from the study at any time, without penalty. confidentiality of participants was ensured, and written informed consent was obtained from each participant. the responses from the participants were analysed, using qualitative content analysis (krueger & casey, ). data collection was conducted concurrently with data analysis and continued until no new information emerged from the responses. the researchers read each verbatim transcript several times to obtain an overall understanding of the content and to gain a sense of the whole. the meaning units (words, sentence, and paragraphs) in the interviews related to nurses' work experiences were identified and coded. the codes were sorted into similar things together and grouped into categories based on similarities and differences. after assessing themes across groups, overarching themes were derived. two of the investigators independently coded each transcript. when discrepancies in coding occurred, the investigators discussed and resolved them by consensus. trustworthiness of the study was maintained following criteria by lincoln and guba ( ) . the study participants included female and male nurses. their mean age was . ( . ) years, ranging from to years, and their work experience ranged from months to years. the following major themes emerged: "experiencing burnout owing to the heavy workload," "relying on personal protective equip- participants reported discomfort in wearing ppe all day on duty. the amount of time of wearing ppe varied according to their work and the severity of the patients' condition. participants said that they preferred a mask that led to less breathing difficulties. one participant said, "i prefer the mask made by a company because it has a space that helps me to breathe easily. many nurses prefer to use it." the patterns of staying in the isolation room wearing a papr differed. nurses from one hospital stated that they stayed in the isolation room for a maximum of hours while wearing their papr and then came out; they stayed in the anteroom (a room in front of the negative pressure isolation room) and went back into the isolation room when needed. contrary to this, nurses from another hospital stayed in the isolation room for their entire shift, except for the lunch hour. meanwhile, nurses who wore a papr said that they felt like wearing a space suit. they had a backache from wearing heavy equipment. "i had put the battery of the papr on a side participants communicated with others by writing on paper. they reported that it was easy to hear the intercom sound in the room, but it was difficult to talk back because the head shield of the papr blocked out sounds. permission to use computers or smartphones in the isolation room varied across hospitals. in one hospital, nurses working in an isolated intensive unit communicated with other nurses in another isolated room using a smartphone messenger application. they said it helped them to know how others in isolation rooms were doing and to ask them when they were unsure about patient care. participants said that they gradually returned to normal life. the hospitals rewarded working with mers patients differently. these included participating in healing programs, receiving financial incentives, eating out in teams, or receiving several days off for resting. a participant said "i enjoyed participating in the healing camp. the post-trauma prevention education was also helpful. i was relieved to hear that we could seek psychiatric counselling if necessary." after completing their volunteered job with the mers patients, participants stated that they had learned on site while caring for infected patients and that it was very rewarding and worthwhile. they expressed that they felt being matured and gained a lot of confidence from these experiences. participants also said that when they returned to their work unit, they often heard "you did a good job" from their peers, and that "it felt supportive and healing." this study explored the nurses' work experience during the mers outbreak. our participants reported that their workload increased with time. this result indicates that, as part of emergency planning, nurse managers and hospital administrators should prepare for the extra workload during the emergency of an infection outbreak and to ensure quality of care. participants reported that restricting unauthorized access of visitors was one of the main issues. restricting visitors was one of the strategies used for controlling further outbreak during the norovirus outbreak (danial et al., ) . visiting hospitalized patients in a group is a part of the korean culture, as it is a way of expressing support and wishing for a quick recovery. rather than just restricting the visitors, it would be helpful to suggest alternative ways of expressing support for patients, such as sending a message through a phone or social networking service. participants expressed their concerns about the possibility of being infected. in fact, health care personnel who had close contact with mers patients were at a high risk for infection (alraddadi et al., ) . previous studies support our results. during the mers epidemic, health care workers felt fearful about being infected; however, they continued to work during the epidemic as it was their professional and ethical duty (al-dorzi et al., ; khalid, khalid, qabajah, barnard, & qushmaq, ) . emergency room nurses working during the outbreak of mers also expressed high concerns about being infected, and that they would have like to avoid caring for patients with mers if there was a choice (choi & kim, ) . these fears of nurses could be reduced by sharing the correct information about the quality of the protection devices they wear and appropriate ways to use them to prevent the transmission of infection (speroni et al., ) . in addition, hospitals experiencing mers epidemic suggested that institutional plans be made in advance to provide personal safety equipment when there is a rapid increase in its demand (al-dorzi et al., ; stirling, hatcher, & harmston, ) . however, our participants mentioned discomfort in wearing ppe. likewise, a study on a simulation exercise for health care workers wearing ppe in a hospital in the uk reported that they found the ppe uncomfortable, and even basic tasks took longer than usual while wearing it (phin et al., ) . thus, feedback from nurses on protection devices would help medical equipment companies design more comfortable medical protection equipment. our participants complained of having to continuously catch up with the frequently updated guidelines. likewise, it was reported that one of challenges for hospitals was the changing and conflicting guidelines and the overwhelming amount of information that required sifting through during the h n influenza pandemic (rebmann, regarding going back to routines, our participants felt supported when they received positive responses from peers when they went back to their unit after taking care of patients at risk. additionally, hospitals implemented various programs for health care professionals to reward or appreciate their hard work during the outbreak. the common response of participants on these was very positive. in a study, nurses who took care of h n high-risk infected patients and who worked in an isolated area in taiwan said that nurses needed counselling services (honey & wang, ) . after any outbreak, it may be important to offer a healing program for nurses, to help them share their experiences and feelings with others. a limitation of this study was that all participants were staff nurses. further research is needed to explore the mers experiences of patients, nurse managers, and other health care workers. because of variations in nurses' work schedule, the focus groups were quite small. the disadvantage of a small group is that it limits generating a rich diversity in views and the total range of experiences, although the advantage of smaller groups is that they are easier to recruit and allow everyone to have a greater opportunity to share experiences. another limitation was that this was a cross-sectional study. longitudinal studies are needed to examine the impact of any changes in hospital regulations or policies on nursing care. these study results suggest that nurse managers and administrative personnel should understand that overload of nurses' work during the outbreak may lead them burned out, which may negatively affect quality of care to patients. furthermore, establishing consistent and solid practice guidelines and efficiently disseminating them and training health care workers to deliver them could lead to less confusion during an infection outbreak. it is important to acknowledge nurses' work as valuable and to create a supportive environment in workplace of nurses. these efforts will empower nurses to work as an expert and will positively influence the quality of care. finally, it is essential to raise awareness about infection control among health care workers and people in general to strengthen emergency preparedness. the critical care response to a hospital outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infection: an observational study risk factors for middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection among healthcare personnel middle east respiratory 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in an epidemic: the example of the mers-cov outbreak in saudi arabia consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research (coreq): a -item checklist for interviews and focus groups modeling the transmission of middle east respirator syndrome corona virus in the republic of korea middle east respiratory syndrome in persons, south korea working experiences of nurses during the middle east respiratory syndrome outbreak none. the authors declare no conflict of interest. all listed authors meet the authorship criteria and all authors are in agreement with the content of the manuscript. sun-mi chae http://orcid.org/ - - - key: cord- - b authors: mok, chris ka pun; zhu, airu; zhao, jingxian; lau, eric h y; wang, junxiang; chen, zhao; zhuang, zhen; wang, yanqun; alshukairi, abeer n; baharoon, salim a; wang, wenling; tan, wenjie; liang, weiwen; oladipo, jamiu o; perera, ranawaka a p m; kuranga, sulyman a; peiris, malik; zhao, jincun title: t-cell responses to mers coronavirus infection in people with occupational exposure to dromedary camels in nigeria: an observational cohort study date: - - journal: lancet infect dis doi: . /s - ( ) - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: b background: middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) remains of global public health concern. dromedary camels are the source of zoonotic infection. over % of mers coronavirus (mers-cov)-infected dromedaries are found in africa but no zoonotic disease has been reported in africa. we aimed to understand whether individuals with exposure to dromedaries in africa had been infected by mers-cov. methods: workers slaughtering dromedaries in an abattoir in kano, nigeria, were compared with abattoir workers without direct dromedary contact, non-abattoir workers from kano, and controls from guangzhou, china. exposure to dromedaries was ascertained using a questionnaire. serum and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pbmcs) were tested for mers-cov specific neutralising antibody and t-cell responses. findings: none of the participants from nigeria or guangdong were mers-cov seropositive. ( %) of abattoir workers with exposure to dromedaries, but none of abattoir workers without exposure (p= · ), ten non-abattoir workers or controls from guangzhou (p= · ) had evidence of mers-cov-specific cd (+) or cd (+) t cells in pbmc. t-cell responses to other endemic human coronaviruses ( e, oc , hku- , and nl- ) were observed in all groups with no association with dromedary exposure. drinking both unpasteurised camel milk and camel urine was significantly and negatively associated with t-cell positivity (odds ratio · , % ci · – · ). interpretation: zoonotic infection of dromedary-exposed individuals is taking place in nigeria and suggests that the extent of mers-cov infections in africa is underestimated. mers-cov could therefore adapt to human transmission in africa rather than the arabian peninsula, where attention is currently focused. funding: the national science and technology major project, national institutes of health. middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) is one of eight emerging pathogens identified in the who research and development blueprint requiring urgent action for development of effective vaccines and antiviral drugs. the emergence of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov- ) as a pandemic virus emphasises the threat posed by zoonotic coronaviruses. mers-cov causes a zoonotic disease, middle east respiratory syndrome (mers), with out breaks in health-care facilities associated with trans mission between humans. as of november, , laboratoryconfirmed cases of mers, including associated deaths (case-fatality ratio of · %), were reported globally; the majority of these ( cases, including deaths) occurred in saudi arabia. travel-associated outbreaks led to cases and deaths in south korea. dromedary camels are the source of zoonotic mers-cov disease. the majority (> %) of dromedaries are found in africa. they have comparable seroprevalence and virus shedding to those in the arabian peninsula, but no zoonotic disease has been reported in africa. humans with prolonged close exposure to dromedaries in the arabian peninsula have serological evidence of mers-cov infection, sometimes having seroprevalence as high as %, , but serological evidence is rare in africa, even in dromedary-exposed individuals. , however, virologically confirmed infection, especially if it is asymptomatic or mild, might not lead to a serological response. thus, alternative and more sensitive methods for detection of past human mers-cov infection are needed. specific t-cell responses have been shown to be longlasting in sars-cov and mers-cov infected humans, , and persist longer than antibodies in sars. we therefore aimed to test peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pbmc) in workers from an abattoir in kano, nigeria, for mers-cov-specific t-cell responses to understand if the dromedary-exposed individuals in africa have been infected by mers-cov. in this observational cohort study, workers at an abattoir in kano, nigeria, consenting to participate in the cohort study in march - , , were recruited. nonabattoir workers were also recruited randomly from the city of kano during the same period, and blood donors aged - years sampled in may -aug , , at guangzhou blood center, guangzhou, china, were randomly included as healthy controls from a region with no dromedary camel exposure. convalescent blood samples collected from people with symptomatic or asymptomatic virologically confirmed mers-cov infections detected at the king abdulaziz medical city, riyadh, and king faisal specialist hospital, jeddah, saudi arabia, collected as part of a previously reported study were included as positive controls. the clinical, serological and t-cell responses (using only interferon [ifn]-γ as a readout of positive cells) of this patient cohort have been previously reported. pbmcs were collected at months (patients - , - , - as reported in the previous publication) or months (patients [ ] [ ] after infection. written informed consent was obtained from all study participants in nigeria and the study was approved by the health research ethics committee of the ministry of health, nigeria (moh/off/ /t.i/ ). we obtained institutional review board approval from the health commission of guangdong province to use the anonymised blood donor samples for this study. written informed consent was obtained from all recovered patients with mers to participate in this study and approval obtained from the institutional review boards of the national guard hospital, riyadh, and king faisal specialist hospital, jeddah. procedures ml of blood were collected from each study participant from the abattoir and from donors from guangzhou. pbmcs were isolated from blood using leucosep tubes (greiner, kremsmünster, austria) and ficoll-paque plus (ge healthcare, chicago, il) according to the manu facturer's instructions. pbmcs were stored in liquid nitrogen and plasma at - °c or lower before and during shipping before analysis. plasma was heat inactivated for min at °c before the serology testing. anti-mers-cov antibody titres were determined using plaque reduction neutralisation tests. , a set of -mer peptides overlapping by ten amino acids en comp assing the four mers-cov (hcov-emc/ ) structural proteins (peptides s , s , n, and me encompassing the n-terminal and c-terminal portions of the spike [ evidence before this study middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) is recognised as one of eight emerging pathogens of greatest threat to global public health, and dromedary camels are the source of human zoonotic infection. the emergence of sars-cov- highlights the pandemic potential of zoonotic coronaviruses. although zoonotic disease has been restricted to the arabian peninsula, the largest number (> %) of mers-cov infected camels are found in africa. we searched pubmed for articles published between nov , , and dec , , in english with the search terms "mers" and "coronavirus" and "human" and "africa" and manually screened all retrieved articles. there was one mers outbreak reported in tunisia initiated by a traveller returning from the arabian peninsula but no reports of zoonotic disease in africa. there were six sero-epidemiological studies of camel-exposed or other humans in kenya, egypt, nigeria, and morocco and only two (two of in kenya and three of tested in morocco) found any evidence of mers-cov infection. because there was evidence that serological assays for mers-cov had suboptimal sensitivity for past infection and because we had previous data showing that t-cell assays for mers-cov are specific and potentially more sensitive than antibody detection, we investigated t-cell responses in dromedary-exposed abattoir workers and controls in nigeria. we found that ( %) of abattoir workers with exposure to dromedaries had mers-cov specific t-cell responses, but of abattoir workers without exposure to dromedaries and ten non-abattoir workers from kano, none had such t-cell responses. no individuals with mers-cov t-cell responses had detectable antibody. by contrast, t-cell responses to endemic human coronaviruses were detected comparably in abattoir workers with and without exposure to dromedaries and control groups. we document that dromedary-exposed individuals in africa are frequently infected with mers-cov without evidence of severe disease. our findings indicate that there is substantial zoonotic transmission of mers-cov to people with dromedary exposure in parts of africa. the contribution of mers-cov to zoonotic respiratory disease remains to be established. our findings have implications for global mers-cov control policy. there is a need to confirm our findings elsewhere in africa and to include molecular testing for mers-cov in the investigation of patients with severe acute respiratory infections in dromedary-exposed populations in africa. orf b, orf and orf b) were synthesised by sino biological (shanghai, china), and used for stimulation of pbmcs. t-cell responses were measured using intracellular cytokine staining assays for interferon-γ (ifn-γ) and tumour necrosis factor (tnf). structural proteins peptide libraries of hku -cov, oc -cov, nl -cov, and e-cov were also synthesised by sino biological to detect viral-specific t-cell responses. to enhance specificity, only cells with dual expression of both ifn-γ and tnf after peptide stimulation were considered as positive. flow cytometry was used to determine the phenotype and function of t cells. the following anti-human monoclonal antibodies were used: bv -cd (hit a; bd, san jose, ca), percp-cy . in a previous study of dromedary abattoir workers in saudi arabia, ten of workers sampled had detectable t-cell responses to mers-cov. on the basis of this finding, and the assumption that abattoir workers without dromedary exposure and the other control groups would have no detectable t-cell responses, eight abattoir workers would be the minimal sample size required to detect a positive result with % probability, where the detection probability is given by: -( -p)n with p equivalent to / and n being the sample size. we aimed at sampling all abattoir workers who consented to participate, as long as we successfully sampled at least eight dromedary-exposed abattoir workers. association of t-cell responses with different exposure to dromedaries was done using fisher's exact test. in univariate analysis, we estimated the crude odds ratio (or) for each potential epidemiological exposure factor in relation to mers-cov t-cell positivity using a logistic regression model. independent risk factors for t-cell positivity were identified using multivariable logistic regression. we included a-priori variables, such as years of work in abattoir and whether other household members frequently visited camel farms, and other variables with a crude or of more than or less than · in the univariate analysis. due to small sample size and cross-related practices of drinking camel milk and camel urine, we first fitted a logistic regression model which considered all four combinations of the two practices (eg, drinking camel milk only, drinking camel urine only, drinking both camel milk and urine or not drinking either), adjusted for potential confounding factors (model ). then we further assessed the effect of drinking camel milk and camel urine separately in two models (models and ) . missing data were handled using multiple imputation with imputations by predictive mean matching using the aregimpute function in r. all statistical analyses were done using r version . . . the funder of the study had no role in study design, data collection, data analysis, data interpretation, or writing of the report. the corresponding author had full access to all the data in the study and had final responsibility for the decision to submit for publication. we recruited volunteers working in an abattoir in kano, nigeria. dromedaries, sheep, goats, and cattle were slaughtered in different areas of this abattoir (appendix p ), and workers usually restrict themselves to work with one animal type. ( %) workers had occupational exposure to dromedaries, whereas ( %) were only involved in the slaughtering of sheep, goats, or cattle. ten people residing in kano not involved in abattoir-work and volunteers from guangzhou, china, with no exposure to dromedaries, were also recruited as additional controls. patients with confirmed mers from saudi arabia were included in this study as positive controls. all participants were adults (aged ≥ years). boots were the main protective equipment used by abattoir workers with ( [ %] of ) and without ( [ %] of ) exposure to dromedaries, whereas other protection, such as gloves, coveralls, masks, or goggles, were rarely used. there was no significant difference in the demographic characteristics between the three groups recruited in kano (table ) . none of the sera collected neutralised the nig virus (previously isolated at the same abattoir) at the dilution of : to levels of greater than % of control, the lowest threshold for a positive result (data not shown). pbmcs possessed good viabilities in all groups from which they were collected (appendix p ) and responded to anti-human cd stimulation (appendix p ). ( %) of samples from workers with exposure to dromedaries contained cd + or cd + t cells that responded to at least one peptide pool, particularly s and s pools ( figure a, b; appendix p ) . no mers-cov specific cd + or cd + t-cell responses were detected in the three groups without exposure to dromedaries ( figure c, d) . the proportion of individuals with both cd + and cd + t-cell responses was significantly larger among dro medaryexposed abattoir workers than in workers without exposure (cd + p= · ; cd + p= · ), non-abattoir workers (cd + p= · ; cd + p= · ), or the ghuangzhou control group (cd + p= · ; cd + p= · ). the magnitude of the cd + t-cell responses in abattoir workers with exposure to dromedaries was similar to individuals in the saudi arabian positive control group with a subclinical condition (p= · ), whereas the cd + t-cell responses were comparable to the symptomatic group (p= · ). for stimulation with peptide pools derived from mers-cov accessory proteins (orf , orf a, orf b, orf and orf b), pbmcs were available from workers with exposure to dromedaries who had t-cell responses to mers-cov structural proteins, from who had negative t-cell responses to mers-cov structural proteins, and from four each from abattoir workers without exposure to dromedaries and non-abattoir workers. eight of the dromedary-exposed workers who had t-cell responses to structural proteins also had t-cell responses to accessory proteins ( figure e ). none of the abattoir workers with dromedary exposure who did not have t-cell responses previously, nor those without dromedary exposure and non-abattoir workers had t-cell responses to accessory proteins ( figure e ). all the t-cell responses detected to accessory proteins were cd + t-cell responses and no cd + t-cell responses were detected (data not shown). taken together, of workers with exposure to dromedaries in our cohort, six had both cd + and cd + t-cell responses against mers-cov structural proteins, four had only cd +, and eight had only cd + t-cell responses. the mers-cov-specific cd + and cd + t cells were multifunctional with dual expression of two cytokines (ifn-γ and tnf). the majority of mers-cov-specific cd + t cells from dromedary-exposed workers were phenotypically effector memory (cd ra-ccr -) cells (figure f), whereas cd + t cells consisted of effector memory (cd ra-ccr -) and effector (cd ra+ ccr -) cells ( figure g, h) , comparable to the temra subset (effector memory t cells expressing cd ra) described in mers survivors. thus, these multifunctional cells are expected to rapidly and efficiently respond to subsequent mers-cov reinfection. ( %) of the participants had pbmcs available for additional testing for four endemic human coronaviruses ( e, hku , nl , and oc ), including dromedary-exposed workers positive and ten negative for a mers-cov t-cell response and from the negative control groups who were all mers-cov t-cell negative. ( %) of were t-cell positive to one or more of the human coronaviruses, with cd + t-cell responses being detected in all four groups (figure a), whereas cd + t-cell responses were found less often (figure b). in this group of people, mers-cov t-cell responsiveness was not significantly associated with t-cell responses to any of the other coronaviruses (fisher's exact test; e p= · , hku p= · , nl p= · , and oc p= · ). of the with t-cell response to any of the other coronaviruses, ten ( %) had t-cell responses to mers-cov. by contrast, seven ( %) of with no detectable t-cell response to any other coronavirus had t-cell responses to mers-cov, the negative association being statistically significant (fisher's exact test p= · ) . human coronaviruses did not differ between the exposure groups and this was in marked contrast with the observations with mers-cov, which was observed exclusively in the dromedary-exposed group. drinking unpasteurised camel milk (or · , % ci · - · ) and drinking camel urine ( · , · - · ) were significantly and negatively associated with t-cell positivity (table ). in the multivariate analysis, drinking both camel milk and urine was significantly negatively associated with t-cell responses ( · , % ci · - · ; model ; table ). similar findings were obtained from a model without adjustment for potential confounders (data not shown). we further assessed the effect of each practice separately (models and ; table ) and found that drinking unpasteurised camel milk ( · , · - · ) and camel urine ( · , · - · ) remained a significant factor for t-cell negativity. the two practices of drinking camel milk and camel urine were closely cross-related; ( %) of dromedary-exposed workers drank camel milk or urine, drank milk without drinking urine, and two drank urine without drinking milk. our results indicated that drinking camel milk or camel urine was associated with a protective effect against mers-cov infection, but we could not separate their independent effects in the analysis. dromedaries in africa have comparable seroprevalence of mers-cov and virus shedding to those in the arabian peninsula, but zoonotic disease has not been reported. , , even serological evidence of mers-cov infection in dromedary-exposed populations is uncommon. we previously found no serological evidence of mers-cov infection in dromedary-exposed abattoir workers in an abattoir in kano, nigeria, although virus rna was repeatedly detected in the camels slaughtered during the winter months, with a peak of % of animals shedding virus in some weeks. the negative serological results in workers from the same abattoir in this study were thus consistent with those of other studies of dromedary-exposed populations in kenya and egypt, which also did not find mers-cov-specific antibodies. , , one study in kenya found two seropositive individuals among people tested, and our study in morocco detected three seropositive individuals among people living in dromedary herding areas. because some patients with confirmed mers disease might not manifest neutra lising antibody responses and because such antibody responses can wane over time, serological studies could underestimate the extent of mers-cov infections in africa. furthermore, antibody responses might not be positive in those with mild or asymptomatic infection, , [ ] [ ] [ ] and t-cell responses are known to be more sensitive and long-lasting following sars-cov infections. we have therefore previously analysed t-cell responses to mers-cov. in these studies, both mers survivors (symptomatic and asymptomatic) and camel workers one abattoir worker with exposure to dromedaries had missing data for years working in abattoir, one for other household members frequently visited camel farms, two for travel outside kano in the past months, and one for participated in mass gathering. *mean for age was · years (sd · ). †mean for years working in abattoir was · years (sd · ). (asymptomatic) identified in saudi arabia were shown to have mers-cov specific t cells in their blood, and some of those with t-cell responses did not have neutralising antibodies. comparable findings were observed in the korean outbreak; some patients with mild mers did not produce neutralising antibodies but had mers-cov-specific t cells in their peripheral blood. we have shown that mers-cov-specific t cells were present in ( %) of dromedary-exposed workers but not in controls without exposure to dromedaries, and we conclude that mers-cov infections in people with occupational contact with dromedaries is underestimated in nigeria, and probably elsewhere in africa. t-cell responses in these workers recognised the highly variable s region and unique accessory proteins found in mers-cov, arguing for the mers-cov specificity of the t-cell responses. by contrast, t-cell responses to human coronaviruses nl , hku , e, and oc were found equally distributed in the dromedary-exposed worker group and the control groups (abattoir workers without dromedary exposure, non-abattoir workers, and ghuangzhou negative control). cross-reactive t-cell responses to other human endemic coronaviruses were not likely to be an explanation for the mers-cov t-cell responses in the dromedary-exposed workers, the association being a negative one. the observation that dromedary-exposed individuals with mers-cov t-cell responses did not have antibody responses is consistent with previous studies on mers and the underlying mechanisms needs further investigation. a question of relevance to public health is why no human zoonotic mers has been documented in africa even though zoonotic infection seems to be taking place as assessed by specific t-cell responses. the perception that mers does not occur in africa might reduce the use of mers-cov diagnostics in patients who have travelled to the arabian peninsula, precluding detection of zoonotic mers in africa. our finding that zoonotic mers-cov infection is occurring in dromedaryexposed populations in africa highlights that mers-cov needs to be considered in the differential diagnosis of patients with severe acute respiratory infections in these regions. an alternative hypothesis is that mers-cov strains in africa differ in pathogenic potential to those circulating in the arabian peninsula-ie, causing infection but less likely to cause severe disease. we have shown that mers-covs identified from africa (clade c), including those isolated in nigeria (clade c ), are phylogenetically distinct from contemporary viruses causing disease in the arabian peninsula (clade b). , , viruses from the african clade c -lineage were found to replicate less efficiently in human respiratory epithelial cell lines, in ex-vivo cultures of the human lung and in experimentally infected human dpp transgenic mice, possibly suggesting impaired pathogenic potential. the absence of antibodies in individuals with t-cell responses might also be indicative of less severe infections, because patients with mild or asymptomatic mers-cov infections often do not have detectable antibody in both the acute and convalescent stages of infection. , irrespective of whether mers-cov in africa is less pathogenic than the virus strains in the arabian peninsula, our findings argue for more intensive investigation of mers-cov in both humans and camels in africa. if repeated unsuspected zoonotic transmission of mers-cov continues to take place in africa as our findings indicate, given the much larger number of mers-cov-infected dromedaries in africa, the possibility of the virus adapting and efficiently transmitting between humans is probably more likely here than in the arabian peninsula where mers control efforts have been focused. the phylogenetic diversity of clade c viruses in africa suggests that these are the precursors that gave rise to the potentially more pathogenic clade b viruses currently enzootic in the arabian peninsula. , if so, similar pathogenic mers-cov might independently emerge in africa. overall, our findings suggest that the mers control in the arabian peninsula needs to be extended to africa. occupational contact with camels was found to be a key risk factor for mers-cov infection, as defined by the positive t-cell responses against mers-cov. a univariate analysis of exposure factors associated with mers-cov infection (ie, mers-cov t cell reactivity) in the dromedary-exposed worker group revealed that drinking unpasteurised camel milk and drinking camel urine for medicinal purposes were significantly and negatively associated with infection risk. because the practices of drinking raw camel milk and urine were often associated and because of the small sample size, it was not possible to estimate their independent effects in a multivariate analysis in which both factors were concurrent variables. the finding that drinking unpasteurised camel milk was negatively correlated with infection risk is surprising and requires independent confirmation. camel milk has been previously thought of as a potential risk factor for mers-cov infection because mers-cov virus has sometimes been detected in camel milk. however, camel milk contains high titre antibodies to mers-cov, which is likely to neutralise any infectious virus particles, and viable mers-cov was not isolated from milk samples in which mers-cov rna was detected. thus, mers-cov antibody present in camel milk could provide protection against mers-cov infection. our study had some limitations. exposure and risk factors associated with t-cell positivity were self-reported and the details on frequency or intensity for different modes of contacts with dromedaries were not collected. a small sample size reduced the power of the multivariable logistic regression analysis, although we were still able to identify a large protective effect of drinking unpasteurised camel milk or urine on t-cell positivity. in conclusion, we have shown that detection of virusspecific t-cell responses was a more sensitive method for detecting past infection compared with the serological tests being used hitherto, findings that may be also relevant to assessment of population-based infection attack rates of sars-cov- using seroprevalence that are currently under way. our findings suggest that the incidence of mers infections taking place in africa is underestimated. these findings have implications for policies on global mers prevention and control and highlight the need for attention towards camel-herding regions in africa as well as the arabian peninsula. ckpm, jincz, and mp designed the study. ckpm, joo, and sak coordinated and carried out the field work. az, jingz, and jincz designed and performed the experiments. jw, zc, zz, and rapmp participated in the experiments. ckpm, az, jingz, and mp analysed the data. ehyl and wl did the statistical analysis. yw collected pbmc from guangzhong blood donors. ana and sab provided mers patients samples from saudi arabia. ww and wt contributed new reagents. ckpm, az, jincz, and mp drafted the manuscript. all authors critically reviewed and commented on the manuscript. we declare no competing interests. review of emerging infectious diseases requiring urgent research and development efforts middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in dromedary camels: an outbreak investigation risk factors for mers coronavirus infection in dromedary camels in burkina faso presence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus antibodies in saudi arabia: a nationwide, cross-sectional, serological study occupational exposure to dromedaries and risk for mers-cov infection no serologic evidence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection among camel farmers exposed to highly seropositive camel herds: a household linked study middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) neutralising antibodies in a high-risk human population mers-cov antibody responses year after symptom onset, 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responses to middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus during the acute and convalescent phases of human infection memory t cell responses targeting the sars coronavirus persist up to years post-infection middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in dromedary camels in africa and middle east middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in dromedary camels in nigeria enzootic patterns of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in imported african and local arabian dromedary camels: a prospective genomic study middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) rna and neutralising antibodies in milk collected according to local customs from dromedary camels key: cord- -rgrt e r authors: yan, bingpeng; chu, hin; yang, dong; sze, kong-hung; lai, pok-man; yuan, shuofeng; shuai, huiping; wang, yixin; kao, richard yi-tsun; chan, jasper fuk-woo; yuen, kwok-yung title: characterization of the lipidomic profile of human coronavirus-infected cells: implications for lipid metabolism remodeling upon coronavirus replication date: - - journal: viruses doi: . /v sha: doc_id: cord_uid: rgrt e r lipids play numerous indispensable cellular functions and are involved in multiple steps in the replication cycle of viruses. infections by human-pathogenic coronaviruses result in diverse clinical outcomes, ranging from self-limiting flu-like symptoms to severe pneumonia with extrapulmonary manifestations. understanding how cellular lipids may modulate the pathogenicity of human-pathogenic coronaviruses remains poor. to this end, we utilized the human coronavirus e (hcov- e) as a model coronavirus to comprehensively characterize the host cell lipid response upon coronavirus infection with an ultra-high performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (uplc–ms)-based lipidomics approach. our results revealed that glycerophospholipids and fatty acids (fas) were significantly elevated in the hcov- e-infected cells and the linoleic acid (la) to arachidonic acid (aa) metabolism axis was markedly perturbed upon hcov- e infection. interestingly, exogenous supplement of la or aa in hcov- e-infected cells significantly suppressed hcov- e virus replication. importantly, the inhibitory effect of la and aa on virus replication was also conserved for the highly pathogenic middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov). taken together, our study demonstrated that host lipid metabolic remodeling was significantly associated with human-pathogenic coronavirus propagation. our data further suggested that lipid metabolism regulation would be a common and druggable target for coronavirus infections. coronaviruses are enveloped viruses with a large single-strand, positive-sense rna genome [ , ] . as of today, there are a total of six coronaviruses that are known to infect humans, including human coronavirus oc (hcov-oc ), human coronavirus e (hcov- e), severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov), human coronavirus hku (hcov-hku ), human coronavirus nl (hcov-nl ), and the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) [ ] . these human-pathogenic coronaviruses cause a broad range of clinical manifestations. hcov-oc , hcov- e, hcov-hku , and hcov-nl cause mild, self-limiting upper respiratory tract infections. in contrast, sars-cov and the recently emerged mers-cov may cause severe pneumonia with acute respiratory distress syndrome, multi-organ failure, and death in both immunocompetent and immunocompromised hosts [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . lipids play crucial roles at various stages in the virus life cycle. first, lipids can serve as the direct receptors or entry co-factors for enveloped and non-enveloped viruses at the cell surface or the endosomes [ , ] . second, lipids and lipid synthesis play important roles in the formation and function of the viral replication complex [ , ] . third, lipid metabolism can generate the required energy for efficient viral replication [ ] . moreover, lipids can dictate the proper cellular distribution of viral proteins, as well as the trafficking, assembly, and release of virus particles [ , ] . in this regard, the host lipid biogenesis pathways play indispensable roles in modulating virus propagation. as in other viruses, lipids play key roles in the life cycle of coronaviruses. coronaviruses confiscate intracellular membranes of the host cells to generate new compartments known as double membrane vesicles (dmvs) for the amplification of the viral genome. dmvs are membranous structures that not only harbor viral proteins but also contain a specific array of hijacked host factors, which collectively orchestrate a unique lipid micro-environment optimal for coronavirus replication [ ] . a recent study indicated that a key lipid processing enzyme, cytosolic phospholipase a α enzyme (cpla α) that belongs to the phospholipase a (pla ) superfamily, was closely associated with dmvs' formation and coronaviruses' replication [ ] . the viral protein and rna accumulation, as well as the production of infectious virus progeny, were significantly diminished in the presence of cpla α inhibitor [ ] . at the same time, phospholipase a group iid (pla g d), an enzyme that predominantly contributes to anti-inflammatory/pro-resolving lipid mediator expression, contributed to worsened outcomes in mice infected with sars-cov by modulating the immune response [ ] . however, to date, the change and modulating effects of the specific lipids involved in lipid rearrangement upon coronavirus infection remains largely unexplored. to obtain a comprehensive and unbiased profile of perturbed lipids upon coronavirus infection, we performed mass spectrometry (ms)-based lipidomics profiling on coronavirus-infected cells using hcov- e as a model virus. specific lipids including glycerophospholipids and fatty acids (fas) upon virus infection were identified, which represented the lipid species that were rearranged by hcov- e infection. further pathway analysis revealed that the linoleic acid (la) and arachidonic acid (aa) metabolism axis was the most perturbed pathway upon hcov- e infection. importantly, supplement of additional la and aa to coronavirus-infected cells significantly inhibited virus replication of both hcov- e and the highly virulent mers-cov, suggesting that the la-aa metabolism axis is a common and essential pathway that could modulate coronavirus replication. in this regard, temporal modulation of the host lipid profile is a potential novel strategy to combat emerging human coronaviruses. high performance liquid chromatography (hplc)-grade methanol, acetonitrile, chloroform and -propanol were purchased from merck (darmstadt, germany). hplc-grade water was prepared using a milli-q water purification system (millipore, burlington, ma, usa). analytical grade acetic viruses , , of acid and commercial standards used for biomarker identification were purchased from sigma-aldrich (st. louis, mo, usa). internal standards (is) including arachidonic acid-d , (s)-hete-d , leukotriene-b -d and platelet-activating factor c- -d (paf c- -d ) were purchased from cayman chemical (ann arbor, mi, usa) [ ] . huh- and veroe cells were maintained in dulbecco's modified eagle medium (dmem) supplemented with % heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum (fbs), u/ml penicillin, and g/ml streptomycin ( % co at • c). mers-cov (emc/ strain) was kindly provided by professor ron fouchier (erasmus medical center, rotterdam, the netherlands). mers-cov and hcov- e were cultured in veroe cells in serum-free dmem supplemented with u/ml penicillin and g/ml streptomycin as we described previously [ ] [ ] [ ] . the supernatants were harvested when cytopathic effects (cpe) were observed and centrifuged to generate the viral stocks. the viral stocks were titrated by plaque assay on veroe cells and stored at − • c as previously described [ , ] . briefly, confluent veroe cells were infected with -fold serial viral dilutions. the cells were incubated with diluted viruses at • c for h and subsequently overlaid with % low-melting-point agarose (promega, madison, wi, usa). the cells were fixed with % formaldehyde as the plaques were observed and then stained with . % crystal violet. all experiments involving live mers-cov followed the approved standard operating procedures of the biosafety level facility as previously described [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . huh- cells were seeded into -well plate to reach % confluency and infected with mers-cov or hcov- e at multiplicity of infection (moi) of . or , respectively. after h of inoculation, the cells were washed with phosphate-buffered saline (pbs) and maintained in lipids-supplemented medium at the indicated concentrations for h. aa, la, oleic acid (oa), and palmitic acid (pa) were dissolved in ethanol and ethanol was used as a negative control. the lipids were purchased from cayman chemical (ann arbor, mi, usa). the supernatants and cell lysates were collected at h post-infection. the viral genome copy numbers were determined by reverse-transcription quantitative polymerase chain reaction (rt-qpcr) as previously described [ ] [ ] [ ] . confluent huh- cells were mock infected or infected with hcov- e at moi of and incubated in dmem medium. at hpi, cells were collected for cellular lipid extraction. the lipid extraction was performed for liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (lc-ms) analysis according to a previously described protocol with slight modifications [ , ] . inactivation of virus infectivity was confirmed before further processing as we previously described with some modifications [ ] . briefly, µl of ice-cold mm ammonium bicarbonate solution was added to dissociate cells. two millilitres of chloroform/methanol (v/v : ) containing is were added, followed by vortexing and centrifugation at rpm for min at • c. the bottom phase was transferred to glass vials and dried using a vacuum concentrator for storage at − • c. the dried samples were reconstituted in µl solvent mixture containing methanol/ -propanol/water (v/v/v : : ) for lc-ms analysis. after centrifugation at , rpm for min at • c, supernatants were transferred to lc vials for lc-ms analysis. the lipid extract was analyzed using an acquity uplc system coupled to a synapt g -si high definition mass spectrometry (hdms) system (waters corp., milford, ma, usa). the chromatography was performed on a waters acquity beh c column ( . µm, . × mm, i.d., . mm, waters corp., milford, ma, usa). the mobile phase consisted of (a) . % acetic acid in water and (b) acetonitrile. gradient elution applied for ultra-high performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (uplc-ms) analysis was described in table s . the column and autosampler temperature were maintained at • c and • c, respectively. the injection volume was µl [ ] . the mass spectral data were acquired in both positive and negative modes. the capillary voltage, sampling cone voltage and source offset were maintained at . kv, v, and v, respectively. nitrogen was used as desolvation gas at a flow rate of l/h. the source and desolvation temperatures were maintained at • c and • c, respectively. mass spectra were acquired over the m/z range of to . the synapt g -si hdms system was calibrated using sodium formate clusters and operated in sensitivity mode. leucine enkephalin was used as a lock mass for all experiments. ms/ms acquisition was operated in the same parameters as ms acquisition. collision energy was applied at the range from to ev for fragmentation to allow putative identification and structural elucidation of the significant lipids. acquisition of the raw data was performed using masslynx software version . (waters corp., milford, ma, usa) and raw data were converted to the common data format (netcdf) files using conversion software databridge (waters corp., milford, ma, usa). the netcdf data were subsequently deconvolved into a usable data matrix using the xcms software (http://metlin.scripps. edu/download/) [ ] and the grouping of features was performed using the camera r package [ ] . preprocessed data were then exported as a .csv file for further data statistical analysis. metaboanalyst . (http://www.metaboanalyst.ca) and simca-p v . (umetrics, umeå, sweden) were used for univariate and multivariate statistical analysis, respectively [ ] . for univariate analysis, statistical significance of features was determined between the mock and hcov- e infected group using the student's t-test and fold change. the p-value < . and fold change > were used as criteria for significant features selection. for multivariate analysis, the features were subjected to pareto scaling firstly then orthogonal partial least squares discriminant analysis (opls-da) was performed as a supervised method to find important variables with discriminative power. the opls-da model was evaluated with the relevant r and q . the variable importance in projection (vip), which reflects both the loading weights for each component and the variability of the response explained by this component, was used for feature selection [ ] . ms/ms fragmentation was performed on the significant features with high abundances. the significant features identification were carried out by searching accurate ms and ms/ms fragmentation pattern data in the metlin database (metabolomics database, http://metlin.scripps. edu/), human metabolome database (http://www.hmdb.ca/), and lipd maps (lipidomics gateway, http://www.lipidmaps.org/). for confirmation of lipid identity using authentic chemical standard, ms/ms fragmentation pattern of the chemical standard was compared with that of candidate lipid under the same lc-ms condition to reveal any matching [ , ] . to investigate how coronavirus perturbs host lipid metabolism, we performed lipidomics analysis on hcov- e-infected huh cells and compared the results with those of the mock-infected cells. the preliminary features list included precursor ions, adducts and isotope ions, which were imported into the metaboanalyst and simca-p software for further analysis. the r x/ r y, represented the x/y variables explanation rate of the opls-da model, were . % and . %, respectively. the predicted component, as estimated by cross-validation, was . (q ). these cross-validated parameters were satisfactory for opls-da mode (supplementary figure s a) . at the same time, the permutation test ( times) also indicated that the validated model was satisfied (supplementary figure s b) . overall, our results demonstrated that these significant lipid features could be selected by the validated statistical model for subsequent identification. a total of (positive mode) and (negative mode) ion features were selected according to the omics-based statistical analysis method. these ion features were significantly discriminative between hcov- e-infected and mock-infected cells. to observe the discrimination trend in more detail, a hierarchical clustering analysis was performed based on the degree of similarity of lipid abundance profiles to show the overview trend of all significant ion features. as indicated in figure , most of the significant features from both negative mode ( figure a ) and positive mode ( figure b ) expressed an up-regulation trend after hcov- e infection compared with the mock infection controls. furthermore, to identify lipids specific to hcov- e infection, these significant features were grouped and annotated using the camera software, and the potential precursor ions were used to perform further ms/ms experiments for obtaining their fragmentation patterns. finally, a total of lipids were identified, which could be classified into three lipid classes, including lysophosphatidylcholine (lysopc), lysophosphatidylethanolamine (lysope) and fatty acid (fa). the chromatogram peak heights of these identified lipids were generated by lc-ms raw data and the ratio between infected and mock-infected cells was determined. as demonstrated in figure , we found a consistent up-regulation trend of the identified lipids in hcov- e-infected cells. in particular, lysopc was the predominant lipid class of all identified, accounting for approximately % of all identified lipids with significant elevation (figure a ). at the same time, arachidonic acid (aa), which belongs to the fa class, showed the highest increase in fold-change among all identified lipids with a maximum of . -fold increase ( figure b ). in addition, the level of lysopes ( figure c ) was also up-regulated with a maximum fold change of . , which was comparatively less than that of the lysopcs and fas. the identities of lysopc ( : / : ), platelet-activating factor c- (paf c- ), lysope ( : / : ), aa, la, pa and oa were confirmed by matching the retention time (rt) and ms/ms fragmentation patterns of the authentic chemical standards that distinguish between hcov- e-infected cases and non-infected controls ( figure ). the detailed information of the identified lipids was listed in table based on the list of significantly up-regulated lipids after hcov- e-infection, metaboanalyst (http://www.metaboanalyst.ca) was applied to investigate which pathway might be markedly perturbed. the result of the pathway analysis was graphically presented in figure . from the enrichment analysis results, the la metabolism pathway and fa biosynthesis pathway had a statistically significant raw p-value (raw p < . , as shown in the y-axis). pathway impact results indicated that the la metabolism and aa metabolism pathways presented higher impact than the other pathways, as indicated in the x-axis value. combining the above two analysis results, we postulated that the la metabolism pathway to be a markedly perturbed pathway that correlated with the lipid rearrangement process induced by hcov- e infection. from the enrichment analysis results, the la metabolism pathway and fa biosynthesis pathway had a statistically significant raw p-value (raw p < . , as shown in the y-axis). pathway impact results indicated that the la metabolism and aa metabolism pathways presented higher impact than the other pathways, as indicated in the x-axis value. combining the above two analysis results, we postulated that the la metabolism pathway to be a markedly perturbed pathway that correlated with the lipid rearrangement process induced by hcov- e infection. to better understand the current pathway analysis results and the cellular lipid signaling response upon hcov- e infection, we constructed a global la pathway map based on the pathway information in the kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes (kegg) database (https://www.genome.jp/kegg/) and literature mining ( figure ). upon hcov- e infection, the glycerophospholipids, as main components of the cell membrane, were metabolized to lysophospholipids and fas after cpla enzyme activation. lysophospholipids such as lysopcs and lysopes were correspondingly increased after hcov- e infection. moreover, lysopcs could be further metabolized to platelet-activating factor. fas were also released from glycerophospholipids but only la and aa could initiate downstream pathways to generate corresponding metabolites. the up-regulation of both lysophospholipids and fas were partially confirmed by authentic standards. furthermore, to investigate the downstream pathways trend of fas, the authentic standards were also applied in lc-ms method to confirm whether these downstream lipids were changed correspondingly. as illustrated in figure , aa is a downstream lipid of la and the origin lipid of aa metabolism pathway. the identity of aa was confirmed by authentic standard (supplementary figure s d) , which was found to be significantly up-regulated. therefore, combining pathway analysis and the authentic standards verification results, our data to better understand the current pathway analysis results and the cellular lipid signaling response upon hcov- e infection, we constructed a global la pathway map based on the pathway information in the kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes (kegg) database (https://www.genome.jp/kegg/) and literature mining ( figure ). upon hcov- e infection, the glycerophospholipids, as main components of the cell membrane, were metabolized to lysophospholipids and fas after cpla enzyme activation. lysophospholipids such as lysopcs and lysopes were correspondingly increased after hcov- e infection. moreover, lysopcs could be further metabolized to platelet-activating factor. fas were also released from glycerophospholipids but only la and aa could initiate downstream pathways to generate corresponding metabolites. the up-regulation of both lysophospholipids and fas were partially confirmed by authentic standards. furthermore, to investigate the downstream pathways trend of fas, the authentic standards were also applied in lc-ms method to confirm whether these downstream lipids were changed correspondingly. as illustrated in figure , aa is a downstream lipid of la and the origin lipid of aa metabolism pathway. the identity of aa was confirmed by authentic standard (supplementary figure s d) , which was found to be significantly up-regulated. therefore, combining pathway analysis and the authentic standards verification results, our data suggested that the la-aa metabolism axis was the most significantly perturbed pathway and might be associated with lipids rearrangement or other processes in hcov- e infection. suggested that the la-aa metabolism axis was the most significantly perturbed pathway and might be associated with lipids rearrangement or other processes in hcov- e infection. to investigate the potential implication of the perturbed la-aa metabolism axis in hcov- e infection, we treated hcov- e-infected huh cells with la and aa and included pa and oa for comparison. the la and aa were mapped and played a vital role in the perturbed la-aa metabolism axis ( figure ). in contrast, pa and oa were not mapped in the perturbed pathway and may only be produced from glycerophospholipids due to cpla enzyme activation. huh- cells were infected with hcov- e and treated with aa, la, pa, or oa. the cell lysates and culture supernatants were harvested at h post-infection to determine the viral genome copy number by rt-qpcr. as shown in figure , la and aa consistently inhibited the replication of hcov- e as evidenced by the decrease in virus genome copies in both cell lysate ( figure a ,c) and supernatant samples ( figure b-d) . in contrast, pa inhibited hcov- e replication only when supplied at high concentration while hcov- e replication was largely independent of oa ( figure a-d) . to further investigate if the modulatory effects of la and aa were conserved among other human-pathogenic coronaviruses, we evaluated the effects of these lipids on the replication of the recently emerged and highly virulent mers-cov. our data demonstrated that la and aa potently suppressed mers-cov replication in a similar manner as hcov- e ( figure e,f) . overall, our results demonstrated that exogenously supplied la and aa could interfere with the optimal to investigate the potential implication of the perturbed la-aa metabolism axis in hcov- e infection, we treated hcov- e-infected huh cells with la and aa and included pa and oa for comparison. the la and aa were mapped and played a vital role in the perturbed la-aa metabolism axis ( figure ). in contrast, pa and oa were not mapped in the perturbed pathway and may only be produced from glycerophospholipids due to cpla enzyme activation. huh- cells were infected with hcov- e and treated with aa, la, pa, or oa. the cell lysates and culture supernatants were harvested at h post-infection to determine the viral genome copy number by rt-qpcr. as shown in figure , la and aa consistently inhibited the replication of hcov- e as evidenced by the decrease in virus genome copies in both cell lysate ( figure a ,c) and supernatant samples ( figure b-d) . in contrast, pa inhibited hcov- e replication only when supplied at high concentration while hcov- e replication was largely independent of oa ( figure a-d) . replication of human-pathogenic coronaviruses, which suggested that the la-aa metabolism axis was significantly involved in the propagation of these viruses. to further investigate if the modulatory effects of la and aa were conserved among other human-pathogenic coronaviruses, we evaluated the effects of these lipids on the replication of the recently emerged and highly virulent mers-cov. our data demonstrated that la and aa potently suppressed mers-cov replication in a similar manner as hcov- e ( figure e,f) . overall, our results demonstrated that exogenously supplied la and aa could interfere with the optimal replication of human-pathogenic coronaviruses, which suggested that the la-aa metabolism axis was significantly involved in the propagation of these viruses. in this study, a ms-based lipidomics approach was established to characterize the host cell lipid changes upon coronavirus infection. univariate and multivariate statistical analyses were applied in data processing for the selection of significant lipid features. a total of lipids including lysophospholipids and fas were identified and were consistently up-regulated in hcov- e-infected cells. seven representative lipids were confirmed by authentic standards, including lysopc ( : / : ), paf c- , lysope ( : / : ), aa, la, pa and oa. subsequent pathway analysis indicated that the la-aa metabolism axis, consisting of la and aa as important precursor lipids, was substantially perturbed after hcov- e infection. moreover, we demonstrated that exogenously supplied la and aa were capable of inhibiting the replication of hcov- e and the highly pathogenic mers-cov, which suggested the la-aa metabolism axis to be a conserved and essential pathway in the propagation of human coronaviruses. a total of lipids including lysopcs, lysopes and unsaturated/saturated fas were identified to be significantly upregulated after hcov- e infection. twenty of these ( . %) lipids were lysopc and lysope. lysopc is the most abundant lysophospholipid in humans, with a high plasma concentration of several hundred micromoles. in addition, lysopc was a potent inhibitor and could reversely arrest pore expansion during syncytium formation mediated by diverse viral fusogens [ ] . another lysophospholipid, lysope, is present at low concentrations in vivo but they induce various cellular responses such as activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase (mapk) and neuronal differentiation when applied to cells in vitro [ ] . among the identified fas, the la and aa both belong to polyunsaturated omega- fatty acid and are essential fatty acids. in addition, la is the metabolic precursor of aa, both of which are key components of the cell membrane. la and aa also play fundamental roles in the biological function of many tissues by modulating enzymes, ion channels, receptors, as well as inflammation [ ] . coronavirus replication is associated with intracellular membrane rearrangement and depends on the formation of double membrane vesicles (dmvs) and other membranous structures as replicative organelles [ ] . the cell membrane components consist mainly of glycerophospholipid components such as phosphatidylcholine (pc), phosphatidylethanolamine (pe), lysophosphatidylcholine (lysopc), and lysophosphatidylethanolamine (lysope). a specific phospholipids composition is required by different viruses to form the optimal replicative organelles best suited for their replication [ ] . moreover, the lysopc/pe was produced from pc/pe by cpla activation, which simultaneously generated corresponding fatty acid moiety. in this regard, cpla activation is commonly believed to be beneficial for virus replication [ , ] . in our study, we found that a number of lysophospholipids and fas downstream of cpla activation, were upregulated upon hcov- e infection. the upregulation of these lipid species including la and aa were believed to promote efficient coronavirus replication. however, when we evaluate this hypothesis by exogenously supplementing additional la and aa to hcov- e-or mers-cov-infected cells, we noticed a significant reduction in virus replication. taken together, our data suggested that coronavirus infection did not randomly perturb the cellular lipid compositions. instead, we speculate that coronaviruses precisely modulate and rearrange the host lipid profile to reach an intricate homeostasis optimized for its replication. any exogenous manipulation that disrupts the equilibrium may interfere with the optimal replication of the viruses. alternatively, supplementing la and aa might disturb the la-aa metabolism axis and result in feedback reversion of lysophospholipids into phospholipids through land's cycle [ ] , thus limiting virus replication. in addition, la and aa are polyunsaturated fatty acids that are biological signaling precursors. they can be metabolized to important eicosanoids and metabolites, which play multiple roles in the host immune response and the pathogenesis of viral infections [ ] [ ] [ ] . however, previous study had suggested that arachidonic acid (aa) downstream metabolites show no evidence of anti-coronaviral activity as observed through special inhibitors of cyclooxygenases (cox) / and -lipoxygenase (lox), which are two key enzymes requiring aa as a precursor. the results indicated aa downstream products may not have a significant effect on coronaviruses replication, at least in vitro [ , ] . in this regard, the function of the downstream metabolites of la and aa may play key roles in the pathogenesis of coronaviruses in vivo. in the present study, we revealed that the cellular lipid profile was rearranged upon hcov- e infection. a total of lipids including lysopcs, lysopes and fas were upregulated. among them, la and aa, which were mapped into the la-aa metabolism axis, demonstrated strong modulatory effects on the replication of hcov- e and the highly pathogenic mers-cov. in this regard, our data suggested that optimal coronavirus replication required a specific composition of cellular lipids and any disruption could decrease the efficiency of coronavirus replication. thus, the ms-based lipidomics strategy could be used to monitor virus-specific lipid requirement, to discover the perturbed pathways and identify novel lipids to interfere with virus replication. in further studies, combining lipidomics data with biological and immunological data may help to elucidate specific pathogenic mechanisms and identify novel treatment strategies for virus infections. supplementary materials: the following are available online at http://www.mdpi.com/ - / / / /s , table s : gradient elution program applied for uplc-ms analysis, figure s : opls-da model validation and permutation test. the funding sources had no role in study design, data collection, analysis or interpretation or writing of the report. the corresponding author had full access to all the data in the study and had final responsibility for the decision to submit for publication. is the discovery of the novel human betacoronavirus c emc/ (hcov-emc) the beginning of another sars-like pandemic? 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developing seeds the arachidonic acid metabolome serves as a conserved regulator of cholesterol metabolism the role of arachidonic acid in the regulation of nitric oxide synthase isoforms by hiv gp protein in astroglial cells. free radic an insight into the role of arachidonic acid derived lipid mediators in virus associated pathogenesis and malignancies l-lysine acetylsalicylate + glycine impairs coronavirus replication key: cord- -fn b y authors: mudgal, rajat; nehul, sanketkumar; tomar, shailly title: prospects for mucosal vaccine: shutting the door on sars-cov- date: - - journal: human vaccines & immunotherapeutics doi: . / . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: fn b y the sudden emergence of a highly transmissible and pathogenic coronavirus sars-cov- in december from china and its rapid global spread has posed an international health emergency. the rapid development of an effective vaccine is imperative to control the spread of sars-cov- . a number of concurrent efforts to find an effective therapeutic agent or vaccine for covid- (coronavirus disease ) are being undertaken globally. oral and nasal mucosal surfaces serve as the primary portal of entry for pathogens like coronaviruses in the human body. as evidenced by studies on similar coronaviruses (sars-cov and mers-cov), mucosal vaccination can provide a safe and effective means for the induction of long-lasting systemic and mucosal immunity to confer protection against sars-cov- . this article summarizes the approaches to an effective mucosal vaccine formulation which can be a rewarding approach to combat the unprecedented threat posed by this emerging global pandemic. in the st century, we have seen a worldwide spread of three previously unknown coronaviruses. the first outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) occurred in november in the guangdong province, china. the causative agent of the sars outbreak was identified as sars coronavirus (sars-cov). another coronavirus, middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) was first identified in saudi arabia in . on december , , several cases of pneumonia were reported in wuhan, china. the etiological agent of the outbreak was later identified as sars coronavirus (sars-cov- ) because the genomic sequence was closely related to that of the sars-cov from . , on february , , the world health organization (who) named the disease caused by the novel coronavirus (sars-cov- ) as coronavirus disease . coronaviruses belong to the coronaviridae family. the family members are enveloped, positive-stranded rna viruses which appear as crown-like entities under the electron microscope due to spikes of glycoproteins protruding from their viral envelopes, thus exhibiting a corona-like appearance. the coronaviridae family is divided into two subfamilies: letovirinae and orthocoronavirinae. the latter consists of the genera alphacoronvirus, betacoronavirus, gammacoronavirus, and deltacoronavirus. the pathogenic coronaviruses: sars-cov, mers-cov, and sars-cov- are all betacoronaviruses. among known rna viruses, coronaviruses have the largest genomes size in the range of to kb in length. two-third of the viral genome at ˊ end encodes up to nonstructural replicase proteins which are translated as two polyproteins: pp a and pp ab. the genes encoding structural proteins, including spike (s), envelope (e), membrane (m), and nucleocapsid (n) proteins are present at ˊ end of genomic rna. , the s protein of coronaviruses is one of the most important targets for the development of sars vaccines and therapeutics because it is involved in receptor recognition, as well as virus attachment and entry. the s protein is made up of s and s subunits. s subunit has the receptor-binding domain (rbd) which binds with host receptor and then the s subunit mediates the fusion of viral and host membranes. host receptor for sars-cov is angiotensinconverting enzyme (ace ), whereas mers-cov recognizes dipeptidyl peptidase (dpp ) as its receptor. , the common symptoms of coronavirus infection are fever, cough, and sore throat. clinically, patients with sars suffer from atypical pneumonia. , clinical presentation of sars-cov- patients is similar to patients infected with sars-cov. covid- manifests itself with symptoms including fever, dry cough, fatigue, and acute respiratory distress syndrome. , these clinical features are a direct consequence of massive alveolar epithelial cell and vascular endothelial cell damage which is also accompanied by an exuberant release of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines. the disease severity and lung damage in the case of sars-cov- infection can be directly correlated with the dysregulated immune response at - days after symptom onset and is characterized by exuberant production of cytokines including il- , il- , il- , mip- a, ip- , and tnf-α. , this 'cytokine storm' was also reported in animal studies with sars-cov infection and was responsible for the dampening of adaptive immunity of patients in the later phase of infection. as of now, the spread of sars-cov- is being quelled by strict policy measures such as travel restrictions, social distancing, patient isolation, and nationwide lockdown in several parts of the world. there are no approved vaccines available against any of the coronaviruses. this emerging global pandemic has instigated an unprecedented search for an effective prophylactic or therapeutic intervention against covid- . [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] in this review, we have discussed the potential and challenges for the development of a successful mucosal vaccine against sars-cov- . vaccines have been one of the major contributors in the eradication of most of the infectious diseases in the last century. vaccination of a population interrupts the transmission chain of a communicable pathogen by not only protecting the immunized subjects but also by halting the transmission of the virus by 'breaking the chain' within a population by induction of herd immunity in the vaccine recipients. vaccines can be administered by either intramuscular or subcutaneous injection to introduce them into the systemic circulation. vaccination through systemic routes elicits strong systemic immune response but is not effective in generating efficient mucosal immunity. mucosal vaccines are advantageous not just in evoking strong immune response at both mucosal sites and systemic circulation but also offer greater practicality in terms of cost and administration. mucosal vaccines can be produced at considerably low cost for mass immunization, the administration is needle-free and convenient compared to systemic vaccines. majority of mucosal vaccines are administered through oral or intranasal routes while rectal, vaginal, ocular, and sublingual routes can also be used. the selection of administration route depends on the nature of the antigen and the desired site for induction of immune response. upon oral immunization, immune responses are induced strongly in gastrointestinal (gi) tract, mammary glands, and salivary glands while intranasal vaccination induces marked antigen-specific immune response in respiratory, gi, and genital tracts. the primary mode of transmission of sars-cov is through mucosal membranes of the eyes, nose, or mouth. studies with s protein of sars-cov- have revealed that it also recognizes human ace (hace ) receptor on the host cells similar to sars-cov. [ ] [ ] [ ] ace is abundantly expressed in nasal and oral mucosa rendering them the primary targets for the viral entry and dissemination of sars-cov- . concomitant gastrointestinal symptoms are reported in confirmed covid- patients along with pulmonary pathology, characteristic of sars-cov- infection. the occurrence of acute hemorrhagic colitis in a few cases and the presence of sars-cov- rna in fecal samples of covid- patients indicate enteric involvement in covid- reasserting the similarity in tissue tropism with sars-cov. [ ] [ ] [ ] considering the prominent role of nasal and gastric mucosa in the transmission and the clinical progression of sars-cov- , mucosal immunization using oral or intranasal vaccine could be an effective strategy for immunoprophylaxis against sars-cov- . vaccination at the entry site such as intranasal or oral immunization induces a strong local immune response in the case of sars-cov. , consequently, vaccination at the mucosal sites reduces the risk of antibodydependent disease enhancement (ade) by blocking the virus at the entry site. administration of mucosal vaccine has also been shown to elicit strong systemic humoral immunity thereby neutralizing any virus particle that evades the primary immune response at the mucosal site. currently, several strategies are being examined for the development of a mucosal vaccine against sars-cov- . a unique mucosal system exists independent of the systemic immune system to protect exposed mucosal surfaces against environmental antigens and downregulation of systemic immune responses. it acts as the first line of defense against most of the antigens and prevents them from evoking systemic immune system. the mucosal system serves as the most common portal for pathogen entry in the human body. the mucosal immune system consists of a complex network of tissues, non-lymphoid /lymphoid cells, and effector molecules including cytokines, chemokines, and antibodies. the mucosal immune system is compartmentalized into immune inductive sites-where antigen sampling from mucosal surface occurs and then priming of b cells and t cells takes place, and immune effector site-where the activated immune effector cells move after extravasation and secrete cytokines to promote iga class-switch recombination. , inductive site for the mucosal immune system is constituted by mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (malt). malt comprises of highly organized structures such as appendix and peyer's patches in the intestine and tonsils in the upper airway. the effector sites of the mucosal immune system include lamina propria of various mucosae, surface epithelia, and exocrine glands. gut-associated lymphoid tissue (galt) and nasopharyngeal-associated lymphoid tissue (nalt) represent the major mucosal inductive sites. waldeyer's ring and oropharyngeal lymphoid tissues (paired palatine tonsils) in humans are considered anatomical equivalent of murine nalt. larynx-associated lymphoid tissue (lalt), salivary duct-associated lymphoid tissue (sdalt), lacrimal ductassociated lymphoid tissue (ldalt), and conjunctiva-associated lymphoid tissue (calt) are also considered part of human malt. these mucosal inductive sites are covered with a layer of enterocytes and microfold cells (m cells). m cells are specialized thin epithelial cells that move soluble antigen from the gut lumen to the underlying lymphoid tissues via transcytosis. exogenous antigens can activate t cells directly or are handed off to dendritic cells (dcs) that can act as antigen-presenting cells (apcs). , these primed t cells move to the germinal centers and secrete cytokines to promote b-cell isotype switching to iga production. secretory iga (siga) antibodies are the most essential effector molecule in the mucosa. it is recognized as the first line of protection against foreign toxins, pathogens, and overgrowth of commensal microbes. it is secreted as a dimer joined together by a joining chain and is actively transported exclusively across the mucosal surface via a polymeric iga receptor. the activated t and b cells retain immunological memory and contribute to long-lasting protective immunity against the pathogen in systemic and mucosal systems. siga neutralizes toxins or pathogens in the mucosal environment using three mechanisms: immune exclusion, antigen excretion, and intracellular neutralization ( figure ). in addition to siga, transudated iga and igg, which are generated in response to both systemic and mucosal vaccination, also contribute to local surface defense in the genitourinary mucosa and in the lower respiratory tract which are more permeable to serum-derived antibodies than intestine. these antibodies employ a diverse range of effector functions to protect against pathogens. they neutralize toxins; can mediate opsonization and facilitate internalization of invading pathogens by phagocytes. transudated igg exert its immunopathological effect when siga-dependent elimination of pathogen is unsuccessful. serum igg antibodies protect against viremia and are crucial for virus clearance from systemic circulation. a mucosal vaccine can be developed based on one of the several vaccine platforms including viral vectors, virus-like particle (vlp)-based, dnas, subunit, inactivated whole virus, or live-attenuated vaccine. , , each of these platforms has its own advantages and disadvantages. vlp-based vaccines are composed of viral structural proteins capable of selfassembly. dna vaccine comprises viral immunogens encoded by a recombinant plasmid that is delivered to the site of administration where the plasmid expresses itself and elicits the desired immune response. both these safe vaccine platforms preserve the inherent antigenic structure of viral immunogens and are noninfectious but often suffer from weak immunogenicity. viral vectors encode the antigenic protein and are delivered to the host cell where the antigen is expressed and is presented on the surface of apcs to induce a cellular and humoral immune response. these vaccines are highly efficient but preexisting immunity against the viral vector might cause a harmful immune response in some recipients. live-attenuated vaccines or inactivated vaccines are based on pathogens that have been attenuated or inactivated by heat or chemical treatment. as of now, all the mucosal vaccines licensed for human use are based on liveattenuated approach including oral polio vaccine (opv) and intranasal influenza vaccine (flumist®). safety concerns are often associated with attenuated vaccines due to the possibility of incomplete inactivation of harmful pathogens. subunit vaccines consist of specific antigenic fragments of virus capable of eliciting strong antibody-mediated and cellular immune response. inactivated whole virus vaccines and subunit vaccines are relatively inexpensive, inert, and nontoxic but the possibility of alteration of immunogenicity of antigens needs to be confirmed consistently. few sars-cov and mers-cov vaccines based on the different platforms are summarized in table . s protein is the main antigenic component of sars-cov, sars-cov- , and mers-cov among four structural proteins (s, e, m, and n proteins). vaccines using s protein elicit a potent immune response and inhibit viral infection. , , but the use of fulllength s protein as an antigen for vaccine design has raised few safety issues due to ade of viral infection in vaccinated subjects. a study on the chinese macaque models for sars-cov showed greater lung damage in vaccinated animals (vaccinated with fulllength s proteins) relative to unvaccinated subjects upon virus challenge. anti-s protein igg antibodies have been implicated in this acute alveolar damage on exposure to the virus. similar symptoms have been observed in critical patients with sars-cov infection. it is speculated that ade of viral infection is mediated through the binding of virus-neutralizing antibody complex to the fc receptors on the monocytes/macrophages leading to increased production of pro-inflammatory cytokines. additionally, this virus-antibody complex might activate the classical pathway of complement system or antibody-mediated cytotoxicity leading to cellular damage. taking a cue from studies with sars-cov and mers-cov, caution must be exercised in selecting an antigen target that minimize ade while inducing a potent immune response against future exposure to sars-cov- . the use of rbd of s protein as an antigen in the case of sars-cov or mers-cov has been extensively explored. , rbd of s protein is highly immunogenic and confers neutralizing capability against multiple strains of sars-cov and mers-cov. rbd-based vaccine minimizes the risk of ade upon exposure to virus in vaccinated individuals as it lacks the non-neutralizing immunodominant region of s protein. other fragments of s protein of sars-cov and mers-cov that have been used for vaccine design include s and s fragments ( figure ). , a mucosal vaccine based on n protein of sars-cov has shown the induction of both cellular and humoral immunity in mice. several immunogenic domains of n protein are highly conserved in coronaviruses. n protein of sars-cov- shares high sequence identity (~ %) with n protein of sars-cov and hence can be considered for the development of a broad spectrum coronavirus vaccine. a challenging alternative that can warrant protection against future outbreaks of similar coronaviruses is to identify a universal epitope in the whole virus family or genera. this strategy is being undertaken for influenza viruses and can be extended to coronaviruses as well. immunoinformatics can also be a powerful tool in prediction of epitopes on the viral surface proteins. traditionally, mucosal immune induction needs a higher dose of antigen in comparison to parenteral immunization as antigenic preparation may get diluted in mucus in the nasal cavity or get expelled by mucus and ciliary movement in the respiratory tract. effective intranasal vaccination requires the antigen to reach mucosal sites, cross the mucus layer, and induce local iga production. a vaccine administered through the oral route has to endure the low ph environment in the upper gi tract and a variety of nucleases and proteases present in the digestive tract before it can reach the immunological sites. mucosal antigens when administered alone lead to a weak induction of immune response. to overcome these physical and biochemical obstacles in priming mucosal immune cells, vaccines delivered through oral or nasal routes are often administered complemented with an adjuvant. adjuvants are the supplementary materials (natural or synthetic) in a vaccine formulation that potentiates the immune-induction capacity of a vaccine. adjuvant in a vaccine formulation plays a critical role in maintaining the structural integrity of the antigen, augmenting antigen bioavailability, and enhancing antigenic stimulation. adjuvants are broadly divided into two classes: adjuvants that can serve as carrier systems to facilitate antigen delivery to immune induction sites and adjuvants that can act as immunostimulators through enhanced internalization, presentation, and processing of the antigen in the apcs. a number of polymers including chitosan and poly lacticco-glycolic acid (plga) have been used as carriers in various vaccine formulations for immunostimulation due to their high affinity toward mucosal surfaces. , emulsions and liposomes are the other carriers routinely tested for mucosal vaccine. dc and m cells are a major determinant for induction of mucosal immune response at immune inductive sites and thus represent an ideal site for antigen presentation. surface markers at the surface of epithelial cells and dcs can be strategically targeted for antigen delivery with specialized molecules such as lectins or nanoparticles for increased antigen uptake by apcs. , pathogen recognition receptor agonists such as synthetic poly-(i:c), or toll like receptor agonists such as cpg oligodeoxynucleotides, engage these receptors present on the surface of apcs to potentiate the immunogenicity of the vaccine. , other commonly used adjuvants including cholera enterotoxin (ct) and heat-labile enterotoxin (lt) from e. coli exert their adjuvanticity by interacting with gm gangliosides on the surface of follicular dendritic cells and in turn increase the induction of b-cell clones. the use of immune-stimulating complexes (iscoms) has also proven to be highly effective for administration with mucosal vaccines. one of the major factors influencing the rational design of a mucosal vaccine is immunotolerance at the mucosal sites. immunotolerance is the ingenious modulation of the mucosal microenvironment to avoid unnecessary induction of host immune cells against foreign antigens or commensal microbes. mucosal surfaces are exposed continuously to environmental, food, or self-antigens which lead to the development of a tolerogenic microenvironment, especially in gastric mucosa. some vaccination strategies fail to develop effective immunity and can induce immunotolerance. this suppression of immune response is affected mainly by vaccine formulation, antigenic dose, and frequency of administration. administration of antigen at low doses for a long time leads to low-dose immunotolerance. contrastingly, high dose of antigen administered at a low rate induces high-dose tolerance instead of immunostimulation. this hypo-responsiveness at the mucosal induction sites can be overcome by strategically determining the antigen dose, vaccine formulation, and timing of vaccine delivery. the design of a novel mucosal vaccine also aims at mimicking the kinetics of pathogen infection for increasing the clinical efficacy of the vaccine. optimal release timing of antigen at the inductive site helps in dodging the mucosal immunotolerance. to this end, the antigen is conjugated with adjuvants like tlr ligands or cd- specific antibodies. , immunosenescence several issues are needed to be addressed for the design and development of an efficacious mucosal vaccine against sars-cov- . it has been observed in human challenge studies that immunity acquired with coronavirus infection is often shortlived and in some cases, re-infection with the same virus was possible after an extended period. it was reported in some cases that immunity acquired with sars-cov or mers-cov also declines considerably - years after viral infection. , another concern for designing a vaccine against sars-cov- is that the viral infection is associated with severe pathology specifically in patients of higher age group (typically > years). people in this age group do not respond very well to vaccination in terms of neutralizing antibody titers and require a higher amount of antigen to produce sufficient immunogenicity. specialized dose-regime in terms of the amount of antigen, use of specific adjuvants, or the immunization effects of follow-up doses after a single prime dose can be investigated in vulnerable age groups and immunocompromised people before extending vaccination to them. for most parenterally administered vaccines and mucosal vaccines, correlates and precise mechanism of their efficacy remain poorly defined. most of the licensed vaccines rely on the measurement of a single parameter that is statistically correlated with protection afforded by the vaccine. there is no absolute method of sampling, and the choice of sampling method varies according to the parameter to be evaluated. conventionally, quantification and qualification of secreted antibodies is performed using seroimmunoassays in body secretions such as saliva, tears, nasal, blood samples or genital secretions, and gut or organ lavages. cellular correlates of immunity are analyzed using assays such as enzyme-linked immunospot assays (elispots), reverse-transcriptase pcr (rt-pcr) or cell-sorting techniques. a modern system biology approach can also be used that utilizes functional genomics to identify molecular signatures that correlate well with traditional biological markers for evaluating vaccine efficacy. correlates of protection differ greatly based on whether the objective of vaccination is to prevent a mucosal or a systemic infection. several animal models including mice, ferrets, macaques, hamsters, and non-human primates have been used for evaluating safety and efficacy of sars-cov and mers-cov vaccines. , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] ferrets are a suitable animal model for sars-cov vaccine evaluation as they support viral replication in the respiratory tract, develop similar disease symptoms, and display severe lung pathology. , smaller animal models like rabbits and mice are a preferred choice for vaccine evaluation in animals because of inexpensive maintenance, ease of genetic manipulation, and standardized methods of testing. wild type mice are nonpermissive to sars-cov- viral replication. a transgenic mice model expressing hace has recently been developed by genetic manipulation to make the mice susceptible to sars-cov- infection. this mice model mirrors the pathological features of sars-cov- infection in human patients albeit at a moderate level as compared to sars-cov. moreover, a young animal/mice model can effectively exhibit excellent neutralizing efficiency induced by a vaccine candidate but it cannot effectively mimic the clinical manifestations of covid- in an elderly population. hence, robust lethalchallenged mice models using senescent mice that can recapitulate the clinical disease in the aged human population are needed to be developed for assessing the efficacy of a covid- vaccine candidate. following animal modelbased preclinical studies, good manufacturing practices are employed for the scale-up of the vaccine production. currently, mucosal vaccines form a small proportion of licensed vaccines for humans. limited choice of adjuvants for human mucosal vaccines, immunotolerance, and differential degree of vaccine-induced immune response in different populations are some of the impediments associated with the development of mucosal vaccines. efficacies of different mucosal vaccines depend on myriad of factors such as age, environment, host genetics, the microbiome of the recipient, and the regimen of immunization. it ranges from % to % for rotavirus vaccines to %-to % for oral vaccines against influenza and polio viruses. cholera, polio, and rotavirus oral vaccines are found to be less efficacious in developing countries. this weak induction of immune response can be attributed to nutritional deficiencies such as vitamin a or zinc, concomitant bacterial, helminth, or viral infections, and the presence of high levels of maternal antibodies in the breast milk. , intranasal immunization using live attenuated or live vectors is also associated with the risk of the harmful antigens and adjuvants (such as ct and lt) accessing the central nervous system through the cribiform plate. a number of infectious diseases have been successfully controlled with the use of parenterally administered vaccine that may or may not lead to the induction of mucosal immune response. administration of the vaccine through systemic circulation might not necessarily recapitulate the immune response generated by mucosal administration but is adequate for evoking immune response against mucosal pathogens such as human papilloma virus (hpv), influenza virus, or polio virus. all three licensed vlp-based hpv vaccines are administered intramuscularly and induce a high level of durable igg antibody response against the virus. , these antibodies are also detectable at mucosal sites of infection such as oral cavity and cervix after vaccination and serve as the primary effectors of protection against hpv. , currently, there are two types of licensed influenza vaccines: parenterally administered inactivated influenza vaccine and live attenuated influenza virus vaccine (laiv) which is delivered intranasally. inactivated influenza vaccine elicits some degree of local iga antibodies and high levels of systemic igg antibodies to mediate protection by diffusing into the mucosal sites. laiv, in turn, mimics natural infection and induce highly cross-reactive serum igg, mucosal iga, and cellular immunity in the recipients. , yearly influenza vaccines are adjusted according to the prevalent strains in the coming flu season. in clinical settings, inactivated vaccine is found to be more effective than laiv in preventing symptomatic disease in healthy adults while laiv offers greater protection against influenza disease in children. [ ] [ ] [ ] similarly, two types of vaccines are available for polio virus: an injectable polio vaccine (ipv) and opv. sabin opv, with its enormous impact in disease control worldwide, is considered to be the prototype oral vaccine. superiority of opv over ipv is attributed to the induction of high titers of mucosal iga antibodies. , despite the generation of higher serum antibody titers, ipv provides limited intestinal immunity. due to the risk of rare cases of vaccine associated paralytic polio, most developed countries have switched to either ipv or a sequential combination of ipv and opv. , based on the substantial experience in control of mucosal pathogens using parenterally administered vaccines, several parenteral vaccines are being developed or evaluated against sars-cov- . notably, dna-based vaccine by inovio pharmaceuticals (ino- ), mrna-based vaccine by moderna (mrna- ), adenovirus-vectored vaccine (chadox ), and an inactivated virus vaccine (picovacc) are currently under investigation in human clinical trials. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] rapid licensure and production of a mucosal vaccine time is the most valuable asset in the rapidly emerging covid- pandemic, especially in high-mortality areas. rapid development and testing of a viable vaccine can be achieved by adopting a number of novel strategies. instead of developing a novel vaccine development platform, utilizing an existing vaccine platform will accelerate the design and production of vaccines against sars-cov- and will enable a quicker future response against newly emerging viruses. since the outbreaks of sars-cov and mers-cov, several vaccine candidates were developed using different production platforms. these established platforms are being used for the development of vaccine candidate against sars-cov- . , , to expedite the process for licensure and use of the vaccine against sars-cov- in the wake of the current pandemic, eyal et al. have suggested an alternative model for accelerated rollout of an effective sars-cov- vaccine by skipping phase clinical trials. this study proposes a controlled human challenge model wherein nonsusceptible adult volunteers from a healthy group will be challenged with an increasing dose of live virus to determine a dose that induces clinical symptoms similar to the natural infection in the individuals of similar age (preparatory phase). after this dose for controlled human challenge model has been optimized, a randomized cohort of volunteers will receive the candidate vaccine or placebo before being challenged with the controlled dose of the live virus (phase ). the successful vaccine candidates can then be administered to a large cohort of individuals for evaluation of shortterm safety prior to vaccine rollout (phase ). this accelerated licensure of the vaccine can be followed up with post-approval surveillance to monitor the occurrence of rare side effects and long-term efficacy for future regulatory approvals. the overwhelming demand for a sars-cov- vaccine in the current pandemic by far exceeds the existing production capacity. to deliver required quantities of the successful vaccine, production process will have to be ramped up to an enormous scale. the necessary infrastructure can be developed simultaneously with the continued production on existing capacity. alternatively, rapid manufacturing of a successful vaccine can be facilitated by adopting a new pandemic paradigm, with a fast start and many steps of vaccine development and production executed in parallel before confirming a successful outcome of another step. in recent years, rapid production of live attenuated vaccines is being facilitated by utilizing reverse genetics process that involves the precise deletion of specific genes of viral genome. deletion of pathogenic components of the pathogen is advantageous over traditional methods of viral attenuation in terms of safety and efficacy of a vaccine. the current covid- pandemic has virtually brought most world economies to a halt and severely impacted the lives of a large proportion of the world population. development of a viable sars-cov vaccine is imperative to reduce mortality and morbidity associated with this novel virus outbreak. mucosal vaccines offer better patient compliance in terms of the physical and psychological comfort due to absence of needlestick injury and thus are highly compatible for mass immunization in a pandemic scenario. vaccine administration using injection involves the cost of injection device, it's safe disposal, and the employment of trained medical staff which adds a considerable cost for mass vaccination especially in developing countries. mucosally administered vaccines also abrogate the risk of transmission of infections by injection devices. despite our detailed understanding of mucosal system in mice, the complex cellular and molecular interplay of different component of innate immune response to mucosal vaccination in humans is still poorly deciphered. additionally, the emergence and rapid global spread of sars-cov- has provided a very small window for basic and translational studies that propel the development and evaluation of vaccine against a pathogen. while the knowledge gained from previous studies on sars-cov and mers-cov can be used for sars-cov- vaccine development, it is yet uncertain as to what extent it will work for sars-cov- or whether correlates of protection used will faithfully predict protective efficacy. potential ade and waning of vaccine-induced immune response represent other obstacles in the development of a mucosal vaccine against sars-cov- . the currently licensed mucosal vaccines against viral pathogens are exclusively live-attenuated. the development of a safe and immunogenic live-attenuated vaccine is an attractive possibility for mucosal vaccine against sars-cov- . live attenuated vaccines, by definition establish a mild infection at the immunization site and exhibit some level of in-built adjuvanticity thereby ensuring the delivery of a higher antigen dose and better targeting of mucosal inductive sites for immunostimulation. this candidate vaccine can be easily administered orally as encapsulated antigens or can be delivered through the intranasal route via droplets and aerosol spray. covid- pandemic demands for adopting nonconventional approaches for a viable mucosal vaccine development, hastening the vaccine licensure process, utilizing existing vaccine development and manufacturing platforms, and ensuring global distribution of the licensed vaccine in time to minimize the impact of covid- across the globe. it will also need an unprecedented scale-up of the manufacturing process and concerted efforts of the supply chains to make the vaccine available before this pandemic is over. learning from the covid- pandemic, sustained investments in vaccine development and production infrastructure should be made to save human lives and curtail the economic impact associated with a looming viral pandemic. moreover, continued 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database of geopositioned middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus occurrences date: - - journal: sci data doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: t jngq as a world health organization research and development blueprint priority pathogen, there is a need to better understand the geographic distribution of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) and its potential to infect mammals and humans. this database documents cases of mers-cov globally, with specific attention paid to zoonotic transmission. an initial literature search was conducted in pubmed, web of science, and scopus; after screening articles according to the inclusion/exclusion criteria, a total of sources were selected for extraction and geo-positioning. each mers-cov occurrence was assigned one of the following classifications based upon published contextual information: index, unspecified, secondary, mammal, environmental, or imported. in total, this database is comprised of unique geo-positioned mers-cov occurrences. the purpose of this article is to share a collated mers-cov database and extraction protocol that can be utilized in future mapping efforts for both mers-cov and other infectious diseases. more broadly, it may also provide useful data for the development of targeted mers-cov surveillance, which would prove invaluable in preventing future zoonotic spillover. middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) emerged as a global health concern in when the first human case was documented in saudi arabia . now listed as one of the who research and development blueprint priority pathogens, cases have been reported in countries across four continents . imported cases into non-endemic countries such as france, great britain, the united states, and south korea have caused secondary cases [ ] [ ] [ ] , thus highlighting the potential for mers-cov to spread far beyond the countries where index cases originate. reports in animals suggest that viral circulation could be far more widespread than suggested by human cases alone [ ] [ ] [ ] . to help prevent future incidence of mers-cov, public health officials can focus on mitigating zoonotic transfer; however, in order to do this effectively, additional research is needed to determine where spillover could occur between mammals and humans. previous literature reviews have looked at healthcare-associated outbreaks , importation events resulting in secondary cases , , occurrences among dromedary camels , , or to summarize current knowledge and knowledge gaps of mers-cov , . this database seeks fill gaps in literature and build upon existing notification data by enhancing the geographic resolution of mers-cov data and providing occurrences of both mammal and environmental detections in addition to human cases. this information can help inform epidemiological models and targeted disease surveillance, both of which play important roles in strengthening global health security. knowledge of the geographic extent of disease transmission allows stakeholders to develop appropriate emergency response and preparedness activities (https://www.jeealliance.org/ global-health-security-and-ihr-implementation/joint-external-evaluation-jee/), inform policy for livestock trade and quarantine, determine appropriate demand for future vaccines (http://cepi.net/mission) and decide where to deliver them. additionally, targeted disease surveillance will provide healthcare workers with updated lists of the methods and protocols summarized below have been adapted from previously published literature extraction processes [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , and provide additional context surrounding our systematic data collection from published reports of mers-cov. data collection. we identified published reports of mers-cov by searching pubmed, web of science, and scopus with the following terms: "middle eastern respiratory syndrome", "middle east respiratory syndrome", "merscov", and "mers". the initial search was for all articles published about mers-cov prior to april , , and was subsequently updated to february , . these searches were conducted through the university of washington libraries' institutional database subscriptions. we searched the web of science web of science core collection (the subscribed edition includes science citation index expanded, -present; social sciences citation index, -present; arts & humanities citation index, -present; emerging sources citation index, -present). we searched the standard scopus database and the standard, freely available pubmed database; these products have a single version that is consistent across institutional subscriptions or access points. in total, this search returned , related abstracts, which were collated into a database before a title-abstract screening was manually conducted (fig. . flowchart) . articles were removed if they did not contain an occurrence of mers-cov; for example, vaccine development research or coronavirus proteomic analyses. non-english articles were flagged for further review and brought into the full text screening stage. the accompanying supplementary file highlight the title and abstract screening process and the inclusion and exclusion criteria. full text review was conducted on , sources. to meet the inclusion criteria, articles must have contained both of the following items: ) a detection of mers-cov from humans, animals, or environmental sources, and ) mers-cov occurrences tagged with spatial information. additionally, extractors attempted to prospectively manually remove articles containing duplicate occurrences that were already extracted in the dataset. extractors only prospectively manually removed articles if it was clear the articles contained data we were confident had already been extracted and had high-quality data. we excluded sources based on full text review. in addition, we reviewed citations and retroactively added relevant articles to our database if they were not already included. we retroactively added and subsequently marked ten articles for extraction using this process. in total, we extracted peer-reviewed sources reporting detection of mers-cov that included geographic and relevant epidemiological metadata. geo-positioning of data. google maps or arcgis was used to manually extract location information at the highest resolution available from individual articles. we evaluated spatial information as either points or polygons. the geography was defined as a point if the location of transmission was reported to have occurred within a × km area. point data are represented by a specific latitude and longitude. a point references an area smaller than × km in order to be compatible with the typical × km resolution of satellite imagery used for global analyses. the geography was defined as a polygon if the location of transmission was less clear, but known to have occurred in a general area (e.g. a province), or the location of transmission occurred within an area greater than × km (e.g. a large city). we used contextual information to determine location in instances where the author's spelling of a location differed from google maps or arcgis. maps provided by authors were digitized using arcgis. we used three different types of polygons: known administrative boundaries, buffers, and custom polygons. relevant administrative units were sourced from the global administrative unit layers curated by the food and agricultural organization of the un for known administrative boundaries of governorates, districts, or regions, and paired with the occurrence record. buffers were created to encompass areas in cities and regions without corresponding administrative units. to ensure that buffers encompassed the entirety of the area of interest, google maps was used to determine the required radius. in areas with unspecified boundaries (e.g. table mountain national park and the border region between saudi arabia and uae) arcgis was used to generate custom polygons, which were assigned a unique code within a defined shapefile for ease of re-identification. this database is publicly available online , . each of the rows represents a unique occurrence of mers-cov. rows containing an index, unspecified, or imported case represent a single case of mers-cov. rows containing mammal and secondary cases may represent more than one case but are still unique geospatial occurrences. table shows an overview of the content available in the publicly available dataset. in addition, online-only table lists occurrences by geography, origin, shape type, and publication and online-only table provides citations of the data. index unspecified mammal import secondary absent environmental www.nature.com/scientificdata www.nature.com/scientificdata/ . pathogen: name the pathogen identified (e.g. mers-cov, bat coronaviruses, and other mers-cov-like pathogens). . pathogen_note: miscellaneous notes regarding pathogen. . patient_type: index, unspecified, na, secondary, import, or absent. • index: any human infection of mers-cov resulting after direct contact with an animal and no reported contact with a confirmed mers-cov case or healthcare setting. • unspecified: cases that lacked sufficient epidemiological evidence to classify them as any other status (e.g. serosurvey studies). • na: non-applicable field; case was not a patient (e.g. mammal) • secondary: defined as any cases resulting from contact with known human infections. cases reported after the index case can be assumed to be secondary cases unless accompanied by specific details of likely independent exposure to an animal reservoir. • import: cases that were brought into a non-endemic country after transmission occurred elsewhere. • absent: suspected case(s) ultimately confirmed negative for mers-cov. . transmission_route: zoonotic, direct, unspecified, or animal-to-animal. • zoonotic: transmission occurred from an animal to a human. • direct: only relevant for human-to-human transmission. • unspecified: lacked sufficient epidemiological evidence to classify a human case as zoonotic or direct. • animal-to-animal: transmission occurred from an animal to another animal. . clinical: describes whether the mers-cov occurrence demonstrated clinical signs of infection. denoted by yes, no, or unknown. • yes: clinical signs of infection were present/reported. clinical signs among humans may range from mild (e.g. fever, cough) to severe (e.g. pneumonia, kidney failure). clinical signs among camels include nasal discharge. • no: clinical signs of infection were not present/reported. • unknown: subject(s) may or may not have been demonstrating clinical signs of infection. for example, some authors did not explicitly mention symptoms, but individuals reportedly sought medical care. another example being when a diagnostic serosurvey was conducted during an ongoing outbreak. the term "unknown" was used when articles lacked sufficient evidence for extractors to definitively label as "yes" or "no". . diagnostic: describes the class of diagnostic method that was used. pcr, serology, or reported. . diagnostic_note: more detailed information related to the specific test used (e.g. rk , igg, or igm serology). . serosurvey: describes the context if serological testing was used. • diagnostic: testing of symptomatic patients. • exploratory: historic exposure determined among healthy asymptomatic individuals. . country: iso code for country in which the case occurred. . origin: open-ended field to provide more details on the specific in-country location of mers-cov case. . problem_geography: this field was utilized if the mers-cov case was reported in a location that could cause uncertainty when determining exact geographic occurrence (e.g. hospital, abattoir). . lat: latitude measured in decimal degrees. . long: longitude measured in decimal degrees. . latlong_source: the source from which latitude and longitude were derived. . loc_confidence: states the level of confidence that researchers had when assigning a geographic location to the mers-cov case (good or bad). an answer of 'good' meant the article stated clearly that the case occurred in a specific geographic location and no assumptions were required on part of the researcher. an answer of 'bad' meant the article did not clearly state the specific geographic location of the mers-cov case, but the researcher was able to infer the location of occurrence. the field site_notes was utilized to detail the logic behind researchers' decisions when inference was required. . shape_type: the geographic shape type assigned to the mers-cov occurrence (point or polygon). . poly_type: if the mers-cov occurrence was assigned a shape_type of polygon, was it admin (gaul), custom, or buffer? . buffer_radius: if a mers-cov occurrence was assigned a buffer, what is the radius in km? . gaul_year_or_custom_shapefile: file path used to reach the necessary shape file in arcgis. users of this dataset can find custom shapefiles created for this dataset at: https://cloud.ihme.washington.edu/index. php/s/dgoykyqnbjg f /download . poly_id: a standardized and unique identifier assigned to each gaul shapefile. . poly_field: which type of polygon was used to geo-position the occurrence? (e.g. if admin polygon was used, enter adm _code) . site_notes: miscellaneous notes regarding the site of occurrence. . month_start: month that the occurrence(s) began. if the article provided a specific month of illness onset, the month was assigned a number from - ( = january, = february, etc.). if the article did not provide a specific month of illness onset, then researchers assigned a value of 'na' . month that the occurrence(s) ended, defined as the date a patient tested negative for mers-cov. if the article provided a specific month for recovery, the month was assigned a number from - ( = january, = february, etc.). if the article did not provide a specific month of symptom onset, then researchers assigned a value of 'na' . . year_start: year that the occurrence(s) began. if the year of illness onset was not provided in the article, the ihme standard was used: (year_start = publication year - ). year that the occurrence(s) ended. if the article did not provide a specific year for recovery, the ihme standard was used: (year_end = publication year - ). . year_accuracy: if years were reported, this field was assigned a value of ' ' . if assumptions were required, this field was assigned a value of ' ' . all data extracted from the original search (october to april , ) was reviewed independently by a second individual to check for accuracy. challenging extractions from the updated search (may , to february , ) were selected for group review during bi-weekly team meetings. upon extraction completion, all data were checked to ensure they fell on land and within the correct country. while the protocol implemented above was designed to reduce the amount of subjective decisions made by extractors, total elimination was not possible. wherever a subjective decision had to be made, the extractor utilized the various notes fields in order to document the logic behind decisions. these decisions were subsequently reviewed by other extractors. the techniques described here can be applied to collect and curate datasets for other infectious diseases, as has been previously demonstrated with dengue and leishmaniasis . additionally, since these data were collected independently through published reports of mers-cov occurrence, they may be used to build upon existing notification data , . our ability to capture occurrences in this dataset is contingent on the data contained within published literature. therefore, this dataset does not represent a total count of all cases. instead, this dataset's value lies within its geo-precision. data were extracted with a focus on obtaining the highest resolution possible. these data may be merged with other datasets, such as who or oie surveillance records, and are intended to complement, not replace, these resources. together, published reports and notification data can provide a more comprehensive snapshot of current disease extent and at-risk locations. an important consideration, whether using the literature data alone, or in combination with other databases, is the potential for duplication. various pieces of metadata can be used to evaluate where potential duplicates could lie, such as common date fields (month_start, month_end, year_start, year_end) or consistent geographic details (lat, long, poly_id, shape_type) or shared epidemiological tags (patient_type). researchers may wish to consider further steps, such as fuzzy matching of geographic data (e.g. matching a point with an overlapping buffer) or temporal data (e.g. matching a precise month with an overlapping month interval). we acknowledge this duplicate-removal process will not catch all matching records, but it will likely catch several. we recommend occurrences are layered from top to bottom in the following order: index (green), unspecified (orange), mammal (yellow), import (blue), secondary (purple). points were plotted using their assigned latitudes and longitudes, and shape files were created for polygons. buffers were also plotted using assigned latitudes and longitudes, after which each buffer's custom radius was drawn. higher resolution geographies (points, buffers, governorates) were plotted on top of lower resolution geographies (countries, regions). www.nature.com/scientificdata www.nature.com/scientificdata/ this approach because it will allow researchers to remove several duplicates without erroneously deleting any two occurrences that are truly unique (i.e. not duplicates). essentially, we recommend a sensitive approach above a more specific approach, as the latter simply risks culling too many records that aren't actually duplicates. when merging with other databases, consistency in metadata tagging is essential. for the who disease outbreak news data feed , for instance, nomenclature for case definitions is slightly different, with who definitions of "community acquired" and "not reported" comparable to "index" and "unspecified" respectively. in addition, it is important to recognize what information is beyond the scope of these additional databases. again, when comparing to the who dataset, it is important to recognize that serologically positive cases do not meet the case definition used in the who database. these adjustments need to be identified on a dataset-to-dataset basis. among cases tagged as index or unspecified. occurrences tagged as index are coloured green, those tagged as unspecified are coloured orange. points were plotted using their assigned latitudes and longitudes, and shape files were created for polygons. buffers were also plotted using assigned latitudes and longitudes, after which each buffer's custom radius was drawn. higher resolution geographies (points, buffers, governorates) were plotted on top of lower resolution geographies (countries, regions). points were plotted using their assigned latitudes and longitudes, and shape files were created for polygons. buffers were also plotted using assigned latitudes and longitudes, after which each buffer's custom radius was drawn. higher resolution geographies (points, buffers, governorates) were plotted on top of lower resolution geographies (countries, regions). www.nature.com/scientificdata www.nature.com/scientificdata/ this database can be combined with other covariates (e.g. satellite imagery) to produce environmental suitability models of mers-cov infection risk and potential spillover on both global and regional scales as achieved with other exemplar datasets [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . this information can be useful in resource allocation aimed at improving disease surveillance and contribute towards a better understanding of the factors facilitating continued emergence of index cases. the addition of sampling techniques and prevalence data may improve this dataset. researchers were ultimately unable to add these data due to inconsistencies in the way literature reported sampling techniques and prevalence date by geography. an attempt to extract these data using the current approach would have led to sporadic inclusion of this information and would not have been comprehensive for the entire dataset. moving forward, we recommend authors report sampling technique and prevalence data at the highest resolution geography possible, as seen in miguel et al. . we encourage continued presentation of paired epidemiological and geographic metadata that would allow for more detailed analysis in the future. this database may also be utilized in clinical settings to provide an evidence-base for diagnoses when used in conjunction with patient travel histories. additionally, it can be used to identify geographies for surveillance, particularly areas where mers-cov has been documented in animals but not humans (e.g. ethiopia and nigeria). identifying locations for surveillance will, in turn, inform global health security. while models will increase the resolution at which these questions can be addressed, datasets such as this provide an initial baseline. a major limitation of this database is the potential for sampling bias, which stems from higher frequency of disease reporting within countries where there exists strong healthcare infrastructure and reporting systems. this database does not attempt to account for such biases, which must be addressed in subsequent modelling activities where such biases are of consequence. similarly, another limitation is potential duplicate documentation of singular occurrences. this can happen when the same occurrence is assigned different geographies (e.g. point, polygon) in multiple publications. even though extractors made efforts to prospectively manually identify duplicate occurrences, this was challenging because the process relied upon papers providing sufficient details for extractors to determine a duplicate occurrence (e.g. geography, patient demographics, dates of occurrence, diagnostic methods, etc.). however, the majority of papers did not report such details for each occurrence. in those instances, it was impossible for extractors to discern whether occurrences may have been duplicates from a previous artic le. even case studies inconsistently reported patient details and demographic information. these are some examples of challenges faced by extractors when we attempted to identify duplicates. without sufficient contextual clues, extractors lacked evidence to determine duplicity and thus likely extracted some unique occurrences more than once. despite efforts to remove duplicate occurrences from the database, it is possible that some remain. geographic uncertainty is similarly problematic for analyses such as this. in some cases, polygons, as opposed to points, are utilised as a geographic frame of reference, reflecting the uncertainty in geotagging in the articles themselves. for some occurrences, there is a strong assumption that the geography listed corresponds to the site of infection. while the use of km × km as the minimum geographical unit allows for some leeway in this precision, it is possible that even with the point data (often corresponding to household clusters) these may not map directly with true infection sites. this must be considered in any subsequent geospatial analysis. finally, this database represents a time-bounded survey of the literature. while all efforts were made to be comprehensive within this period, articles, and therefore data, will continue to be published. efforts to streamline ongoing collection processes are still to be fully realized . regardless, we hope that this dataset provides a solid baseline for further iteration. isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) clinical features and viral diagnosis of two cases of infection with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: a report of nosocomial transmission enhanced mers coronavirus surveillance of travelers from the middle east to england control of an outbreak of 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niche map of ebola virus disease in africa the global distribution of crimean-congo hemorrhagic fever the global distribution and burden of dengue risk factors for mers coronavirus infection in dromedary camels in a supervised learning process to validate online disease reports for use in predictive models critical contribution of laboratories to outbreak response support for middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus international health regulations ( ) facilitate communication for in-flight contacts of a middle east respiratory syndrome case first confirmed case of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in the kingdom of bahrain: in a saudi gentleman after cardiac bypass surgery. case rep event based surveillance of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in bangladesh among pilgrims and travelers from the middle east: an update for the period middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus antibodies in dromedary camels middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus neutralising serum antibodies in dromedary camels: a comparative serological study definitive diagnosis in suspected middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus cases characteristics of traveler with middle east respiratory syndrome complete genome sequence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) from the first imported mers-cov case in china imported case of mers-cov infection identified in china mers-related betacoronavirus in vespertilio superans bats prevalence and genetic diversity analysis of human coronaviruses among cross-border children no mers-cov but positive influenza viruses in returning hajj pilgrims, china two deletion variants of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus found in a patient with characteristic symptoms human neutralizing monoclonal antibody inhibition of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus replication in the common marmoset complete genome sequence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus isolated from a dromedary camel in egypt cross-sectional surveillance of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in dromedary camels and other mammals in egypt mers coronavirus neutralizing antibodies in camels mers coronaviruses in dromedary camels seroepidemiology for mers coronavirus using microneutralisation and pseudoparticle virus neutralisation assays reveal a high prevalence of antibody in dromedary camels in egypt systematic, active surveillance for middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in camels in egypt middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: epidemiology and disease control measures geographic distribution of mers coronavirus among dromedary camels first cases of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infections in france, investigations and implications for the prevention of human-to-human transmission clinical features and virological analysis of a case of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection a case of imported middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection and public health response laboratory investigation and phylogenetic analysis of an imported middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus case in greece cluster of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections in iran epidemiological and clinical characteristics of patients with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in iran in health care associated middle east respiratory syndrome (mers): a case from iran influenza virus but not mers coronavirus circulation in iran phylogenetic analysis of merscov in human and camels in middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus specific antibodies in naturally exposed israeli llamas, alpacas and camels the prevalence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) antibodies in dromedary camels in israel detection of coronaviruses in bats of various species in italy investigation of an imported case of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov don't forget the migrants": exploring preparedness and response strategies to combat the potential spread of mers-cov virus through migrant workers in sri lanka high prevalence of middle east respiratory coronavirus in young dromedary camels in jordan. vector borne zoonotic dis arabia: an index case investigation middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) serology in major livestock species in an affected region in jordan stillbirth during infection with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus antibodies against mers coronavirus in dromedary camels mers-cov antibodies in humans, africa no serologic evidence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection among camel farmers exposed to highly seropositive camel herds: a household linked study serological evidence of mers-cov antibodies in dromedary camels (camelus dromedaries) in laikipia county occurrence of the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) across the gulf corporation council countries: four years update emergence of mers-cov in the middle east: origins, transmission, treatment, and perspectives laboratory-confirmed case of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infection in malaysia: preparedness and response dromedary camels in northern mali have high seropositivity to mers-cov middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infections in two returning travellers in the netherlands middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in dromedary camels in nigeria lack of serological evidence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in virus exposed camel abattoir workers in nigeria asymptomatic mers-cov infection in humans possibly linked to infected dromedaries imported from oman to united arab emirates middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in dromedary camels the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) zoonotic origin and transmission of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in the uae imported case of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infection from oman to thailand serologic evidence for mers-cov infection in dromedary camels contact tracing the first middle east respiratory syndrome case in the philippines effectiveness of the middle east respiratory syndrome-coronavirus protocol in enhancing the function of an emergency department in qatar high proportion of mers-cov shedding dromedaries at slaughterhouse with a potential epidemiological link to human cases isolation of mers coronavirus from a dromedary camel mers-cov infection of alpaca in a region where mers-cov is endemic middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) rna and neutralising antibodies in milk collected according to local customs from dromedary camels occupational exposure to dromedaries and risk for mers-cov infection risk factors for primary middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in camel workers in qatar during - : a case-control study mers-cov outbreak in jeddah-a link to health care facilities a case of long-term excretion and subclinical infection with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in a healthcare worker a comparative study of clinical presentation and risk factors for adverse outcome in patients hospitalised with acute respiratory disease due to mers coronavirus or other causes a family cluster of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections related to a likely unrecognized asymptomatic or mild case acute management and long-term survival among subjects with severe middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus pneumonia and ards acute middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: temporal lung changes observed on the chest radiographs of patients acute myocarditis associated with novel middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus an outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) due to coronavirus in al-ahssa region, saudi arabia antibody response and disease severity in healthcare worker mers survivors brief report: family cluster of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections characteristics and outcomes of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus patients admitted to an intensive care unit in jeddah, saudi arabia clinical and laboratory findings of the first imported case of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus to the united states clinical aspects and outcomes of patients with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection: a singlecenter experience in saudi arabia clinical course and outcomes of critically ill patients with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection co-circulation of three camel coronavirus species and recombination of mers-covs in saudi arabia community case clusters of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in hafr al-batin, kingdom of saudi arabia: a descriptive genomic study description of a hospital outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome in a large tertiary care hospital in saudi arabia descriptive epidemiology and characteristics of confirmed cases of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in the makkah region of saudi arabia detection of the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus genome in an air sample originating from a camel barn owned by an infected patient epidemiological, demographic, and clinical characteristics of cases of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus disease from saudi arabia: a descriptive study evidence for camel-to-human transmission of mers coronavirus exposures among mers case-patients first confirmed cases of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infection in the united states, updated information on the epidemiology of mers-cov infection, and guidance for the public, clinicians, and public health authorities hospital outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus human infection with mers coronavirus after exposure to infected camels, saudi arabia identified transmission dynamics of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection during an outbreak: implications of an overcrowded emergency department impact of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) on pregnancy and perinatal outcome lack of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus transmission from infected camels longitudinal study of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in dromedary camel herds in saudi arabia transmission and evolution of the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in saudi arabia: a descriptive genomic study spread, circulation, and evolution of the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus an observational, laboratory-based study of outbreaks of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in jeddah and riyadh, kingdom of saudi arabia multifacility outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome in taif, saudi arabia epidemiology of a novel recombinant middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in humans in saudi arabia mers coronavirus in dromedary camel herd, saudi arabia mers cov infection in two renal transplant recipients: case report mers-cov in upper respiratory tract and lungs of dromedary camels middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) coronavirus seroprevalence in domestic livestock in saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov): a cluster analysis with implications for global management of suspected cases middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in al-madinah city, saudi arabia: demographic, clinical and survival data middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in children middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection during pregnancy: a report of cases from saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in dromedary camels in saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus transmission in extended family middle eastern respiratory syndrome corona virus (mers cov): case reports from a tertiary care hospital in saudi arabia molecular epidemiology of hospital outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome notes from the field: nosocomial outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome in a large tertiary care hospital-riyadh, saudi arabia outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome at tertiary care hospital patient characteristics infected with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in a tertiary hospital predictors of mers-cov infection: a large case control study of patients presenting with ili at a mers-cov referral hospital in saudi arabia presence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus antibodies in saudi arabia: a nationwide, crosssectional, serological study presentation and outcome of middle east respiratory syndrome in saudi intensive care unit patients report of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infection in four patients with hematological malignancies treated at king fahad medical city risk factors for middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection among healthcare personnel spontaneous intracranial hemorrhage in a patient with middle east respiratory syndrome corona virus successful recovery of mers cov pneumonia in a patient with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome: a case report surveillance and testing for middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus, saudi arabia the critical care response to a hospital outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infection: an observational study the first case of the korean middle east respiratory syndrome outbreak travel-related mers-cov cases: an assessment of exposures and risk factors in a group of dutch travellers returning from the kingdom of saudi arabia treatment outcomes for patients with middle eastern respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers cov) infection at a coronavirus referral center in the kingdom of saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus transmission among health care workers: implication for infection control histopathology of middle east respiratory syndrome coronovirus (mers-cov) infection -clinicopathological and ultrastructural study the calm before the storm: clinical observations of middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) patients the prevalence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infection in livestock and temporal relation to locations and seasons assessing the detection of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus igg in suspected and proven cases of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection cross-sectional study of mers-cov-specific rna and antibodies in animals that have had contact with mers patients in saudi arabia a cohort-study of patients suspected for mers-cov in a referral hospital in saudi arabia conveyance contact investigation for imported middle east respiratory syndrome cases recovery from the middle east respiratory syndrome is associated with antibody and t-cell responses outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome-coronavirus causes high fatality after cardiac operations prevalence of antibodies against the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus, influenza a and b viruses among blood donors, saudi arabia serological evidence of coronavirus infections in native hamadryas baboons (papio hamadryas hamadryas) of the kingdom of saudi arabia hematologic, hepatic, and renal function changes in hospitalized patients with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus and pulmonary tuberculosis coinfection: implications for infection control outcome of strict implementation of infection prevention control measures during an outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in saudi arabia: a retrospective study sero-prevalence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) specific antibodies in dromedary camels in tabuk, saudi arabia seroepidemiology of middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) coronavirus in saudi arabia ( ) and australia ( ) and characterisation of assay specificity risk factors for primary middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus illness in humans middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus disease in children close relative of human middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in bat rooting the phylogenetic tree of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus by characterization of a conspecific virus from an african bat mers outbreak in korea: hospital-to-hospital transmission a case report of a middle east respiratory syndrome survivor with kidney biopsy results an unexpected outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in the republic of korea atypical presentations of mers-cov infection in immunocompromised hosts clinical implications of cases of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in a south korean outbreak emergency cesarean section in an epidemic of the middle east respiratory syndrome: a case report epidemiologic features of the first mers outbreak in korea: focus on pyeongtaek st. mary's hospital epidemiological investigation of the th confirmed middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus case with an indefinite mode of transmission during the pyeongtaek outbreak in korea extensive viable middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) coronavirus contamination in air and surrounding environment in mers isolation wards detection of severe acute respiratory syndrome-like, middle east respiratory syndrome-like bat coronaviruses and group h rotavirus in faeces of korean bats high fatality rates and associated factors in two hospital outbreaks of mers in daejeon, the republic of korea infectivity of an asymptomatic patient with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus mers epidemiological investigation to detect potential mode of transmission in the th mers confirmed case in pyeongtaek mers-cov outbreak following a single patient exposure in an emergency room in south korea: an epidemiological outbreak study middle east respiratory syndrome in persons, south korea middle east respiratory syndrome-coronavirus infection: a case report of serial computed tomographic findings in a young male patient outbreaks of middle east respiratory syndrome in two hospitals initiated by a single patient in daejeon successful treatment of suspected organizing pneumonia in a patient with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection: a case report surveillance operation for the st confirmed case of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in response to the patient's prior travel to jeju island transmission among healthcare worker contacts with a middle east respiratory syndrome patient in a single korean centre host susceptibility to mers-cov infection, a retrospective cohort study of the korean mers outbreak a study of the probable transmission routes of mers-cov during the first hospital outbreak in the republic of korea a middle east respiratory syndrome screening clinic for health care personnel during the middle east respiratory syndrome outbreak in south korea: a single-center experience evaluation and clinical validation of two field-deployable reverse transcription-insulated isothermal pcr assays for the detection of the middle east respiratory syndrome-coronavirus serologic responses of mers-coronavirus-infected patients according to the disease severity the clinical and virological features of the first imported case causing mers-cov outbreak in south korea mers-cov antibody responses year after symptom onset neurological complications during treatment of middle east respiratory syndrome impact of middle east respiratory syndrome outbreak on the use of emergency medical resources in febrile patients hospital outbreaks of middle east respiratory syndrome zero transmission of middle east respiratory syndrome: lessons learned from thailand family cluster of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections further evidence for bats as the evolutionary source of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus a phylogenetically distinct middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus detected in a dromedary calf from a closed dairy herd in dubai with rising seroprevalence with age acute middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in livestock dromedaries antibodies against mers coronavirus in dromedary camels clinicopathologic, immunohistochemical, and ultrastructural findings of a fatal case of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in the united arab emirates epidemiological investigation of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in dromedary camel farms linked with human infection in abu dhabi emirate middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus antibody reactors among camels in dubai middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus during pregnancy polyphyletic origin of mers coronaviruses and isolation of a novel clade a strain from dromedary camels in the united arab emirates prevalence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in dromedary camels in abu dhabi emirate time course of mers-cov infection and immunity in dromedary camels transmission of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections in healthcare settings response to emergence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus diversity of middle east respiratory syndrome coronaviruses in dromedary camels based on full-genome sequencing identification of diverse viruses in upper respiratory samples in dromedary camels from united arab emirates mers-cov in pregnancy some epidemiological studies on mers coronavirus in dromedaries in the united arab emirates -a short communication emerging and reemerging diseases in the world health organization (who) eastern mediterranean region-progress, challenges, and who initiatives melinda gates foundation opp# and s.i.h. was supported by opp curated and catalogued the database. s.s. provided managerial support. all authors participated in interpreting and summarizing the results. r.e.r. wrote the first draft of the manuscript. all other authors critically reviewed the manuscript had full access to all of the data in the study and takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis s.i.h. and d.m.p. are members of the editorial board of scientific data. supplementary information is available for this paper at https://doi.org/ . /s - - - .correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to d.m.p.reprints and permissions information is available at www.nature.com/reprints. open access this article is licensed under a creative commons attribution . international license, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the creative commons license, and indicate if changes were made. the images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's creative commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. if material is not included in the article's creative commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. to view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/ . /.the creative commons public domain dedication waiver http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/ . / applies to the metadata files associated with this article. key: cord- -r iqpmmc authors: smits, saskia l.; raj, v. stalin; pas, suzan d.; reusken, chantal b.e.m.; mohran, khaled; farag, elmoubasher a.b.a.; al-romaihi, hamad e.; alhajri, mohd m.; haagmans, bart l.; koopmans, marion p. title: reliable typing of mers-cov variants with a small genome fragment date: - - journal: j clin virol doi: . /j.jcv. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: r iqpmmc background: middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) is an emerging pathogen that causes lower respiratory tract infection in humans. camels are the likely animal source for zoonotic infection, although exact transmission modes remain to be determined. human-to-human transmission occurs sporadically. the wide geographic distribution of mers-cov among dromedary camels and ongoing transmissions to humans provides concern for the evolution of a mers-cov variant with efficient human-to-human transmission capabilities. phylogenetic analysis of mers-cov has occurred by analysis of full-length genomes or multiple concatenated genome fragments, which is time-consuming, costly and limited to high viral load samples. objective: to develop a simple, reliable mers-cov variant typing assay to facilitate monitoring of mers-cov diversity in animals and humans. study design: phylogenetic analysis of presently known full-length mers-cov genomes was performed to identify genomic regions with sufficient phylogenetic content to allow reliable mers-cov variant typing. rt-pcr assays targeting these regions were designed and optimized. results: a reverse-transcription pcr assay for mers-cov targeting a bp spike fragment provides a phylogenetic clustering of mers-cov variants comparable to that of full-length genomes. the detection limit corresponds to a cycle treshold value of ∼ with standard upe real time pcr assays on rna isolated from mers-cov emc. nasal swabs from rt-pcr positive camels (ct values . – . ) yielded reliable sequence information in samples. conclusions: we developed a simple, reliable mers-cov variant typing assay which is crucial in monitoring mers-cov circulation in real time with relatively little investment on location. middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov; family coronaviridae) may cause severe lower respiratory tract infection in humans [ , ] . camels are considered the likely animal source for zoonotic infection; sporadic human-to-human transmission does occur, but is considered to be inefficient based on currently available data [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . until recently, new mers-cov infections in humans were reported at a steady low rate reaching ∼ confirmed human cases early . in march and april , however, a surge of mers-cov infections occurred mainly in hospitals around jeddah, kingdom of saudi arabia (ksa) and united arab emirates (uae). this increased case load was in part attributed to an increase in community cases, but mostly to transmission within hospitals, with no evidence for evolution of a mers-cov variant with more efficient human-to-human transmission capabilities (who;http://www.who.int/csr/disease/coronavirus infections/ mers cov update may .pdf?ua= ). the ongoing occurrence of new cases, however, and the finding that mers-cov is endemic in dromedary camels in a wide geographic region [ , , ] , stresses the need for surveillance of strain diversity, to help unravel the epidemiology of this newly identified pathogen, and to provide a reference for studies into mers-cov evolution. all currently sequenced human and camel mers-cov genomes share > % nucleotide identity across the ∼ kb genome. phylogenetic analysis has occurred mainly by analysing full-length genomes or multiple concatenated genome fragments, to provide reliable phylogenetic information [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] . however, full length genome sequencing capacity is not widely available, and requires relatively high viral load, leading to limited success when trying to sequence animal or human samples [ ] . an accurate typing of mers-cov variants, preferably with a simple assay encompassing a short region of the mers-cov genome, is crucial in monitoring the mers-cov outbreak in real time with relatively little investments on location. in this study, we describe the development of a mers-cov variant typing assay, which can be used in monitoring mers-cov circulation, especially when more information on virus type is required rapidly from a large number of viruses from animals/humans. full or near full-length mers-cov genomes encompassing nucleotides - (numbering corresponding to mers-cov emc genome jx ) were aligned with mafft version (http://mafft.cbrc.jp/alignment/server/) ( table ) . to remove the redundancy from the dataset, fastgroupii analysis (http://fastgroup.sdsu.edu/fg tools.htm) was performed grouping all currently available viral genomes based on nucleotide composition, resulting in groups (table ) . one viral genome from each group was taken as representative in subsequent analyses. a summary of nucleotide positions that vary across the genomes was created using bioedit v . . [ ] and the number of nucleotide positions with variations was plotted over nucleotide windows. phyml trees were generated using seaview software with the approximate likelihood ratio test based on a shimodaira-hasegawa-like procedure which used general time reversible as substitution model. nearest neighbor interchange, subtree pruning, and regrafting-based tree search algorithms were used to estimate tree topologies, as described previously [ ] . total nucleic acids were isolated using an automated mag-napure extraction with the total nucleic acid isolation kit (roche, mannheim, germany) as described previously [ ] . the detection limit of the assay was determined on rna isolated from x dilutions of cell culture derived mers-cov emc (jx ), as described above. virus stocks were prepared as described previously [ ] . rna was isolated from serial -fold dilutions of mers-cov emc [ ] . serial -fold dilutions of this rna were amplified in parallel with the mers-cov variant typing assay described above and the upe and n gene real time pcr assays [ , ] . the sensitivity of the mers-cov variant typing assay was expressed as cycle threshold value based on the upe real time pcr assay. on may and , , the first two mers-cov infected patients in the netherlands who became infected upon travel to saudi arabia were reported to who; throat swabs from these patients were available [ ] . in february and april , nasal swabs were taken from dromedary camels of different age and sex from a slaughterhouse in doha, qatar [ ] , which were available for this study. to identify genome regions for reliable phylogenetic analysis comparable to that of full-length genome, (near) full-length mers-cov genomes (table ) were aligned. viral genomes that were . % identical were grouped and one viral genome from each group was taken as representative in the analysis (table ) and a phyml tree was generated (fig. a) . was plotted over nt windows (fig. b) . four genome fragments, two located in orf a, one in s and one in orf b, showed a relatively high number of snps (fig. b) and for this reason already had been used as concatenated genome fragment for phylogenetic analysis [ ] . however, phylogenetic trees created for these four fragments separately did not accurately reflect the phylogenetic positions of the currently known full-length mers-cov genomes (data not shown). in a subsequent analysis all identified snps were inspected visually and regions containing snps with phylogenetic information regarding the previously identified four clusters of viruses were identified (fig. a) . the s domain of the spike protein contains a number of these mutations (fig. b) . a fragment of bp, containing three of these snps, provided a phylogenetic tree similar to the one obtained upon full-genome analysis regarding the previously identified four mers-cov clusters (fig. ) , whereas other mers-cov genome regions did not provide similar results. as observed for the full-length genomes, human, and camel mers-cov genomes shared > % nucleotide identity across the bp s domain fragment. mers-cov genomes that were released recently and not taken along in the variation analysis were typed using the bp s domain and clustered similar to their phylogenetic positions as upon full genome analysis ( fig. and table ), thereby validating the assay. a sequencing rt-pcr targeting the identified genome fragment was developed and optimized using rna isolated from cell culturederived mers-cov. in limiting dilution experiments, the mers-cov variant typing assay amplified the bp fragment down to a cycle treshold value of ∼ as determined by diagnostic upe real time pcr assays [ , ] . the mers-cov variant typing assay was used to type rt-pcr positive nose swabs from the first two human dutch mers-cov cases in . the results showed grouping consistent with previous findings based on long sequence fragments [ ] (fig. ). in addition, the mers-cov variant typing assay was performed on camel samples from a slaughterhouse in qatar [ ] and sequences for mers-cov positive animals with cycle threshold values ranging from . to . as determined by upe real time rt-pcr [ , ] were obtained (fig. ) . five different camel mers-cov variants in clusters b and b were detected, without the need for full genome sequencing. phylogenetic analysis of representative mers-cov full-length genomes indicated that four regions in the mers-cov genome exist with a substantially higher nucleotide variation across genomes. however, phylogenetic analysis of these genome regions sepa-rately did not provide reliable phylogenetic information, in contrast to an analysis of the concatenated fragments [ , , ] . subsequent analyses revealed a region in the open reading frame that encodes the spike protein with a number of positions in which nucleotide variation occurs between mers-cov variants with a strong phylogenetic signal regarding previously identified clusters of viruses based on full-length mers-cov genomes. the here- [ ] and from camels from a slaughterhouse in doha, qatar [ ] . the observed detection limit of a cycle treshold value of ∼ allows variant typing in clinical samples obtained from humans and animals with relatively low viral loads. it enables inclusion of samples in phylogenetic analysis that would not have been included when only full length genomes would have been accepted. this mers-cov variant typing assay, targeting a part of the mers-cov spike gene, is a relatively simple rt-pcr sequencing assay that could be performed more widely as initial screening assay in laboratories with basic sequencing capacity. it provides accurate crude mers-cov type information, applicable in monitoring viral variants in real time. new variants identified through this initial screening could then be sent to a reference laboratory for further characterization. the continued occurrence of transmission between humans in health care and family settings is an ongoing concern as stated by the world health organization (http://www.who.int/csr/disease/coronavirus infections/mers cov update march .pdf?ua= ), although the outbreaks appear to be self-limiting or extinguishable with rigorous implementation of appropriate infection control guidelines at present. however, as the primary route of transmission to humans is uninterrupted, human-to-human transmissions will continue to occur. the data obtained from the mers-cov variant typing assay would aid in informing the most effective international preparedness and response, allowing ad hoc risk assessment and implementation of containment strategies if necessary. state of knowledge and data gaps of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in humans isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in dromedary camels in saudi arabia mers coronaviruses in dromedary camels middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in dromedary camels: an outbreak investigation middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) coronavirus seroprevalence in domestic livestock in saudi arabia human infection with mers coronavirus after exposure to infected camels antibodies against mers coronavirus in dromedary camels seroepidemiology for mers coronavirus using microneutralisation and pseudoparticle virus neutralisation assays reveal a high prevalence of antibody in dromedary camels in egypt middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus neutralising serum antibodies in dromedary camels: a comparative serological study middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus quasispecies that include homologues of human isolates revealed through whole-genome analysis and virus cultured from dromedary camels in saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in dromedary camels isolation of mers coronavirus from a dromedary camel transmission and evolution of the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in saudi arabia: a descriptive genomic study bioedit: a user-friendly biological sequence alignment editor and analysis program for windows / /nt genomic characterization of a newly discovered coronavirus associated with acute respiratory distress syndrome in humans detection of a novel human coronavirus by real-time reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction assays for laboratory confirmation of novel human coronavirus (hcov-emc) infections middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infections in two returning travellers in the netherlands this work was funded by zonmw top project z. this does not alter our adherence to all the policies on sharing data and materials. all authors contributed to gathering and analysis of the information. saskia smits, bart haagmans, and marion koopmans drafted and revised the manuscript based on all authors contributions. supplementary data associated with this article can be found, in the online version, at http://dx.doi.org/ . /j.jcv. . . . key: cord- -vdeffy l authors: jiang, yuting; li, junfeng; teng, yue; sun, hong; tian, guang; he, lei; li, pei; chen, yuehong; guo, yan; li, jiangfan; zhao, guangyu; zhou, yusen; sun, shihui title: complement receptor c ar inhibition reduces pyroptosis in hdpp -transgenic mice infected with mers-cov date: - - journal: viruses doi: . /v sha: doc_id: cord_uid: vdeffy l middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) is a highly pathogenic virus with a crude mortality rate of ~ %. previously, we established a human dpp transgenic (hdpp -tg) mouse model in which we studied complement overactivation-induced immunopathogenesis. here, to better understand the pathogenesis of mers-cov, we studied the role of pyroptosis in thp- cells and hdpp tg mice with mers-cov infection. we found that mers-cov infection induced pyroptosis and over-activation of complement in human macrophages. the hdpp -tg mice infected with mers-cov overexpressed caspase- in the spleen and showed high il- β levels in serum, suggesting that pyroptosis occurred after infection. however, when the c a-c ar axis was blocked by an anti-c ar antibody (ab), expression of caspase- and il- β fell. these data indicate that mers-cov infection induces overactivation of complement, which may contribute to pyroptosis and inflammation. pyroptosis and inflammation were suppressed by inhibiting c ar . these results will further our understanding of the pathogenesis of mers-cov infection. middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov), the second highly pathogenic coronavirus to emerge after severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov), causes severe acute respiratory failure and extra-pulmonary multi-organ damage accompanied by severe systemic inflammation [ ] [ ] [ ] . however, the pathogenesis of mers-cov still needs to be explored. complement activation and pyroptosis are two proteolytic cascades that defend the host against dangerous pathogens. they are important parts of the innate immune system and have some similar characteristics, including pore-formation and proinflammatory characteristics. pyroptosis is a lytic and inflammatory mode of regulated cell death catalyzed by the caspase family [ ] . activation of caspase- relies on assembly of inflammasome complexes, which contain nlrp b, nlrc , nlrp , and aim . different inflammasomes are activated by different pathogen-associated molecular patterns (pamps) or danger-associated molecular patterns (damps) via particular pattern recognition receptors (prrs). the best-characterized inflammasome is the nlrp inflammasome, which responds to a variety of bacterial, viral, and fungal agents [ , ] , damps (e.g., atp, monosodium urate crystals, and amyloid-β aggregates) [ , ] , and even environmental and industrial particles such as silica and asbestos [ ] . the nlrp inflammasome comprises the nlrp scaffold, the asc (pycard) adaptor, and pro-caspase- . the activated nlrp inflammasome promotes transformation of pro-caspase- to its active form, which proteolytically cleaves gasdermin d, pro-il- β, and pro-il- to yield their bioactive forms. the n-terminal domain of cleaved gasdermin d perforates the cell membrane, resulting in osmotic lysis [ ] , whereas mature il- β and il- act as proinflammatory cytokines [ ] . the complement system is an ancient molecular cascade; indeed, homologs have been found in sea urchin [ ] and mosquitoes [ ] . complement is activated via three pathways: the classical, lectin, and alternative pathways. during the process of activation, an enzyme named c convertase cleaves c to c a and c b, which are recruited to the c convertase to form the c convertase. c convertase catalyzes cleavage of c to c a and c b to initiate the terminal complement pathway, resulting in formation of the membrane attack complex, which has pore-forming properties. during this process, two split products, c a and c a (known as anaphylatoxins), promote inflammation or serve as chemoattractants by engaging their cognate receptors [ , ] . in a previous study we demonstrated that aberrant complement activation contributes to severe outcomes in hdpp transgenic mice infected with mers-cov, and that preventing over-activation of the complement system may be an effective clinical therapy for mers [ ] . here, we examined the role of pyroptosis in the pathogenesis of mers, along with the relationship between pyroptosis and complement. the results may help us to better understand the mechanism underlying severe outcomes after mers-cov infection. all animal experiments were approved by the institutional animal care and use committee (iacuc) of the beijing institute of microbiology and epidemiology (iacuc permit no: bime - ; permit date: march ). animal studies were carried out in strict accordance with the recommendations set out in the guide for the care and use of laboratory animals. human monocytic cells (thp- ) were purchased from the american type culture collection (manassas, va, usa, atcc number: tib- ) and cultured in rpmi medium supplemented with % heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum (fbs), u/ml penicillin, µg/ml streptomycin sulfate, × glutamax-i (l-glutamine alternate), and . mm -mercaptoethanol. thp- (differentiated) macrophages were obtained by exposing the cells to nm phorbol- -myristate- -acetate (pma) for h, followed by culture for a further h in complete growth medium without pma. mers-cov (hcov-emc/ strain) was propagated and titrated on vero cells in an approved biosafety level laboratory. thp- differentiated macrophages cultured in -cm flasks were infected with mers-cov at a multiplicity of infection of . . the virus was adsorbed at • c for h and unbound virus was washed away. hdpp -tg mice ( weeks old, female) [ ] were maintained in a pathogen-free facility and housed in cages containing sterilized feed and drinking water. following intraperitoneal anesthetization with sodium pentobarbital ( mg/kg body weight), mice were inoculated intranasally with mers-cov ( . % tissue culture infectious dose (tcid )) in µl dulbecco's modified eagle's medium (dmem). mice in the sham group received the same volume of dmem. for the experiments of c ar inhibition, mice were received an intravenous (i.v.) injection ( µg/kg) of a monoclonal ab (mab) specific for mouse c ar (hycult biotech, uden, the netherlands) to block the interaction of c a to c ar or an injection of phosphate-buffered saline (pbs) (sham treatment control) at the same time as mers-cov inoculation. all infectious experiments related to mers-cov were performed in an approved biosafety level facility. thp- differentiated macrophages were lysed in trizol™ reagent (life technologies, carlsbad, ca, usa) at h post-infection with mers-cov. total rna and proteins were isolated according to the reagent user guide. mice were euthanized by overdose inhalation of carbon dioxide at different time points after infection with mers-cov. lungs were harvested and total rna was extracted and purified using an rneasy extraction kit (qiagen, hilden, germany). to detect expression of inflammasomes and complement components in mers-cov-infected thp- differentiated macrophages and hdpp -tg mice, µg of total rna from cells or the lung of mice we used as template for first-strand cdna synthesis. the resulting cdna was subjected to quantitative pcr using power sybr ® green pcr master mix (life technologies, carlsbad, ca, usa) to determine the relative abundance of inflammasome and complement components. the forward and reverse primers used for each component are listed in the table . the relative amount of each gene was obtained by normalization against an endogenous control gene (gapdh) and calculated using the comparative −∆∆ct method. sham-infected monocytes and sham-infected hdpp -tg mice were used as respective calibrators. an identical amplification reaction comprising (i) polymerase activation and dna denaturation at • c for min, (ii) cycles each of the denaturation at • c for s, and (iii) an annealing/extension step at • c for s, was used for each gene analyzed. proteins isolated from thp- monocytic cells and thp- differentiated macrophages were electrophoresed in a % sds-page gel and transferred to a pvdf membrane (ge healthcare, dassel, germany). pvdf membranes were then blocked for h at room temperature in % non-fat cytokines in mouse serum were measured using a milliplex mouse cytokine/chemokine magnetic panel kit (merck millipore, burlington, ma, usa). a panel of inflammatory cytokines (il- β, il- , tnf-α, and ifn-γ) was detected according to the manufacturer's protocol. sections of paraffin-embedded spleen and lung tissues ( µm thick) were prepared and stained to detect antigen expression. briefly, retrieved sections were incubated overnight at • c with the following antibodies: mouse anti-caspase- mab (adipogen, san diego, ca, usa), polyclonal rabbit anti-cd (abcam, cambridge, ma, usa), and polyclonal anti-ifn-γrα (santa cruz biotechnology). biotinylated immunoglobulin g was then added, followed by an avidin-biotin-peroxidase conjugate (beijing zhongshan biotechnology co., ltd., beijing, china). immunoreactivity was detected using , diamino benzidine (dab). slides were counter-stained with hematoxylin. statistical analyses were performed using graphpad prism software, version . (graphpad software, san diego, ca, usa). student's t test was used to compare two groups with respect to relative expression of mrna and cytokine levels in serum. p values < . were considered significant. unlike abortive infection of sars-cov in human macrophages, mers-cov can establish a productive infection in macrophages and induce production of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines [ ] . many rna viruses, such as ev , h n , h n influenza a virus, and zika virus, can infect macrophages and trigger il- β secretion via the nlrp inflammasome [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . to evaluate the response of macrophages to mers-cov infection, we inoculated thp- monocytic cells and thp- differentiated macrophages with mers-cov or rpmi medium (sham-infection). we then examined expression of nlrp , pro-caspase- , and pro-il- β h later by rt-qpcr. as shown in figure , mers-cov infection induced relatively higher expression of pro-caspase- ( figure a ) and pro-il- β ( figure b ), but not nlrp ( figure c ), in both thp- monocytes and macrophages. expression of pro-il- β in monocytes increased by -fold, whereas that in macrophages increased by -fold (on average). we verified expression of caspase- , il- β, and mers nucleocapsid protein (np) by western blotting ( figure d ). mers-cov-infected thp- macrophages expressed higher levels of pro-caspase- , pro-il- β, and activated il- β (p ) than sham-infected thp- macrophages or mers-cov-infected thp- monocytes. mers np was detected in both mers-cov-infected thp- monocytes and macrophages. these results indicate that mers-cov infection induces high levels of proinflammatory il- β secretion and thp- macrophage pyroptosis. to determine whether mers-cov infection induces pyroptosis in mice, we used rt-qpcr to detect mrna encoding nlrp , pro-caspase- , and pro-il- β in lung tissue from hdpp transgenic mice at day post-mers-cov infection. although there was no significant difference in expression of nlrp and pro-caspase- between the sham-infected and mers-cov-infected groups ( figure a ,b), expression of pro-il- β mrna was significantly higher after mers-cov infection ( figure c ). in addition, we measured the concentration of il- β in serum. the results showed that mers-cov infection induced production of il- β ( figure d ). furthermore, we examined expression of caspase- in the lung and spleen at day post-mers-cov infection by ihc. in line with the mrna results, there was no significant difference in expression of caspase- in the lung of sham-infected and mers-cov-infected mice. however, the spleens of mice infected with mers-cov showed higher expression of caspase- than those of mice in the sham group ( figure e ). the results indicated that mers-cov infection could induce pyroptosis in mice. (d) samples of total protein were subjected to western blotting to detect pro-caspase- , pro-il- β, activated il- β, and mers np. to determine whether mers-cov infection induces pyroptosis in mice, we used rt-qpcr to detect mrna encoding nlrp , pro-caspase- , and pro-il- β in lung tissue from hdpp transgenic mice at day post-mers-cov infection. although there was no significant difference in expression of nlrp and pro-caspase- between the sham-infected and mers-cov-infected groups (figure a,b) , expression of pro-il- β mrna was significantly higher after mers-cov infection ( figure c ). in addition, we measured the concentration of il- β in serum. the results showed that mers-cov infection induced production of il- β ( figure d ). furthermore, we examined expression of caspase- in the lung and spleen at day post-mers-cov infection by ihc. in line with the mrna results, there was no significant difference in expression of caspase- in the lung of sham-infected and mers-cov-infected mice. however, the spleens of mice infected with mers-cov showed higher expression of caspase- than those of mice in the sham group ( figure e ). the results indicated that mers-cov infection could induce pyroptosis in mice. il- β plays an important role in mediating autoinflammatory diseases and in generating inflammatory responses to infection [ ] . therefore, to assess the inflammatory responses in mice, we measured tnf-α, ifn-γ, and il- in serum at day post-mers-cov infection. as shown in figure a -c, serum from mice in the mers-cov-infected group contained more tnf-α, ifn-γ, and il- than that from sham-infected mice. ihc examination of cd and ifn-γ receptor expression also suggested greater macrophage infiltration and activation in the lung and spleen of mice at days post-mers-cov infection ( figure d ). these results indicate that mers-cov infection causes systemic inflammation, as reported in clinical mers patients and mers-cov infected animal models [ , ] . il- β plays an important role in mediating autoinflammatory diseases and in generating inflammatory responses to infection [ ] . therefore, to assess the inflammatory responses in mice, we measured tnf-α, ifn-γ, and il- in serum at day post-mers-cov infection. as shown in figure a -c, serum from mice in the mers-cov-infected group contained more tnf-α, ifn-γ, and il- than that from sham-infected mice. ihc examination of cd and ifn-γ receptor expression also suggested greater macrophage infiltration and activation in the lung and spleen of mice at days post-mers-cov infection ( figure d ). these results indicate that mers-cov infection causes systemic inflammation, as reported in clinical mers patients and mers-cov infected animal models [ , ] . the complement system links activation of toll-like receptors to transcription of il- β mrna [ , ] . it has been studied that intracellular c is converted to biologically active c a and c b by the protease cathepsin l [ ] , and c a activates nlrp and triggers il- β production in human monocytes by regulating efflux of atp [ ] . in addition, c a is believed to induce a proinflammatory or anti-inflammatory response when ligated to c ar or c ar respectively [ ] [ ] [ ] . thus, we used rt-qpcr to examine expression of complement components and their receptors c ar, c ar , and c ar . as shown in figure , c and c ar expression by both thp- monocytes and macrophages was highly upregulated (by - -fold) after mers-cov infection. c ar was upregulated, whereas c ar was downregulated, after mers-cov infection. the complement system links activation of toll-like receptors to transcription of il- β mrna [ , ] . it has been studied that intracellular c is converted to biologically active c a and c b by the protease cathepsin l [ ] , and c a activates nlrp and triggers il- β production in human monocytes by regulating efflux of atp [ ] . in addition, c a is believed to induce a proinflammatory or anti-inflammatory response when ligated to c ar or c ar respectively [ ] [ ] [ ] . thus, we used rt-qpcr to examine expression of complement components and their receptors c ar, c ar , and c ar . as shown in figure , c and c ar expression by both thp- monocytes and macrophages was highly upregulated (by - -fold) after mers-cov infection. c ar was upregulated, whereas c ar was downregulated, after mers-cov infection. our previous study demonstrated that mers-cov infection results in dysregulated host immune responses and severe tissue damage [ ] and inhibiting c ar alleviates mers-cov infection-induced tissue damage by regulating host immune responses [ ] . here, we used an anti-c ar ab to block the c a-c ar axis. the antibody was administered at the same time as mers-cov infection. we then measured expression of caspase- in the spleen and il- β in the lung and serum. compared with the pbs-treated group, mice receiving the anti-c ar ab expressed less caspase- in the spleen at day post-mers-cov infection ( figure a ). although there was no significant difference between the two groups with respect to pro-il- β mrna expression ( figure b ), serum levels of il- β were lower in the anti-c ar ab-treated group than in the pbs-treated group at day ( figure c ) and day [ ] post-mers-cov infection. these results suggest that complement inhibition decreased the expression of pyroptosis indicators, il- β and caspase- , in mice infected with mers-cov. our previous study demonstrated that mers-cov infection results in dysregulated host immune responses and severe tissue damage [ ] and inhibiting c ar alleviates mers-cov infection-induced tissue damage by regulating host immune responses [ ] . here, we used an anti-c ar ab to block the c a-c ar axis. the antibody was administered at the same time as mers-cov infection. we then measured expression of caspase- in the spleen and il- β in the lung and serum. compared with the pbs-treated group, mice receiving the anti-c ar ab expressed less caspase- in the spleen at day post-mers-cov infection ( figure a ). although there was no significant difference between the two groups with respect to pro-il- β mrna expression ( figure b ), serum levels of il- β were lower in the anti-c ar ab-treated group than in the pbs-treated group at day ( figure c ) and day [ ] post-mers-cov infection. these results suggest that complement inhibition decreased the expression of pyroptosis indicators, il- β and caspase- , in mice infected with mers-cov. our previous study demonstrated that mers-cov infection results in dysregulated host immune responses and severe tissue damage [ ] and inhibiting c ar alleviates mers-cov infection-induced tissue damage by regulating host immune responses [ ] . here, we used an anti-c ar ab to block the c a-c ar axis. the antibody was administered at the same time as mers-cov infection. we then measured expression of caspase- in the spleen and il- β in the lung and serum. compared with the pbs-treated group, mice receiving the anti-c ar ab expressed less caspase- in the spleen at day post-mers-cov infection ( figure a ). although there was no significant difference between the two groups with respect to pro-il- β mrna expression ( figure b ), serum levels of il- β were lower in the anti-c ar ab-treated group than in the pbs-treated group at day ( figure c ) and day [ ] post-mers-cov infection. these results suggest that complement inhibition decreased the expression of pyroptosis indicators, il- β and caspase- , in mice infected with mers-cov. at day after mers-cov infection, we measured proinflammatory cytokines (ifn-γ, tnf-α, and il- ) in serum. ifn-γ levels in mice treated with the anti-c ar ab were much lower than those in the pbs-treated group ( figure a ). to further evaluate the effect of complement inhibition on the local inflammation at later time after mers-cov infection, we examined expression of cd and ifn-γ receptor in lung and spleen at days post-mers-cov infection. ihc revealed that macrophage infiltration and activation were lower in the anti-c ar ab-treated group ( figure d ). taken together, these results suggest that inhibiting complement dampens the over-activated inflammatory response in mice infected with mers-cov. at day after mers-cov infection, we measured proinflammatory cytokines (ifn-γ, tnf-α, and il- ) in serum. ifn-γ levels in mice treated with the anti-c ar ab were much lower than those in the pbs-treated group ( figure a ). to further evaluate the effect of complement inhibition on the local inflammation at later time after mers-cov infection, we examined expression of cd and ifn-γ receptor in lung and spleen at days post-mers-cov infection. ihc revealed that macrophage infiltration and activation were lower in the anti-c ar ab-treated group ( figure d ). taken together, these results suggest that inhibiting complement dampens the over-activated inflammatory response in mice infected with mers-cov. macrophages play important roles in host defense by clearing dead cells, ingesting and destroying microbes, and presenting antigens to t lymphocytes. in addition, macrophages produce the full array of complement components [ ] and prrs, which are closely associated with inflammasome activation and pyroptosis. the accumulated studies indicate that macrophages play an important role in the pathogenesis of sars and mers [ , ] . macrophages infected with mers-cov secrete proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines [ ] . widespread distribution of these macrophages throughout many organs is one of the reasons underlying multi-organ damage and systemic inflammation after virus infection. pyroptosis or inflammasome activation plays an important role in virus-mediated pathogenesis. for example, abortive hiv- infection in quiescent macrophages play important roles in host defense by clearing dead cells, ingesting and destroying microbes, and presenting antigens to t lymphocytes. in addition, macrophages produce the full array of complement components [ ] and prrs, which are closely associated with inflammasome activation and pyroptosis. the accumulated studies indicate that macrophages play an important role in the pathogenesis of sars and mers [ , ] . macrophages infected with mers-cov secrete proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines [ ] . widespread distribution of these macrophages throughout many organs is one of the reasons underlying multi-organ damage and systemic inflammation after virus infection. pyroptosis or inflammasome activation plays an important role in virus-mediated pathogenesis. for example, abortive hiv- infection in quiescent lymphoid cd t cells leads to cd t cell pyroptosis independent of the nlrp inflammasome [ ] . ev d and zikv ns activate the nlrp inflammasome by interacting with nacht and the lrr domain of nlrp [ , ] . the pb -f protein of avian influenza a virus h n or h n induces inflammation by activating the nlrp inflammasome [ , ] , and deficiency of nlrp or caspase- protects mice against h n infection-associated morbidity and mortality [ ] . here, we demonstrate that the dysregulated macrophage-mediated immune responses after mers-cov infection may contribute to a severe outcome. several studies demonstrate relationships between complement and inflammasomes. for example, c -/-mice display reduced inflammasome activation in an intracerebral hemorrhage (ich) model [ ] . engagement of c a and c ar on cd + t cells generates reactive oxygen species, which are a classical damp, thereby triggering inflammasome assembly [ ] . in monocytes, c a alters metabolic programming and increases atp efflux, leading to nlrp activation and il- β generation via the receptor p × [ ] . thus, the complement system is considered to be an essential regulatory component of the cellular alarm system that controls inflammasome activation [ ] . here, we inhibit mers-cov infection-induced inflammation and pyroptosis by blocking the c a-c ar axis with an anti-c ar antibody. in our study, we first demonstrated that virus infection leads to pyroptosis by measuring activation of caspase- and il- β in human macrophages infected with mers-cov ( figure ). next, we found that mers-cov infection induced transcription of pro-il- β in the lung and expression of caspase- in the spleen. activated caspase- could be released into the extracellular space and delivered to the lung via exosomes [ ] or the systemic circulation; it then cleaves pro-il- β into its bio-activated form, which is secreted into the serum ( figure d ). we cannot exclude the possibility that pyroptosis occurs in the spleen because we did not detect expression of pro-il- β. meanwhile, examination of cd and ifn-γ receptor expression revealed macrophage infiltration and activation in the lungs and spleen ( figure d ). thus, pyroptosis could occur in both organs. in our previous study, we showed that inhibiting c ar increased splenic cell regeneration and decreased splenic cell apoptosis, thereby alleviating mers-cov infection-induced tissue damage [ ] . the spleen happens to be a large reservoir for myeloid lineage cells such as macrophages, dendritic cells and cd + t cells in which pyroptosis mainly occurred [ , , ] . here, we studied and demonstrated that inhibiting c ar suppressed caspase- activation ( figure a ) and macrophage infiltration and activation in the spleen ( figure d ), and thereby reduced the secretion of il- β into the serum ( figure c ) and the systemic inflammation ( figure ). however, in the lung tissue, there was no significant difference of pro-il- β transcription between the ab and sham-treated groups ( figure b ), which may due to the limited macrophages, the main cell type in which pyroptosis occurred, when compared to that in spleen. although many studies have focused on the link between complement and pyroptosis, the pathways that link them remain unclear. here, our results showed that mers-cov infection induces pro-il- β transcription, and complement activation, which leads to pyroptosis in macrophages. induction of pyroptosis was related with complement activation and may be promoted by ligation of c a and c ar , which was confirmed by the blockade of anti-c ar antibody (figure ) . in summary, these data indicate that mers-cov infection induces overactivation of complement, which may contribute to pyroptosis and inflammation. pyroptosis and inflammation were suppressed by inhibiting c ar . these research will further our understanding of the pathogenesis of mers-cov infection. occurred, when compared to that in spleen. although many studies have focused on the link between complement and pyroptosis, the pathways that link them remain unclear. here, our results showed that mers-cov infection induces pro-il- β transcription, and complement activation, which leads to pyroptosis in macrophages. induction of pyroptosis was related with complement activation and may be promoted by ligation of c a and c ar , which was confirmed by the blockade of anti-c ar antibody (figure ) . clinical course and 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the inflammasomes sea urchin coelomocytes specifically express a homologue of the complement component c conserved role of a complement-like protein in phagocytosis revealed by dsrna knockout in cultured cells of the mosquito the role of anaphylatoxins c a and c a in regulating innate and adaptive immune responses the role of the complement anaphylatoxins in the recruitment of eosinophils blockade of the c a-c ar axis alleviates lung damage in hdpp -transgenic mice infected with mers-cov multi-organ damage in human dipeptidyl peptidase transgenic mice infected with middle east respiratory syndrome-coronavirus active replication of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus and aberrant induction of inflammatory cytokines and chemokines in human macrophages: implications for pathogenesis ev d protein binds with nlrp and enhances the assembly of inflammasome complex the nlrp inflammasome mediates in vivo innate immunity to influenza a virus through recognition of viral rna the h n influenza a virus infection results in lethal inflammation in the mammalian host via the nlrp -caspase- inflammasome zika virus infection induces host inflammatory responses by facilitating nlrp inflammasome assembly and interleukin- beta secretion immunological and inflammatory functions of the interleukin- family clinical features and viral diagnosis of two cases of infection with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: a report of nosocomial transmission crosstalk pathways between toll-like receptors and the complement system cholesterol crystals induce complement-dependent inflammasome activation and cytokine release intracellular complement activation sustains t cell homeostasis and mediates effector differentiation c a modulates il- beta secretion in human monocytes by regulating atp efflux and subsequent nlrp inflammasome activation the chemotactic receptor for human c a anaphylatoxin evidence for a functional role of the second c a receptor c l an anti-inflammatory function for the complement anaphylatoxin c a-binding protein, c l extrahepatic complement biosynthesis: where, when and why? multiple organ infection and the pathogenesis of sars cell death by pyroptosis drives cd t-cell depletion in hiv- infection activation of the nlrp inflammasome by iav virulence protein pb -f contributes to severe pathophysiology and disease pb -f peptide derived from avian influenza a virus h n induces inflammation via activation of the nlrp inflammasome nlrp is required for complement-mediated caspase- and il- beta activation in ich intracellular complement activation-an alarm raising mechanism? inflammasome-derived exosomes activate nf-kappab signaling in macrophages structure and function of the spleen key: cord- - gs xcw authors: leist, sarah r.; cockrell, adam s. title: genetically engineering a susceptible mouse model for mers-cov-induced acute respiratory distress syndrome date: - - journal: mers coronavirus doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: gs xcw since , monthly cases of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) continue to cause severe respiratory disease that is fatal in ~ % of diagnosed individuals. the ongoing threat to global public health and the need for novel therapeutic countermeasures have driven the development of animal models that can reproducibly replicate the pathology associated with mers-cov in human infections. the inability of mers-cov to replicate in the respiratory tracts of mice, hamsters, and ferrets stymied initial attempts to generate small animal models. identification of human dipeptidyl peptidase iv (hdpp ) as the receptor for mers-cov infection opened the door for genetic engineering of mice. precise molecular engineering of mouse dpp (mdpp ) with clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (crispr)/cas technology maintained inherent expression profiles, and limited mers-cov susceptibility to tissues that naturally express mdpp , notably the lower respiratory tract wherein mers-cov elicits severe pulmonary pathology. here, we describe the generation of the – (+/+) mers-cov mouse model in which mice were made susceptible to mers-cov by modifying two amino acids on mdpp (a and t ), and the use of adaptive evolution to generate novel mers-cov isolates that cause fatal respiratory disease. the – (+/+) mice are currently being used to evaluate novel drug, antibody, and vaccine therapeutic countermeasures for mers-cov. the chapter starts with a historical perspective on the emergence of mers-cov and animal models evaluated for mers-cov pathogenesis, and then outlines the development of the – (+/+) mouse model, assays for assessing a mers-cov pulmonary infection in a mouse model, and describes some of the challenges associated with using genetically engineered mice. in february of mers-cov was listed as a priority on the r&d blueprint for the global strategy and preparedness plan outlined by the world health organization (who) [ ] . the r&d blueprint includes viruses that pose a global public health risk, and for which there are no available therapeutic countermeasures [ ] . twenty-seven countries have reported cases of mers-cov with most cases confined to the arabian peninsula. diagnosed cases of mers-cov in countries outside the arabian peninsula are primarily traveler associated. the potential for global spread of mers-cov was realized in when a single traveler returning to south korea initiated an outbreak that infected people resulting in % fatality and caused widespread fear that crippled the economy for nearly months [ ] [ ] [ ] . human-to-human transmission is often associated with close contact in the health care setting, but can also occur between family members within a household [ ] . asymptomatic individuals pose a particular risk of transmission due to their unknown carrier status as demonstrated in the health care setting [ ] . despite the high percent of fatalities associated with mers-cov outbreaks on the arabian peninsula most epidemiological studies suggest r values < , indicative of a low risk of sustainable human-to-human transmission, whereas epidemiological studies from the south korean outbreak describe r values (> ) akin to more sustainable human-to-human transmission [ ] . recurring spillover events from dromedary camels (zoonotic reservoir for mers-cov on the arabian peninsula) likely contribute to newly diagnosed cases in humans [ ] [ ] [ ] . the potential for continuous reintroduction to humans increases the risk of mers-cov adapting in humans to acquire enhanced human-tohuman transmission profiles, a scenario suspected to have initiated the sars-cov pandemic in - [ ] . effective public health measures and culling of civet cats, the zoonotic host for sars-cov, brought the sars-cov pandemic to a rapid end [ ] . eliminating mers-cov through culling of infected camel herds is not a practical solution. furthermore, detection of pre-emergent mers-cov-like, and sars-cov-like, strains circulating in bat species indicate that the natural environment is ripe for future human exposures to potentially pathogenic coronaviruses [ ] [ ] [ ] . therefore, the development of therapeutic countermeasures that can interfere with mers-cov pathogenesis is critical to break zoonotic-to-human and human-to-human transmission cycles that may instigate global spread. evaluating the toxicity and efficacy of novel mers-cov therapeutics require the availability of animal models that effectively recapitulate mers-cov pathogenesis during fatal cases of human infections. therefore, the first question in generating a mers-cov animal model would be: what are the pathological features of a human infection? limited histopathological findings from human autopsies indicate that fatal cases of mers-cov results from pneumonia initiated by infection of bronchiolar and alveolar epithelia of the lower respiratory tract (lrt) [ , ] . pneumonia in the lrt is also the prominent finding on radiographs from x-rays and cts of diagnosed human cases [ ] . high viral loads in tracheal aspirates from patients are also associated with severe pulmonary disease [ ] , which is indicative of actively replicating mers-cov in the lrt. initial evaluation of the human mers-cov emc/ isolate in rhesus macaques demonstrated replication in the lrt with mild pneumonia-like disease ( fig. ) [ ] . achieving respiratory pathology reflecting a lethal human disease proved to be more complicated in nonhuman primates. severe respiratory disease in the marmoset produced clinical endpoints consistent with fatal disease that required euthanasia ( fig. ) [ , ] . evaluation of two human isolates, jordan and emc/ , and a tissue cultureadapted mers-cov strain (mers- ) in nonhuman primates resulted in mild disease in rhesus macaques or marmosets ( fig. ) [ ] [ ] [ ] , confounding the reproducibility of near-lethal disease in nhps. nonhuman primates are central to late-stage preclinical evaluation of therapeutic countermeasures, but may be impractical for initial preclinical studies. a small animal model may be applicable if there is limited therapeutic available for toxicity and efficacy testing, especially if large animal numbers are needed to determine confidence and reproducibility. early studies in mouse, hamster, and ferret revealed that conventional small animal models were fully resistant to mers-cov infection and replication (fig. ) [ , , ] . a seminal study identifying the mers-cov receptor as human dipeptidyl peptidase iv (hdpp ) [ ] , and publication of the crystal structure of hdpp interacting with the receptor binding domain (rbd) of the mers-cov spike protein [ ] , exposed tropism determinants critical for susceptibility. dipeptidyl peptidase iv contact amino acids at the hdpp /rbd interface are highly conserved among mers-cov-susceptible mammalian species (human, camel, and specific events since the emergence of mers-cov in are emphasized above the timeline. references to mammalian models evaluated for mers-cov pathogenesis comprise hamster [ ] , ferret [ ] , rabbit [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , camel [ ] [ ] [ ] , nonhuman primates [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , and mouse [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] bat) (fig. ) [ ] . although mouse, hamster, ferret, and guinea pig dpp orthologs exhibit high overall similarity to hdpp , specific amino acid differences at the dpp /rbd interface account for the inability of these species to support infection [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . overexpression of a mouse dpp (mdpp ) with changes in the contact residues at the dpp /rbd altered cellular profiles from resistant to susceptible to mers-cov infection [ , , ] . the dependence on dpp -specific contact was further substantiated by similar studies evaluating modified dpp orthologs from the hamster, ferret, and guinea pig [ ] . dipeptidyl peptidase iv was identified as the major determinant of mers-cov tropism. researchers rapidly leveraged knowledge of the dpp receptor to generate susceptible small animal models ( fig. ) [ ] . zhao et al. utilized a unique approach for producing susceptible mice that could replicate human isolates of mers-cov in the lungs by infecting mouse lungs with an adenovirus that constitutively expresses the full-length hdpp gene ( fig. ) [ ] . transient expression of hdpp supported infection and replication with human strains of mers-cov in the lungs and indicated that this technology may be an effective rapid response platform for initial (c) zoomed-in view of the human dpp structure (light gray) with highlighted mers-cov rbd contact residues (dark gray). species-specific contact residues that differ from human are highlighted in red evaluation of emergent and pre-emergent viruses. however, pathology associated with a fatal mers-cov infection was not observed in the ad-hdpp model [ ] , which limited the capacity to evaluate the efficacy of therapeutic countermeasures. genetic engineering of mice would be necessary to develop preclinical mers-cov mouse models with respiratory phenotypes that reflected clinical outcomes in patients. knock-in of full-length hdpp rendered mice susceptible to human isolates of mers-cov at low infection doses ( fig. ) [ ] [ ] [ ] . knock-in mice exhibited severe pulmonary pathology and increased mortality; however, widespread constitutive expression of full-length hdpp resulted in high levels of mers-cov infection and replication in extrapulmonary tissues [ ] [ ] [ ] . in some studies, higher viral loads could be detected in the brain compared to the lungs [ , ] . mice with infections of the central nervous system (cns) exhibited encephalitis that corresponded with the kinetics of mortality [ ] . currently, there is no evidence to support a cns component associated with mers-cov pathogenesis in humans. attempts to restrict hdpp expression to epithelial cells of the lungs using constitutive tissue specific promoters (e.g., cytokeratin k ) yielded outcomes similar to those observed with sars-cov mouse models, wherein high levels of mers-cov infection/replication were detected in the brains (fig. ) [ ] . to circumvent confounding problems associated with global bio-distribution of overexpressed hdpp receptor, researchers engineered mouse models using sophisticated molecular approaches. pascal et al. employed regeneron's velocigene technology to replace sequences encoding nearly the entire mdpp genomic region with those encoding the exons/introns from the hdpp genetic region ( fig. ) [ ] . retaining the mdpp and genetic elements that regulate expression maintained inherent expression profiles of full-length hdpp in mice [ ] . importantly, mers-cov infection/replication was readily detected in the lungs with little involvement of extrapulmonary tissues [ ] . infection with human isolates of mers-cov caused moderate respiratory pathology with mortality determined by euthanasia of mice at % weight loss [ ] . unfortunately, commercial restrictions limit the availability and use of this model to the broader scientific community. in addition to the concerns raised above, the first generation of mouse models was developed with the full-length hdpp , which may alter the inherent physiological properties of the mouse. the multifaceted involvement of dpp in maintaining immune homeostasis is of significant importance regarding susceptibility to infectious disease [ ] . dpp exists in two forms: ( ) a membrane anchored form on the surface of multiple cells types (e.g., b cells, t cells, nk cells, and epithelial cells to mention a few) and ( ) a secreted form that can be identified in human serum [ ] . dpp interacts with and modifies heterologous protein molecules involved in nociception, neuroendocrine function, metabolism, cardiovascular function, immune regulation, and infection [ ] . modification of heterologous protein function can proceed through cleavage of n-terminal amino acids through the enzymatic activity of the α/b-hydroxylase domain, or allosteric interaction/ signal transduction [ ] . the species specificity of dpp is exemplified by the interaction of hdpp with adenosine deaminase (ada), a well-recognized binding partner of hdpp , which modulates downstream t cell functions [ ] [ ] [ ] . the hdpp /ada interaction evolved in higher mammalian species (human, nhp, bovine, rabbit), but not in mouse or rat [ ] [ ] [ ] . interestingly, in one study ada was demonstrated to block infection of mers-cov in tissue culture [ ] , indicating that the binding site on hdpp for ada, and the mers-cov rbd, may overlap. consequently, introducing full-length hdpp into mice may skew innate immune mechanisms that could influence responses to therapeutic countermeasures. in the second generation of mers-cov-susceptible mouse models amino acid residues predicted to function at the mdpp / mers-cov rbd interface were modified to avoid the introduction of full-length hdpp ( fig. ) [ , ] . li et al. recently developed a mouse model wherein the mdpp genomic region encompassing exons - were replaced with the respective genomic region from hdpp , referred to as an hdpp knock-in model (hdpp -ki) [ ]. exons - encode contact amino acids at the hdpp /mers-cov rbd interface that were able to support replication of human mers-cov isolates in the lungs, but did not elicit a mortality phenotype [ ] . adaptive evolution of human mers-cov in the hdpp -ki mouse resulted in mouseadapted viruses that evoked a lethal respiratory phenotype with little involvement of extrapulmonary tissues. the lethal respiratory phenotype is a consequence of novel mutations acquired during adaptive evolution. a combination of mutations in both the s and s regions of the mers-cov spike protein facilitated a lethal respiratory phenotype [ ] . results in the hdpp -ki model substantiate an earlier mouse model referred to as the - +/+ model, which was designed with only two amino acid changes in mdpp to generate mers-cov susceptible mice. genetic engineering and implementation of the - +/+ mouse model, combined with mers-cov adaptive evolution, is the subject of this chapter. initial studies in tissue culture revealed that human and rodent cell types were resistant to mers-cov infection upon overexpression of mdpp ; however, overexpression of hdpp conferred permissivity to infection/replication [ ] . comparative structural modeling of hdpp and mdpp revealed putative contact residues in mdpp amenable to modification at the dpp /rbd interface. modification of two amino acids (a l and t r) was sufficient to endow mdpp with the capacity to mediate mers-cov infection/replication [ ] . shortly after the emergence of mers-cov into humans in , the crispr/cas genome editing technology became available for applications to modify mammalian genomes in vitro and in vivo [ ] [ ] [ ] . recognizing our unique situation, we designed crispr/cas targets to modify the mouse genome encoding amino acids a and t in exons and of the mdpp gene (fig. ) [ , ] . concomitant with mouse development, in vitro studies were initiated to adapt mers-cov to the modified mdpp [ ] . tissue culture adaption resulted in mers- virus, which contained an rmr insertion and s l mutation in the s region of the mers-cov spike protein [ ] . a mers- molecular clone exhibited enhanced replication kinetics and higher titers compared to human mers-cov isolates. additionally, the mers- virus replicated to higher levels in the lungs of - +/+ mice, compared to human and camel mers-cov isolates [ ] . based on these data the mers- virus was used to initiate passaging in mice heterozygous for mdpp with a l and t r mutations, - +/À (fig. ) . we reasoned that adaptation around one expressed copy of the mdpp with - mutations, and a wild-type mdpp expressed copy, might cultivate generation of a mouse-adapted mers-cov that could utilize wild-type mdpp as the primary receptor. after passages we obtained a mouse-adapted mers-cov (mers c ) exhibiting a lethal respiratory phenotype in the - +/+ mice [ ] . our mers-cov reverse genetic system was used to generate an infectious clone of the mouse-adapted virus, icmersma [ ] . lethal respiratory pathology with icmersma required high infectious doses (  pfu). an additional passages of icmersma in - +/À mice bore a novel mouse-adapted mers-cov that produced lethal respiratory disease at doses of  pfu, and lung pathology associated with severe respiratory disease at  to  pfu [ ] (fig. ) . this mers-cov model system ( - +/+ mice and mouseadapted mers-cov viruses) is now being employed to: ( ) understand complex virus-host interactions [ , , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , ( ) evaluate antibody-based therapeutics [ ] , ( ) evaluate drug-based therapeutic countermeasures [ ] , and ( ) evaluate anti-mers-cov vaccines [ , ] . the goal of this chapter is to provide an outline of how to rationally design a mouse with altered susceptibility to mers-cov. for additional information there are a number of detailed reviews and book chapters describing the design and utilization of the crispr/cas technology for generating mouse models [ , ] . . agarose gel separation based on size allows for discrimination between target dna, cas digested targets, and guide rnas. (b) schematic utilizing crispr/cas technology to genetically engineer mice. fertilized c bl/ j zygotes are collected and injected with rna encoding cas , dpp single guide rna, and oligos to facilitate homology-directed repair (hdr). microinjected zygotes are implanted into pseudopregnant recipient female c bl/ j mice. offspring are screened by sequencing for the intended change at positions and . mice identified as having the appropriate changes are backcrossed to c bl/ j mice to maintain the pure c bl/ j background, or may be crossed to any desired strain (e.g., balb/cj or s /svimj). (c) table describing sequences of cas guide rnas and oligos for hdr to genetically engineer amino acid changes at position (ala to leu) and (thr to arg). (d) sequencing chromatograms highlighting how the f offspring from embryo implantation can be a mosaic of insertion/ deletions (indel's) generated by random non-homologous end joining from cas cutting at the genomic alleles, and the hdr repair that incorporates the intended changes encoding amino acids at positions and . pure homozygous - +/+ lines were obtained by backcrossing onto c bl/ j mice. the highlighted mutations caa (ttg in the reverse orientation) and aga encode the novel l and r amino acids . after a predetermined number of passages the region encoding the spike protein of mers-cov is sequenced using rt-pcr to amplify the region of interest followed by standard sanger sequencing (see note ). . after passages viruses were plaque purified by diluting the heterogenous stock of virus À to À , and infecting a monolayer of vero ccl cells similar to a standard plaque assay. . single plaques are isolated using a pipet tip and the virus expanded on a freshly seeded monolayer of vero ccl cells. . virus stocks are generated, viral rna is isolated using standard trizol purification, and the region encoding the mers-cov spike protein is amplified by standard rt-pcr techniques and sequenced using standard sanger sequencing. . mutations identified by sequencing must be confirmed using a reverse genetic system to generate an infectious clone encoding the identified mutations [ ] . cockrell (fig. ) the details for generating and using the crispr/cas system to generate mutations are outlined in the materials and methods by cockrell et al. [ ] . notably, the - +/+ mice were initially generated in the animal models core facility at the university of north carolina at chapel hill. the extensive technical expertise required for genetic engineering of mice is the subject of many expert reviews and book chapters that will not be covered here. nevertheless, we provide a conceptual overview of the steps to generate the - +/+ mice. . design guide rnas to target each of the a and t alleles. cockrell et al. designed the guide rnas to direct the cas to cut as near the mutation site as possible (fig. ) (see note for helpful resources to design and genetically engineer mouse knockouts). . test guide rnas in vitro for the capacity to cut a target sequence (fig. ) . (a) generate double-stranded odns or a plasmid containing the target sequence with the correct pam site. (b) assemble ribonucleoprotein (rnp) complexes according to manufacturer's instructions (see note ). (c) subject double-stranded dna with target sequence to rnp complexes and assess digestion pattern on an agarose gel (fig. ). . two separate oligos are also designed to introduce the novel mutations on exons (a l) and (t r) of mdpp , through homology-directed repair (fig. ). . fertilized zygotes are collected from c bl/ j female mice that were superovulated and mated to male c bl/ j mice. cas endonuclease, combined with odns encoding the replacement alleles for and in mdpp , were all pronuclear injected into the fertilized zygote [ ] (fig. ) . the fertilized zygotes were from c bl/ j mice. . the injected embryos were implanted into pseudopregnant recipient females. . newly born pups were screened for the presence of the correct change at the and alleles by standard pcr amplification and sanger sequencing (fig. ) (see note ). . - +/+ mice are brought into the bsl laboratory days before start of the experiment to allow for environmental acclimation. . mice are anesthetized via intraperitoneal injection of - μl of a ketamine ( mg/kg)/xylazine ( mg/kg) mixture (see note ). level of anesthesia is assessed by pedal reflex. . measure initial weight (day weight) while waiting for mouse to be anesthetized (see note ). . once a pedal reflex is no longer triggered, mice should be immediately infected by the intranasal route. holding the animal vertically, apply μl of virus solution by pipetting onto their nostrils and allow them to inhale. to ensure that all of the μl reach the lower respiratory tract hold the mouse upright for an additional s (see note ). . note any inconsistencies during infection, including: ( ) presence of bubbles of inoculum from nasal cavity, ( ) occurrence of inoculum in mouth, or ( ) failure to inhale entire dose of inoculum. notes will help to explain potential inconsistencies in readout parameters and may be used as exclusion criteria for inefficient infections. . mice are put back into the cage and placed on their back to ensure virus solution will stay in the lungs. note: cages are returned to cage rack, but the respiration of mice is continuously monitored by observing breathing. . place mice next to each other to keep body temperature as close to normal as possible. . check cage after - min to confirm that all mice wake up from anesthesia and infection. adaptation of mers- in - +/À mice (fig. ) . mouse adaptation was initiated in heterozygous - +/À mice by infecting with μl of the mers- infectious clone (see note ). . at days post-infection the mouse is euthanized by extended exposure to isoflurane.~ ml of isoflurane is added to the bottom of a jar that can be firmly sealed (see note ). a thoracotomy is performed to expose the lungs. . lungs are removed and placed in a ml gasket sealed skirted screw cap tubes. tubes are previously prepared with ml of  pbs containing~ - mm of glass beads. lungs are homogenized for s in a bead homogenizer. . lung lysates are centrifuged in a microcentrifuge for min at max speed to pellet debris. . this is considered passage (p ) and μl of lung homogenate is used to infect a naïve - +/À mouse. . the process is repeated for a desired number of cycles. . after infection mice are monitored daily for weight loss for the entire duration of the experiment. . to record daily weights, pick up mice by the tail, identify by ear notch, and place into cup on a scale. record weight and calculate percentage of starting body weight (see note ). . mice can also be monitored to determine if they are moribund using a clinical scoring scale whereby: ¼ no clinical signs; ¼ ruffled fur; ¼ ruffled fur with hunched posture (only slight with no signs of dehydration); ¼ as defined in number with more severe signs of dehydration and some loss of body strength; ¼ pronounced dehydration and prominent loss of mobility; ¼ unresponsive to stimuli and prominent eye squinting. . it is important to note that weight loss might not always be the most appropriate parameter and animals should be euthanized at the discretion of the researcher even if animals have not reached % of their starting weight. mice that approach % of their starting body weight ( % weight loss) are euthanized via isoflurane overdose followed by a secondary euthanasia method (thoracotomy or cervical dislocation). depending on the experimental circumstances an institutionally approved exception may be implemented to allow continuation of the experiment (increasing the frequency with which the mice are monitored will likely need to be implemented) (see note ). . respiratory function can be performed every day over the entire course of infection, or on single selected days. investigating a novel respiratory virus may require the investigator to perform a time course to determine the most effective time points for measurement. the largest differences between groups typically correlate with peak viral replication. . at each time point measured the mice need to be randomized into different chambers to avoid technical artifacts (e.g., a mouse measured at day in chamber should be evaluated in a different chamber on day measurement). practical considerations dictate that - animals can be measured at any one time, and each group of - mice may take an hour for a proficient technician. therefore, experiments should be carefully planned to limit the number of mice to be evaluated. . mice that are difficult to handle can be slightly anesthetized by applying isoflurane to the chamber in order to remove them from the chamber and return to their cage (see note ). . open thorax, paying attention not to cut into lung tissue. . assess lung tissue for reddish discoloration and record severity by applying a number (no hemorrhaging) to (severe hemorrhaging in all lobes of the lungs). . harvest lung tissue and place in tubes prefilled with sample type specific solution. . put scissors and forceps first into cidecon to remove any residual blood and then into % ethanol in order to not crosscontaminate samples. . whole lung can be used for one assay or different lobes can be used for different assays. steps - from subheading . . . cut into superior vena cava and collect blood with a pipette. . blood is typically transferred to a serum/plasma separation tube that allows for separation of serum/plasma from cells. . in the event that it is necessary to harvest cells for flow cytometry analysis or vetscan hm analysis, the blood sample can be transferred to a tube containing edta. note: vetscan hm is a veterinary diagnostic machine that analyzes basic immune cell counts and additional hematological parameters within min. . all vetscan assays are performed under bsl conditions. removal of samples for downstream analysis outside of bsl conditions require specific inactivation procedures that must be pre-approved by the institutional biosafety committee. . this can also be achieved using a readily transfectable human embryonic fibroblast cell line such as hek t cells and selecting for stably transfected cells. . cells can be counted by seeding an extra well, but it is safe to assume that the cell number is approximately doubled after h. . this can also be achieved using a microscope to assess plaque size if plaques can be readily detected. . since the major determinant of mers-cov tropism is the spike protein, it would be anticipated that mutations having the most significant impact on infection might occur within the gene encoding the spike protein. . at the time that these mice were being generated in early , crispr/cas reagents were not readily available. additionally, there were few bioinformatics tools available to facilitate guide rna design and off-target potential. in the current research environment crispr/cas reagents can be sourced from multiple commercial entities and there are a number of bioinformatics tools to assist with design. addgene is a nonprofit plasmid repository where crispr reagents and resources can be readily obtained (https://www.addgene. org/). additional guidance for generating mice using crispr/cas technology can be found in more comprehensive protocols [ , ] . . all relevant reagents and protocols can now be obtained from commercial sources as readily synthesized rnas and purified proteins (e.g., integrated dna technologies). . although a number of pups may be identified to have the correct mutation, many will likely be mosaic for random mutations including insertions/deletions due to the higher efficiency of non-homologous end joining (nhej) after cas digestion compared to the desired hdr employed to mediate allele modification. . the administered dose will depend on the weight of the animal which should be predetermined the day prior to initiating the experiment. . it is not necessary to anesthetize mice for measuring daily weights. . it is important that the inoculum reaches the lower respiratory tract for a successful mers-cov infection. . mouse adaptation can be initiated with any mers-cov strain that exhibits some pulmonary replication. . mice should never come into contact with the isoflurane. to prevent direct contact, a layer of aluminum foil is placed at the bottom of the jar and this is covered with two additional layers of paper towel. . the percent body weight is typically calculated after leaving the bsl environment. therefore, the weight sheets should have the anticipated weights of each animal at % weight loss. this will provide a real-time indication of when the mice are approaching the criteria established for humane euthanasia. . institutional approval is required for animals to be placed under exception. it cannot be emphasized enough that all animal work should be pre-approved by appropriate university iacuc and ibc committees and should be in accordance with the recommendations for the care and use of animals by the office of laboratory animal welfare at nih. . assessing respiratory function using plethysmography under bsl conditions requires costly equipment and extensive 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respiratory syndrome coronavirus haagmans bl ( ) dipeptidyl peptidase is a functional receptor for the emerging human coronavirus-emc structure of mers-cov spike receptorbinding domain complexed with human receptor dpp coronavirus host range expansion and middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus emergence: biochemical mechanisms and evolutionary perspectives receptor variation and susceptibility to middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection mouse dipeptidyl peptidase is not a functional receptor for middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection glycosylation of mouse dpp plays a role in inhibiting middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection permissivity of dipeptidyl peptidase orthologs to middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus is governed by glycosylation and other complex determinants host species restriction of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus through its receptor, dipeptidyl peptidase cut to the chase: a review of cd /dipeptidyl peptidase- 's (dpp ) entanglement in the immune system direct association of adenosine deaminase with a t cell activation antigen revisiting an old acquaintance: cd and its molecular mechanisms in t cell function crystal structure of cd / dipeptidyl-peptidase iv in complex with adenosine deaminase reveals a highly amphiphilic interface multiplex genome engineering using crispr/cas systems rna-guided human genome engineering via cas one-step generation of mice carrying reporter and conditional alleles by crispr/cas-mediated genome engineering the human sodium iodide symporter as a reporter gene for studying middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus pathogenesis giving the genes a shuffle: using natural variation to understand host genetic contributions to viral infections middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus nonstructural protein is necessary for interferon resistance and viral pathogenesis mers-cov accessory orfs play key role for infection and pathogenesis broad-spectrum antiviral gs- inhibits both epidemic and zoonotic coronaviruses generating genetically modified mice: a decision guide genome editing in mouse embryos with crispr/cas reverse genetics with a full-length infectious cdna of the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus efficient reverse genetic systems for rapid genetic manipulation of emergent and preemergent infectious coronaviruses new metrics for evaluating viral respiratory pathogenesis key: cord- -w on x authors: ahmadzadeh, jamal; mobaraki, kazhal; mousavi, seyed jalil; aghazadeh-attari, javad; mirza-aghazadeh-attari, mohammad; mohebbi, iraj title: the risk factors associated with mers-cov patient fatality: a global survey date: - - journal: diagn microbiol infect dis doi: . /j.diagmicrobio. . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: w on x risk factors associated with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infection outcome were established by analyses of who data from september , to june . of the reported cases, cases, including mers-cov deaths, were analyzed. the case fatality rate was % ( % ci: . – . ). compared to mers patients ≤ years old, those with > years had the adjusted odds ratio estimate for death of . [ % ci: . – . ]. this index was . [ % ci: . – . ] for saudi patients in comparison to non-saudi; . [ % ci: . – . ] for patient with comorbidity in comparison to those without comorbidity; . [ % ci: . – . ] for those who had close contact to a camel in the past days and . [ % ci: . – . ] for patients with > days with onset of signs and hospital admission compared to patients with ≤ days. the middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) is a relatively new viral respiratory infection caused by a novel coronavirus, the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus, or mers-cov (alshahrani et al. ) . coronaviruses are single-stranded positive-sense rna viruses (zumla et al. ) , with human pathogenic strains resulting in a common cold to a severe acute respiratory syndrome (castaño-rodriguez et al. ). mers-cov, an emerging zoonotic virus (alamoudi et al. ; cong et al. ) is pathogenic in human, resulting in shortness of breath, cough, fever, diarrhea, and frequently pneumonia (cong et al. ; sherbini et al. ) . the exact animal origin of mers-cov is not fully understood, but the transmission pattern and the evidence from virologic studies suggest that it may have originated in bats and was transmitted to camels sometime in the distant past (hu et al. , wang et al. . several published studies have assessed the epidemiological status of mers-cov infection. most of these epidemiological studies were derived from specific cohorts with a small sample size, or carried out in a single medical center (alraddadi et al. ; assiri et al. ; harriman et al. ; memish et al. ; mobaraki and ahmadzadeh b; park et al. ) . however, numerous questions about the epidemiological status and associated risk factors of mers-cov at the global level remain unanswered. for this study, we used the publicly available world health organization (who) mers global epidemiologic data (world health organization ) to assess characteristics, clinical information, global distribution status, and probable risk factors associated with mers-cov patient mortality. in this worldwide comprehensive survey, were analyzed publicly available data from the who website:(http://www.who.int/csr/don/ archive/disease/coronavirus_infections/en/) related to laboratory-confirmed mers-cov cases from september , until june , . data for the analyses was downloaded on june , . this who database is periodically updated by the who. epidemiological characteristics of each patient were retrieved including: age, gender, travel history to endemic countries, nationality, country/city of origin. also retrieved was clinical data on the symptomatic mers patients including day/ month of the onset of symptom, day/month of the admission to the hospital, and comorbidities (diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and ischemic heart disease). exposure to hazardous contacts was also collected, including healthcare workers (who worked in the hospital), camels, consumption of raw camel products, and exposure to mers-cov morbid patients at home or hospital within days prior to the onset of symptomology. all the collected information was checked for missing or invalid data. of a total input of mers patient cases, with a complete data set were included in the analysis. in order to avoid measurement bias and miscategorization of cases, of the patients with incomplete data were not included. statistical analysis was conducted using the spss, version (ibm inc., armonk, ny, usa). quantitative measurement is expressed by the mean and standard deviation. qualitative variables are presented as absolute frequency and percentage. logistic regression was used to calculate the adjusted odds ratio (aor) and unadjusted odds ratio (uor) with a % confidence interval to assess the probable relationship between the risk factors and the final outcome (dead/survived) of laboratory-confirmed mers-cov cases. any p-value given was two-sided and was considered statistically significant at . . for this study, a total of sporadic/clusters patients with confirmed mers-cov infection and complete data were used in the analysis. the characteristics and the number of mers cases per year can be found in . most of the mers cases were male and male-specific % cfr was approximately % ( / ). the male vs. female ratio in the fatal and nonfatal cases was . ( / ) vs. . ( / ), respectively (see table ). table illustrates unadjusted and adjusted or for mortality in the laboratory-confirmed mers-cov cases in the survey period. the adjusted analysis showed that the age groups n years ( . ; % ci: . - . ), saudi nationality ( . ; % ci: . - . ), and comorbidity ( . ; % ci: . - . ) were independently associated with higher chances of mortality. additionally, in comparison to mers patients who had ≤ days from onset of clinical signs to hospital admission, adjusted or estimates of the mortality was . ; % ci: . - . for those who had n days from the onset of clinical signs to hospital admission. the adjusted or estimates of mortality was . ; % ci: . - . for mers patients who were exposed to a camel in the last days compared to those who were not exposed. other probable risk factors such as gender, exposure to a morbid case of mers in the last days, healthcare worker, and admission in negative pressure isolate room or icu had no significant association with higher mortality (p n . for all). ). mers-cov started in saudi arabia by sporadic infections in mid- and later its outbreak progressed to other countries (alamoudi et al. ). due to the occurrence of a large number of mers-cov cases and its high worldwide mortality rate, this infection must be considered a public health threat (lessler et al. ) . the current study focuses on the epidemiological trend of mers-cov infection and mortality rate analysis of its worldwide cases in the aforementioned dates. the findings of this study may have important implications for the infection control practice and also help to ensure global health security. based on the analysis, the overall global %cfr of mers was . % [ / ], which is substantially lower than the %cfr in the mers-cov endemic region (table ) . for example, hunter et al. found an overall cfr of % in the abu dhabi (hunter et al. ) and petersen et al. found an overall cfr of % in the kingdom of saudi arabia (petersen et al. ) however, our estimates were higher than the largest mers outbreak in south korea (cfr of %) (cowling et al. ) . our analyses of the who data was approximately similar to the cfr of % reported by memish et al. (memish et al. ) , and also cfr of . % declared by mobaraki et al. (mobaraki and ahmadzadeh a). the regional variation of cfr from previously conducted studies may be skewed due to severity of disease and smaller sample sizes than have been investigated previously. on the whole, the cfr of % related to the mers-cov infection in the present study should be considered as a major health concern at the global scale. thus, the characteristics of this disease and the potential risk factors associated with patient fatality should be studied comprehensively. our findings confirm that the mortality pattern of the mers in saudi arabia is different from the observed countries in the middle east and affected countries beyond. by far, the greatest burden of this disease in terms of mortality and morbidity rates is located in four countries including saudi arabia, south korea, united arab emirates, and jordan. in this regards, differences in the virus and the genetic background of the population affected can play a role. other reasons can include a difference in the availability or ability to implement patient isolation procedures as well as differences in overall medical technology among involved countries. consistent with the previous reports, age range n years is associated with death in cases of mers-cov infection (alzeer ; gautret et al. ; memish et al. ). this finding is in line with a saudi arabian case report series. it showed that the age range of the individuals (n years) had a greater association with mortality and per every year increase in age, the odds of mortality increased by % (majumder et al. ) . the reason for the higher fatality rates in this age range is unclear, but they may have underlying diseases and impaired immune functions that exacerbate the symptom of mers-cov infection and increase the chances of death. also, calculating the or (table ) suggested that having saudi nationality, comorbidity, the interval time of onset sign and admission to the hospital n days are other potential risk factors for the disease progression and mortality related to mers-cov infection. although camels are a suspected reservoir, this study could not find a risk relationship in the mortality of patients who had contact with camels in the days prior to clinical signs. meanwhile, global concern rests on the ability of mers-cov to cause major illnesses in direct and indirect contact with camels and its products, namely drinking unpasteurized camel milk (conzade et al. ; harrath and abu duhier ; kamau et al. ) . details as to the specific mechanism of zoonotic transmission from dromedaries to humans remain unclear, and further epidemiological studies are required in this regard. in line with the findings of alghamdi et al. (alghamdi et al. ), we observed a higher rate of mers-cov incidence in males than females (table ) . however, based on our findings (table ) this gender difference in mortality rates related to mers-cov was not statistically significant (aor = . ; % ci: . - . ), p = . . the current study suffered from some limitations. of the total worldwide cases ( laboratory-confirmed cases of mers-cov), only cases with complete data were investigated in the current study. it should be noted that from mers-cov cases in south korea, only details related to cases were published in the disease outbreak news on the who website. the lack of complete data for all mers cases potentially increases the occurrence of selection and measurement biases in the result. therefore, it might be more appropriate to conduct further large-scale epidemiological studies with complete data related to all morbid cases of mers to obtain a better understanding of mers-cov emergence in humans and also associated risk factors related of this infection. in the future, we may closely monitor the mers-cov infections globally to better understand the risks of this new infection for public health and to provide helpful recommendations for controlling and preventing it. recommendations might change and be updated as additional data becomes available. indeed, despite the above limitations, such studies might be useful to implement educational programs, and access health care for early diagnosis and prevention of modifiable factors to reduce high mortality rates associated with mers-cov. based on our analyses of the who data, years after the emergence of the mers-cov incidence; saudi arabia still has the highest rate of infection. this study estimated a global % cfr ( % ci: . - . ) for mers patients. the results demonstrated a link between mortality and some risk factors such as age n years old, saudi nationality, comorbidities, the interval time of onset sign and the admission to the hospital n days. unlinked data. all authors express their satisfaction with the publication of this paper. this project was funded by the urmia university of medical sciences (grant no. ir.umsu.rec. . ). the funding bodies had no role in study design, data collection, analysis, preparation of the manuscript, or the decision to publish. the data used for the analysis can be obtained from the study authors. we thanks to the urmia university of medical sciences for supporting this study (grant no. - - - ) . we also appreciate all reporting countries with the confirmed mers cases for investigations, data collection and sending of it to the who. the authors would like to acknowledge the miss gazhal akhavan masoumi for editing this paper. preliminary epidemiologic assessment of mers-cov outbreak in south korea no molecular evidence of mers-cov circulation in jeddah, saudi arabia between - : a single-center retrospective study the pattern of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in saudi arabia: a descriptive 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middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections bat origin of human coronaviruses transmission of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections in healthcare settings knowledge and practices regarding middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus among camel handlers in a slaughterhouse an update to middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus and risk of a pandemic in estimating the severity and subclinical burden of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in the kingdom of saudi arabia mortality risk factors for middle east respiratory syndrome outbreak, south korea family cluster of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections etiology of severe community-acquired pneumonia during the hajj-part of the mers-cov surveillance program current epidemiological status of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in the world from . . to . . : a cross-sectional study an update to middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus and risk of a pandemic in hospital outbreaks of middle east respiratory syndrome health-care associate transmission of middle east respiratory syndrome corona virus, mers-cov, in the kingdom of saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in al-madinah city, saudi arabia: demographic, clinical and survival data bat origins of mers-cov supported by bat coronavirus hku usage of human receptor cd world health organization. emergencies preparedness, response:mers-cov.disease outbreak news middle east respiratory syndrome the authors declare that they have no competing interests. key: cord- -tlrsco authors: haghani, milad; bliemer, michiel c. j. title: covid- pandemic and the unprecedented mobilisation of scholarly efforts prompted by a health crisis: scientometric comparisons across sars, mers and -ncov literature date: - - journal: scientometrics doi: . /s - - -z sha: doc_id: cord_uid: tlrsco during the current century, each major coronavirus outbreak has triggered a quick and immediate surge of academic publications on its respective topic. the spike in research publications following the novel coronavirus (covid- ) outbreak, however, has been like no other. the global crisis caused by the covid- pandemic has mobilised scientific efforts at an unprecedented scale. in less than months, more than , research items and in less than seven months, more than , items were indexed, while it is projected that the number could exceed , by the end of , should the current trend continues. with the health crisis affecting all aspects of life, research on covid- seems to have become a focal point of interest across many academic disciplines. here, scientometric aspects of the covid- literature are analysed and contrasted with those of the two previous major coronavirus diseases, i.e., severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) and middle east respiratory syndrome (mers). the focus is on the co-occurrence of key-terms, bibliographic coupling and citation relations of journals and collaborations between countries. interesting recurring patterns across all three literatures were discovered. all three outbreaks have commonly generated three distinct cohorts of studies: (i) studies linked to public health response and epidemic control, (ii) studies on chemical constitution of the virus; and (iii) studies related to treatment, vaccine and clinical care. while studies affiliated with category (i) seem to have been relatively earliest to emerge, they have overall received relatively smaller number of citations compared to publications the two other categories. covid- studies seem to have been disseminated across a broader variety of journals and across a more diverse range of subject areas. clear links are observed between the geographical origins of each outbreak as well as the local geographical severity of each outbreak and the magnitude of research originated from regions. covid- studies also display the involvement of authors from a broader variety of countries compared to sars and mers. considering the speed at which the covid- -related literature is accumulating, an interesting dimension that warrants further exploration could be to assess if the quality and rigour of these publications have been affected. on december , an official case of a novel respiratory disease of the category of coronaviruses, named covid- , was reported in wuhan, china, marking the beginning of what proved to be one of the direst and most devastating viral outbreaks in the modern history (sohrabi et al. ; wang et al. ). this was immediately followed by an unprecedented and swift response of the academic community to address various dimensions of this health crisis and prompted an avalanche of scholarly publications on this topic (golinelli et al. ; haghani et al. ; kagan et al. ) . in less than five months, more than , publications on this topic have already been indexed by scopus with the number increasing figuratively every day in considerable increments (torres-salinas et al. ) . and this figure does not even include many more publications available in various repositories, including cord- (colavizza et al. ) , in the form of preprints awaiting peer review by their respective journals. such explosion of research on a single topic and the off-the-charts surge in the rate of publications is arguably an unprecedented trend in the history of scholarly publications. an article published by science on may , , referred to this phenomenon as one that is "among the biggest explosions of scientific literature ever" (brainard ) . it highlighted how, in the face of this phenomenon, it has become extremely challenging for scientists to stay abreast of the latest developments. this has made the importance of research synthesis more tangible than ever and has even resulted in the development of several computational research mining tools for this very topic utilising methods such as artificial intelligence (ai). among such efforts is a research synthesis tool powered by ai algorithms which has harvested datapoints from a large number the cord- articles and categorised them (brainard ) . though the impact of the covid- health crisis has marked it as a rather unique milestone in the history of disease outbreaks, the world, prior to this, was not a stranger with coronavirus disease outbreaks (mcintosh ; myint ; cavanagh ; lim et al. ; chen et al. ). prior to , two major outbreaks of this family of viruses had already been reported with at least one of them carrying the official label of a "global pandemic" ). on november , , the first case of the severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) disease was reported in the guangdong province in southern china, which by , swiftly spread from continent to continent, prompting the world health organisation to declare it as a pandemic. in fact, sars is known to be "the first pandemic of the st century" (cherry and krogstad ) . nearly ten years later, on june , , the first case of the middle eastern respiratory syndrome (mers) disease was discovered in jeddah, saudi arabia. these two constituted the two most major coronavirus outbreaks, until covid- came along. similar to covid- , though at a much smaller scale, each of these previous outbreaks generated a literature of their own (kostoff and morse ) . in the face of the flood of scholarly outputs on covid- , and along with the conventional review and research synthesis studies (chang et al. ; chen et al. ; cortegiani et al. ) , scientometric (colavizza et al. ) and bibliometric methods (bonilla-aldana et al. ; hossain ) have also gained traction in documenting and analysing the rapid developments of this literature and discovering emerging patterns (chahrour et al. ; dehghanbanadaki et al. ; haghani et al. ; kumar ; le bras et al. ). here in this work, the literatures of these three major coronavirus diseases are disentangled from one another and analysed in a comparative way and from scientometric perspectives. the aim is to discover possible similarities and discrepancies across these three segments of the coronavirus literature, and to discover whether there are recurring patterns in terms of magnitude, temporal evolution and the structure of these three literatures that were each developed in response to a respiratory disease outbreak. the main focus of the analyses is on keyword co-occurrences, bibliographic coupling and citation relations of sources and collaborations between countries. to compare the scientometric aspects of the studies on sars, mers and covid- , three separate datasets of publications on these three topics were retrieved from scopus through three separate search strategies. the decision on which general database to use (e.g. web of science (wos) or scopus) was mainly made on the basis of the number of indexed covid- studies in particular, as the sector of the coronavirus literature that is currently emerging (compared to the literatures on sars and mers that have already stabilised). at the time of the data retrieval (may ), wos had indexed slightly less than , research items on covid- , while the number of items in scopus neared , . given the fact that the scopus database was considerably more up to date in that respect, this database was set as the main source of data extraction in this work. therefore, for the sake of consistency, the data for sars and mers were also extracted from scopus. the search strategies were devised in a way to minimise the possible overlap between the datasets on sars, mers and covid- and to disentangle the three datasets from one another to the most possible extent. preliminary inspection of the literature on each three topics determined a set of distinct keywords that would return the target literature with reasonable specificity and sensitivity. in each search, key terms associated with the other literatures were combined with the boolean operator "and not" in order to avoid the overlap. the lower bound of the time span for each search was set with consideration of the year when each viral outbreak took place. the query strings associated with the three datasets are as below: sars: ( title-abs-key ( ( ( "severe acute respiratory syndrome" or "sars") and ( coronavirus*)) or ( "sars virus" or "sars disease" or "severe acute respiratory syndrome disease" or "severe acute respiratory syndrome virus" or "sars-cov")) and not title-abs-key ( ( "covid" or "ncov" or "covid- " or "covid " or "sars-cov- " or "severe acute respiratory syndrome- " or "mers" or "middle east respiratory syndrome"))) and pubyear > . mers: ( title-abs-key ( ( ( "middle east respiratory syndrome" or "mers") and ( coronavirus)) or ( "mers-cov" or "mers virus" or "mers disease" or "middle east respiratory syndrome virus" or "middle east respiratory syndrome disease")) and not title- or "sars-cov- " or "sars" or "severe acute respiratory syndrome"))) and pubyear > . covid- : title-abs-key ( "covid- " or "covid " or "coronavirus disease " or " -ncov" or "novel coronavirus" or "novel corona virus" or "sars-cov- ") and pubyear > . the search was last time updated on may where it returned , items on sars, , items on mers and , items on covid- . figures , , respectively show the distribution of the studies on sars, mers and covid- , across subject areas. figure a also shows the composition of the covid- literature in terms of the document types, demonstrating that only nearly % of the studies on this topic have so far been in the form of full-length articles, while letters, notes, reviews, and other document formats constitute a large portion (i.e. nearly half) of the literature on this topic at the time of this investigation. full records of the three datasets on sars, mers and covid- were retrieved in csv excel format from scopus, all on the same day. this included the citation information, bibliographic information, abstract and keywords, funding details and the references. the scopus restriction of maximum document per export posed challenges for the retrieval of the sars and covid- datasets whose size were bigger than documents. for the sars dataset, the challenge was circumvented by further limiting the search to specific years, in separate bundles, in a way that the size of each bundle was less than items, therefore allowing us to export the items of each bundle separately. the extraction of the covid- dataset, however, posed a further layer of complication. given that nearly all studies of covid- have been published in one year, i.e. , the year of publication could no longer be used as a criterion to form a set of mutually exclusive exportable bundles. to decompose the search outcome to non-overlapping bundles of documents or less, the following strategy was devised. the document type was used to initially limit the search to mutually exclusive (non-overlapping) categories. first, the search was limited to "review or short survey or erratum or conference paper or data paper". this formed a set of documents which was extracted in one single export (see fig. a for details of the number of items within each document type category). subsequently, the search was set back to the original and was limited to notes ( items) and then to editorial ( items). each of these two subsets, being smaller than items, were exported separately. there were also documents of letter type. this set was further decomposed to two mutually exclusive subsets based on the publication stage criterion ( article in press, and final) and was retrieved in two separate exports. for the remaining article documents, the following strategy was adopted. of the items, were article in press and were final. first, the article in press items were considered. the list of those studies was sorted as first author (a-z) and the first items were extracted in one export. then the list was sorted as first author (z-a), i.e. the order was reversed, and the first items were exported. a similar strategy was utilised to extract the remaining final documents. a supplementary search was also conducted on the general topic of coronaviruses using the string title-abs-key ( "coronavirus*") and pubyear > which returned , documents on the same day. only the data related to the number of documents by year was extracted for this search. figure b shows the temporal distribution of the studies on the general topic of coronaviruses. the graph clearly shows spikes of publication coinciding with the years when sars, mers and covid- outbreaks took place. the first spike is related to the sars outbreak in which is reflected in an immediate and substantial increase in the number of publications on coronaviruses from to . the increase continued, though at a slower pace, to and was then followed by a gradual decline till . the mers outbreak triggered another spike in the number of publications on coronaviruses, though not as large as that of sars. the intensification of attention to this topic, this time, lasted for about three years till before another decline began. the spike of coronavirus studies prompted by the covid- outbreak, however, seem to have been occurring at a completely different scale which can be deemed unprecedented in the history of coronavirus studies, and perhaps arguably in the history of science. the number of studies emerged in the first five months of nears an equivalent of the % of the total size of the coronavirus literature accumulated during more than years . in fig. c , the temporal distribution of the sars, mers and covid- studies have been shown separately according to the three datasets explained earlier. note that, the quantities associated with sars and mers are represented by the left vertical axis whereas that of covid- is represented by the right vertical axis, while its scale is ten times bigger than the scale of the left axis. the history of previous coronavirus research has suggested that the number of studies will likely keep rising for at least a few years before it peaks. but given the unprecedented magnitude of research and the explosive rate of publications since the begging of , it would be interesting to observe whether this pattern would repeat itself and whether the peak would occur at an earlier or later stage compared to those of the previous outbreaks, a question whose answer will only be determined by time. the co-occurrence of keywords associated with the sars, mers and covid- literatures were analysed using vosviewer (van eck and waltman ). each analysis was performed on the separate set of data associated with the literature of interest. the maps of keyword co-occurrences associated with sars, mers and covid- literatures are provided in figs. , , respectively. the minimum number of occurrences for the keywords to be included in the map was set to in all three cases. the number was chosen on the basis of the clarity of the resultant clusters. the unit of analysis has also been set fig. with the colour-coding of the average number of citations. given that almost all studies of covid- are items, the colour-coding related to the average publication year was forgone with respect to this literature. maps of term occurrences based on the analysis of the title and abstract of studies on sars, mers and covid- have also been presented in the "appendix" in figs. , , respectively. while the below analysis focuses mainly on the interpretation of the keyword maps, similar patterns are by-and-large observable through analysis of the title and abstract terms of these studies. with respect to each of the three literatures, three distinct clusters of keywords were identifiable. these clusters showed certain patterns of commonality across the three datasets. each map presents a distinct cluster of keywords that seem to be associable to the studies related to public health emergency management and the prevention of epidemic. this cluster has been assigned a yellow colour in all three maps in figs. , , here, this is referred to as cluster (i). in this cluster, one can observe terms such as those associated with general public health including "wold health organisation", "public health", "public the map of keyword co-occurrences associated with the covid- literature health service", "global health", as well as those associated with disease outbreaks including "emergency", "health risk" "epidemics", "pandemic", "outbreak", "viral diseases", "virus infection", "communicable disease", "transmission", "travel". terms representing measures of emergency severity also appear in this cluster including "mortality", "fatality", "morbidity", "infection risk". this cluster also includes terms that are linked to the prediction of disease propagation. these are terms such as "mathematical model", "modelling", "simulation", "statistical model" and "prediction" that have commonly occurred in this cluster. the cluster includes terms affiliated with measures of disease control and spread prevention such as "(social/patient) isolation", "quarantine", "hygiene", "handwashing", "prevention", "infection control", "(population) surveillance", "mass screening", "(face) mask", "contact tracing". the cluster also represents keywords that are attributable to public policy making and social protection such as "health care planning", "health care policy", "health care quality", "leadership", "disaster planning" and "polices". the cluster (i) of keywords also have distinctly and commonly (across all three datasets) represented keywords that are attributable to the studies on mental health impacts of the epidemic. these are keywords such as "mental health (service)", "psychiatry", "psychology", "mental stress", "anxiety", "fear", "mental disease". these studies have often used methods such as "questionnaire(s)" and "survey(s)" that have commonly reflected in this cluster across the three literatures. issues surrounding the safety of medical facilities and medical staff also appear to have been addressed mainly by studies whose keywords are attributable to this cluster. these studies have generated keywords such as "health care personnel", "nurse(s)", "medical staff", "hospital", "health care facility", "personal protective equipment" that are distinctively observable in cluster (i) of keywords across all three datasets. the economic aspects of the epidemics also seem to have been addressed particularly by covid- as reflected in cluster (i) of the covid- literature. these have been reflected in terms such as "economics", "economic aspect", which have occurred frequently enough in covid- studies to appear distinctly on the map. the presence of such cohort of studies is, however, not as clearly identifiable on the sars and mers maps as is it on the covid- map. this could be explained by the greater magnitude of the societal impact of covid- outbreak compared to sars and mers. the names of the countries and regions have almost invariably appeared in cluster (i) across all three datasets. in certain cases, the country names that have occurred most often are those from which the outbreaks originated or those that suffered most from the impact of the outbreak. for example, "saudi arabia" appears quite distinctly on the cluster (i) of the mers dataset. similarly, the presence of the names of south-east asian countries/regions such as "china", "hong kong", "taiwan", "singapore" on the cluster (i) of the sars map, or the term "wuhan" on the cluster (i) of the covid- map are quite pronounced. the occurrence of the names of countries also could be a reflection of the early (case) studies that have addressed the local impacts/spread of the outbreaks within their own society. on the issue of early studies, the terms "letters", "editorial", and "review" (which have intentionally been kept on the maps) seem to also have distinctly occurred in cluster (i) of each literature which is an indication that this cluster includes early studies that appeared at a time where the amount of data and clinical trials were insufficient for full-length articles. an inspection of the figs. , does, in fact, confirm this hypothesis at least in association with the sars and mers literature, that the cluster (i) of keywords represent studies that on average emerged earlier during the developments of their respective literatures. figures , , that have illustrated the colour-coding of the average number of citations on the maps also show that, although cluster (i) is associated with the early studies that generally preceded studies of the two other clusters and although it represents the largest variety of topics compared to the two other clusters, it is also associated with the studies that, on average, been the recipient of a lesser number of citations when compared to the two other clusters. this pattern appears to have commonly occurred across all three datasets. a second cluster of keywords associated with each of the three literatures were also discovered that is attributable to the studies on the chemistry and physiology of the virus, or viral pathogenesis, or in other words, the chemical constitution of the virus (knight ) , a sector of virology that investigates the biological processes and activities of viruses that take place in infected host cells and result in the replication of a virus. this cluster has been assigned the green colour in the maps of figs. , , . according to the maps, the most distinct terms associated with this cohort of virology studies on sars, mers and covid- are terms such as "virus protein", "virus entry", "chemistry", "metabolism", "physiology", "pathology", "cell line", "(virus/viral) protein(s)", "molecular model(s)", "virus genome", "virus rna", "virus replication", "mutation", and "enzyme activity". as this sector of studies often use "animal model(s)", terms such as "animal cell", "animal experiment", "controlled study", "mice" and "mouse" have frequently appeared in the representative cluster (ii). in reflection of the fact that these cohort of studies ultimately seek "drug design", in addition to generic common terms such as "drug design/potency/structure/synthesis", the names of the specific potential drugs that have been investigated in relation to each disease have appeared in this cluster. this includes terms such as "hydroxychloroquine" or "remdesivir" on the covid- map. an inspection of the maps overlaid with the average year of publications for sars and mers in figs. , in the "appendix" suggests that, on average, this cohort of studies are generally the last to appear in the published domain compared to the two other major clusters, but, according to figs. , , , they receive relatively high citations on average. a third and relatively smaller cluster of keywords was commonly identifiable in relation to each three literatures. this cluster has been visualised in blue across all three maps of keyword co-occurrence. the studies represented by this cluster of keywords, here referred to as cluster (iii), appear to have been more closely focused on the developments of antibodies and vaccines. the terms "treatment", "treatment outcome", "disease severity", "antiviral therapy", "prognosis", "drug safety", "prospective/retrospective study", "immunology", "immunotherapy", "innate immunity", "immune response", "virus/viral vaccine(s)", "virus/viral antibody" across studies of this cluster. terms affiliated with studies related to treatments and clinical care of respiratory patients also appear in this cluster. this includes terms such as "artificial ventilation", "intensive care unit", as well as symptom and organ terminologies associated with each disease, terms such as "fever", "headache", "diarrhea", "lung (injury)", "coughing", "liver injury", "kidney". terms affiliated with cohort analysis studies have appeared in this cluster of the maps associated with each literature. this is reflected in terms such as "female", "male", "child", "infant", "young adult", "adult", "age", "middle aged", "pregnant", "pregnancy". bibliographic coupling of the studies on sars, mers and covid- were analysed at the level of their sources/journals. figures , , show the maps of journal bibliographic coupling associated with sars, mers and covid- literatures respectively. the node sizes are proportional to the number of documents published by the corresponding sources and the thickness of the links are proportional to the degree of bibliographic couplings between the pairs of sources connected by each link. the minimum number of documents associated with each node/journal to appear on the map has been set to . the number has been set on the basis of maximising clarity of the a first-glance comparison shows that while the maps associated with sars and mers are well connected, connections across the covid- map are rather sparse. both the sars and mers maps include three distinct and well-defined clusters of bibliographically coupled journals in addition to one minor and smaller cluster. these clusters show relatively strong degrees of inter-connectivity and coherence, whereas, this feature is not shared by the covid- map. the observation is understandable considering the fact that the sars and mers literatures are relatively well established and have stabilised given that they have both been under development over a period of several years, whereas the covid- literature is an emerging and evolving field. newly published covid- studies do not seem to be sharing many references as of yet, which explains why their coupling connections are relatively weak. the comparison also suggests that the covid- studies are generally scattered across a broader variety of journals and subject areas, as opposed to the sars and mers publications that seem to have been concentrated across a smaller set of specialty (mostly medical) journals. this is also consistent with our observations from figs. , , showing explicitly that studies of covid- are scattered across a broader variety of subject areas compared to the sars and mers literatures. though not shown in fig. , due to the respective values being smaller than %, journals in the following subject areas (those that are deemed minor areas in relation to covid- literature) have each published a relatively considerable number of studies on this topic (a feature that is not necessarily shared where the most active journal has been social anthropology ( items) covering topics such as "climate change reactions" (bychkova ), or "legal voids linked to declared states of emergency" (karaseva )), economics, econometrics and finance ( items, with economic and political weekly ( items) being the most active journal of that category, covering topics such as "food supply chains" (reardon et al. ) , "economic stimulus packages" (mulchandani ) or "reverse migration" (dandekar and ghai )), physics and astronomy ( items, where chaos solitons and fractals ( items) has been the most active publication outlet, covering topics such as "mathematical models for forecasting the outbreak" (barmparis and tsironis ; bekiros and kouloumpou ; boccaletti et al. ; ndaïrou et al. ; postnikov ; ribeiro et al. ; zhang et al. )), energy ( items, with international journal of advanced science and technology ( items) being the most active journal in that category, covering topics such as "flexible work arrangement in manufacturing" (sedaju et al. ) ), material sciences ( items, with acs nano ( items) being the most active outlet in that category, covering topics such as " -d printed protective equipment" (wesemann et al. ) ), decision sciences ( items, with lancet digital health ( items) and transportation research interdisciplinary perspectives ( items) being the most active outlets in that category, covering topics such as "the effect of social distancing on travel behaviour" (de vos ) or "the implementation of drive-through and walk-through diagnostic testing" (lee and lee )), earth and planetary sciences ( items, with indonesian journal of science and technology ( items) being most active in that domain, covering topics such as "the deployment of drones in sending drugs and patient blood samples" (anggraeni et al. ) ). a prominent source that seem to have consistently published a substantial portion of studies on sars and mers is journal of virology. this journal, however, has not published a considerable number of studies on covid- , and with only publications on this topic at the time of writing this article, it does not have a strong representation on the map of covid- . the lancet and science, however, are two major outlets notably identifiable on all three maps. for covid- studies in particular, journals such as journal of medical virology, the bmj, the lancet, journal of infection, science, nature, science of the total environment and medical hypotheses have been most notable outlets of publications so far. some of these outlasts, such as science of the total environment and medical hypotheses, do not have a strong representation on the maps associated with the sars or mers. in terms of the bibliographic coupling of the sources for sars publications, the strong relation between journal of virology and virology, and to lesser extent, with emerging infectious diseases are outstanding. for mers publications, the strong bibliographic coupling of publications between emerging infectious diseases and journal of virology is most outstanding. for covid- publications, the one outstanding bibliographic coupling relation is one that exits between journal of medical virology and journal of infection. the analyses of journal citations also showed similar patterns of scatter and relatively cohesive clusters in relation to the covid- literature compared to the welldefined clusters of journal citations for sars and mers literatures. consistent with the previous observation with respect to journal bibliographic coupling, the covid- literature seems to be also much less cohesive in terms of its journal citation networks, when compared to the sars and mers literatures. as discussed earlier in relation to bibliographic couplings, this could also be partly explained by the fact that covid- papers are scattered across a more diverse range of journals and broader variety of subject categories. for the maps of journal citation relations presented in figs. , , , only the strongest citation relations have been visualised by increasing the minimum strength threshold for the citation links between pairs of journals to show on the map. the nodes have also been overlaid with the average citation colour coding. for sars, the maps present very strong citation relations between publications in journal of virology and those of virology, pnas and science (and to a lesser extent, with emerging infectious diseases, the lancet and new england journal of medicine). for mers in figs. , in the "appendix", the nodes of the bibliographic coupling maps have been colour-coded by the average year of publications and the average citations per document associated with the journals that each node represent (except for the covid- map that has only been overlaid with the average citations). according to these maps, emerging infectious diseases and the lancet have been a major source of publications for early studies on both sars and mers. this pattern for the lancet seems to have extended to covid- studies as well, as this journal has published a substantial portion of the early studies on this topic. for sars, the strong representation of chinese medical journal and chinese journal of microbiology and immunology among the journals that published early studies are notable, a pattern that could be explained by the geographical origin of the sars outbreak. such pattern is to a less obvious extent also observable with respect to the mers literature. collaborations of authors aggregated at the level of the countries were also analysed with respect to the sars, mers and covid- literatures. outputs of the analysis are presented in figs. , , , for sars, mers and covid- respectively. in each map, the size of nodes, each corresponding with a country, are proportional to the number of published documents with an author affiliated with the institutes of those countries. the links connecting the nodes indicate co-authorships between authors residing in the countries, while the thickness of the links represent the strength (i.e. frequency) of the co-authorships. the colour assigned to each node represents the average number of citations that studies emerged from countries have received. the minimum number of documents for country names to appear on the maps has been set to , a number chosen based on the criterion of the quality of the resultant maps. comparison across the three maps of co-authorships shows a pattern of author involvement from the regions where each viral outbreak originated. studies authored by researchers affiliated with chinese institutes are well represented in all three cases, but clearly the map of country co-authorships associated with the covid- literature more so with respect to the sars and covid- literature, diseases whose first cases were recorded in china. the involvement of chinese authors is relatively less pronounced with respect to the mers studies whose origin was in the middle east. instead, with respect to the mers literature, it appears that authors affiliated with institutes in saudi arabia have been exceptionally overrepresented in the publications. this is also, to a lesser extent, the case with egypt being markedly presented on the mers map of the country co-authorships. on sars studies, chinese authors have most strongly collaborated with authors residing in the united states, followed by authors from germany, taiwan, singapore, japan, france, australia, united kingdom and canada. the sars network of collaborations for the authors affiliated with institutes in the united states has been, by and large, similar to that of china. except, south korea, the netherlands, italy and spain are also strongly represented in the collaborations with the united states. the map of co-authorships associated with the mers literature presents the names of many middle eastern countries including saudi arabia, egypt, lebanon, iran, tunisia, qatar, oman, jordan, and united arab emirates which is a clear indication into the exceptionally strong representation of the authors from this region in these studies. the strongest network of co-authorships on this topic are observed between authors from the united states and those of saudi arabia, followed by china, united kingdom, egypt, south korea, canada and the netherlands. the closest collaborators of chinese authors on this topic, after the united states, have been from saudi arabia, united kingdom and egypt. the closest collaborators of saudi arabia, after the united states, have been egypt, china and united kingdom. the covid- map presents a considerably higher number of country names compared to maps of the sars and mers literatures. it clearly shows that authors from a larger number of countries have become involved in studies of covid- , compared to the research on sars and mers that have apparently engaged a lesser number of countries and institutes. china, on the topic of covid- , has a very well spread and rather more evenly distributed network of collaborations with countries across the world, when compared with its network of collaboration on sars and mers. while its strongest collaboration has been with the united states, the names of many other countries appear on its network with no particular country standing out distinctly. italy, as a country that was highly affected by the covid- outbreak, has been exceptionally well represented on this map with a very strong link of collaboration with the united states, followed by united kingdom at a smaller scale. this pattern of exceptional representation of highly affected countries on the maps has to a lesser extent extended to iran, spain, france and brazil as countries severely affected by the covid- outbreak at early stages of the global spread. according to the colour coding of the maps, sars studies in which authors affiliated with the institutes in the netherlands were involved have, on average, received the highest number of citations. this is followed by studies of authors from germany. these are two countries whose authors have published considerable number of documents on sars and received high number of citations at the same time. this pattern was, to some extent, repeated in relation to the mers literature, with studies from the netherlands, germany and united kingdom having received, on average, the highest number of citations. for studies published on covid- , publications from china have so far stood out in terms of both the magnitude of research activities and the average number of citations. outbreaks of infectious diseases have often shown a pattern of generating a quick surge of publications on their respective topics, such that they often create an entirely new literature over a short period of time (olijnyk ; tian and zheng ) . by all measures, however, the influx of the research publications that began to emerge following the novel coronavirus outbreak outsizes those of the previous cases in the history of coronaviruses, and perhaps arguably, in the history of infectious diaereses (tian and zheng ) . this has certainly marked a new milestone in the timeline of research on coronaviruses which dates back to (almeida et al. ). according to the editor-in-chief of the journal of virology, as quoted in an article of the scientist magazine (jarvis ), this surge of research outputs has been to the extent that has inundated established coronavirus researchers and domain experts with peer review requests to an extent that they are unable to cope. parallel to such intensified efforts on the research, peer review and editorial fronts, widespread efforts have also been underway in synthesising, summarising and visualising these rapid developments, a pattern that has also been observed-though at much smaller scales-with respect to the previous epidemics of viral diseases (kostoff and morse ) . in line with these endeavours, this work also aimed at quantifying and analysing scientometric aspects of the covid- literature in contrast with those of the previous major coronavirus diseases, i.e. sars and mers. the focus for sourcing these literatures has been on peer reviewed and published studies. an analysis of the timeline of the development of publications on coronaviruses made clear that the sars outbreak constitutes the first major milestone in the history of this research, an event that brought a then-unprecedented amount of attention to this topic. while scopus has indexed a total of nearly studies on coronaviruses from to , the three immediate years post sars outbreak (i.e. november ) have each recorded nearly coronavirus publications. this means that following the sars outbreak, the then years old literature of coronaviruses almost expanded by % within only three years. this trend, however, did not persist and did not extend to the years succeeding , as from onwards, a gradual decline in the rate of publications on coronaviruses began. this continued until the mers outbreak, another event that reinvigorated the coronavirus research, though not as substantially as that of the sars epidemic. the pattern of a few years of increase in research activities on coronaviruses followed by a gradual decline, which had occurred in relation to sars, also repeated itself in a similar fashion after the mers outbreak. the outbreak of novel coronavirus, however, marks a unique milestone in this timeline. the magnitude of scholarly outputs prompted by this novel virus was to the extent that, in less than five months, , publications was already indexed by scopus, a number that nearly equals % of the total amount of literature generated on coronaviruses during the years of this research prior to . in fact, since april , we have made five consistent recordings of the number of scopus-listed publications linked to covid- at five cross-sections of time, the last of which representing our scopus search on july as the revision of this article was being drafted. this set of records may give an approximation for the current rate of accumulation of studies on this topic. according to fig. that visualises these records, the trend seems to be rather linear, although the rate seems to have increased since may . our very latest scopus search on july showed that the number has reached , items. if the current trend continues, then by the end of , approximately another , articles could be expected on this topic, making the total size of this literature exceed , items. a conservative projection could be obtained using the rate of accumulation associated with the time period between april and may , the earlier stage of the emergence of studies on this topic. this would yield an estimate of approximately , publications by the end of . by retrieving and disentangling the literatures linked to these three respiratory diseases, we sought to discover similarities and discrepancies of their research landscape from scientometric perspectives. the most interesting pattern was the recurrence of three distinct clusters of studies in each literature as suggested by keyword co-occurrence analyses. it appeared that, following each outbreak, an early cluster of studies first emerged, addressing issues attributable to the public emergency management aspects of a pandemic, such as prediction of disease propagation, measures of outbreak control, public policy making, and concerns related to the protection of medical professionals and mental health. accordingly, as a result of these three outbreaks, three significant cohort of studies related to health emergency management have already emerged, which, if synthesised effectively, could constitute a valuable and evidence-based guide to help government and communities better prepare for and react to possible future disease outbreaks, at least of those of the respiratory nature. citation and bibliographic coupling analysis at the level of journals demonstrated that firstly, covid- studies are scattered across a broader variety of sources and subject categories, and secondly, its network of journal relations is still not as cohesive as those of the sars and mers literatures. as the literature on covid- further develops, more cohesive patterns of bibliographic coupling or journal citations may form. while journal of virology and emerging infectious diseases seem to have been two major outlets commonly prominent across both sars and mers literatures, their presence in the literature of covid- seem to not be distinctly notable. instead, a great portion of covid- studies have concentrated across three journals: the lancet, the bmj, fig. the number of studies related to covid- indexed by scopus at five different points in time since april , along with a projection of the number at the end of and journal of medical virology. while major multidisciplinary journals, particularly science, nature, pnas and plos one, have, to varying degrees, been active in publishing studies on all three topics, their influence is most notable in relation to the sars literature where they have published a substantial portion of studies. those studies happen to have been recipients of relatively high number of citations. the involvement of authors from various countries on the publications linked to these three diseases seem to be distinctly correlated with the regions where the outbreaks originated, with authors from china, for example, being much more strongly represented on sars and covid- studies, two diseases whose origin of outbreaks were in that country. middle eastern countries, on the other hand, are exceptionally represented in the mers literature. the questions of where the covid- literature is headed, how big it will grow in the next coming months/years, at what point in time the rate of publications on this topic is going to slow down and how widely this literature is going to spread across journals and subject categories are just a few examples of questions that will only be determined by time. these scholarly patterns may also be influenced by future success or failure of countries in controlling the extent of the surge and re-surge of outbreaks and by possible medical discoveries in relation to vaccine and treatment. but given the pace at which scholarly outputs are currently emerging, the number of under-review preprints, the extent of studies and clinical trials that have already been conceived around the world; and also considering the seemingly long-lasting and far-reaching consequences of this global emergency that have impacted on aspects of life, it will probably not be so soon before we observe a decline in covid- research interest. macro-syntheses of the scholarly literatures generated in response to the three most significant outbreaks of coronaviruses, i.e. sars, mers and covid- , revealed interesting structural similarities across all three literatures and suggested that they are commonly made up of three major segments. in each case, publications related to public health emergency management have been the earliest to merge, followed by studies on virus chemistry and clinical treatments. however, despite this similarity of the structures and the recurring patterns of publications following each outbreak, the magnitude of the rate of scholarly research prompted by the novel coronavirus outbreak remains a striking phenomenon, arguably, unique in the history of scientific publication. the main motive of this study was to document this major milestone and the magnitude of these scientific efforts. it is, per se, a heartening observation to note how the global health crisis has mobilised the efforts of scholars across the globe and across scientific disciplines. a question that naturally follows, however, would be to discover how the rush to combat this global crisis through scientific work has influenced the rigour and quality of the publications. this could warrant further research on this rapidly evolving literature in the form of quality assessment of publications. the deployment of drones in sending drugs and patient blood samples covid- estimating the infection horizon of covid- in eight countries with a data-driven approach sbdiem: a new mathematical model of infectious disease dynamics modeling and forecasting of epidemic spreading: the case of covid- and beyond sars-cov, mers-cov and now the -novel cov: have we investigated enough about coronaviruses?-a bibliometric analysis. travel medicine and infectious disease scientists are drowning in covid- papers can new tools keep them afloat? science covid- and climate 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-d printed protective equipment during covid- pandemic predicting turning point, duration and attack rate of covid- outbreaks in major western countries see figs. , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,and . key: cord- -v n ff authors: ahn, inkyung; heo, seongman; ji, seunghyun; kim, kyung hyun; kim, taehwan; lee, eun joo; park, jooyoung; sung, keehoon title: investigation of nonlinear epidemiological models for analyzing and controlling the mers outbreak in korea date: - - journal: journal of theoretical biology doi: . /j.jtbi. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: v n ff abstract much concern has arisen regarding serious epidemics due to the middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) coronavirus. the first mers case of korea was reported on may , and since then, the mers outbreak in korea has resulted in hundreds of confirmed cases and tens of deaths. deadly infectious diseases such as mers have significant direct and indirect social impacts, which include disease-induced mortality and economic losses. also, a delayed response to the outbreak and underestimating its danger can further aggravate the situation. hence, an analysis and establishing efficient strategies for preventing the propagation of mers is a very important and urgent issue. in this paper, we propose a class of nonlinear susceptible-infectious-quarantined (siq) models for analyzing and controlling the mers outbreak in korea. for the siq based ordinary differential equation (ode) model, we perform the task of parameter estimation, and apply optimal control theory to the controlled siq model, with the goal of minimizing the infectious compartment population and the cost of implementing the quarantine and isolation strategies. simulation results show that the proposed siq model can explain the observed data for the confirmed cases and the quarantined cases in the mers outbreak very well, and the number of the mers cases can be controlled reasonably well via the optimal control approach. first confirmed on may , the latest outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infections in korea accounted for laboratory-confirmed cases, including deaths, recovered individuals discharged from hospitals, and remaining in hospitals up to july , a de facto end date of the outbreak ( ministry of health and welfare , moh ). it spread remarkably fast in hospitals, which has caused the largest mers outbreak outside the middle east. the case fatality rate of . % is, however, much lower than the reported rate of . % prior to the outbreak in korea, according to the world health organization (who). the mers-cov is a novel betacoronavirus which was first identified from the sputum of a -year-old man in fall ( zaki et al., ) . clinical features of mers range from mild illness to fatal conditions such as acute respiratory distress syndrome * corresponding authors. e-mail addresses: ahnik@korea.ac.kr (i. ahn), parkj@korea.ac.kr (j. park). and multi-organ failure resulting in death, especially in patients with underlying comorbidities ( zumla et al., ) . although it is initially known as a zoonotic disease, human-to-human transmission occurs in health care settings and now is linked with significant morbidity ( oboho et al., ) . this outbreak of the mers-cov infection, including the index cases roommates, their caregiver, and even the healthcare workers, in what is called as a super-spreading event ( kupferschmidt, ) , raised several important issues for global public health surveillance and raised several issues regarding infection control policies, including the control of nosocomial transmission to avoid a repeated outbreak ( keeling and rohani, ) . in this study, we carry out an epidemiological assessment of the mers-cov outbreak in korea in order to provide a mathematical framework for understanding the complex dynamics of the pathogen spread and establishing efficient guidelines for implementing quarantine and isolation strategies. more specifically, we propose a class of nonlinear susceptible-infectious-quarantined (siq) models for analyzing and controlling the mers outbreak in korea. the proposed siq model is innovative, in that the mers https://doi.org/ . /j.jtbi. . . - /© elsevier ltd. all rights reserved. transmission probability is time-dependent, monotone decreasing, and squashing-type. more specifically, it is initially almost flat, then decreasing rapidly, and finally gradually reaching a saturation point, which is reasonable because this can reflect the change in individuals' hygienic behaviour with time. recently, there has been much interest in investigating some aspects of the time-dependent nature of the disease transmission probability. in particular, several methods have been considered to model the time-dependence due to the impact of media coverage ( cui et al., ; liu et al., ; sun et al., ; xiao et al., ) . however, these studies have mostly focused on only a single factor under consideration. in this paper, we consider all relevant factors that can affect the mers transmission probability ( e.g. , media coverage, increased awareness, etc.) collectively, and try to model the resultant time-dependent transmission probability using a sigmoidal function. note that the sigmoidal functions are quite popular in the field of machine learning when one needs to address monotone and squashing-type phenomena. for the proposed siq model, we perform the task of parameter estimation, and apply optimal control theory to the controlled siq model, with the goal of minimizing the infectious compartment population and the cost of implementing the quarantine and isolation strategies. simulation results show that the proposed siq model can explain the observed data for the confirmed cases and the quarantined cases in the mers outbreak very well, and the number of the mers cases can be controlled reasonably well via the optimal control approach. finally in the last two sections of this paper, discussion and concluding remarks are given along with brief descriptions of data treatment. in this section, we will propose a nonlinear susceptibleinfectious-quarantined (siq) model for analyzing the mers outbreak in korea. the siq model is a generalization of an epidemiological population model involving susceptible, infectious, and quarantined compartments ( hethcote et al., ; keeling and rohani, ; lenhart and workman, ; xiao et al., ) . in the siq model, the four compartment populations are used as the model's state variables: s ( t ), the number of individuals that are susceptible to the mers disease at time t; i ( t ), the number of individuals that are actively infectious at time t; s q ( t ), the number of quarantined susceptible individuals at time t ; and c q ( t ), the number of confirmed cases at time t . note that in the siq model, q stands for the super-compartment comprising s q and c q (see fig. ). also, note that c q ( t ) is a collective sink-type compartment, which includes the number of the mers patients under treatment, the recovered cases, and the dead cases altogether at time t . as shown in fig. , the siq model considers two kinds of non-pharmaceutical interventions: quarantine of the susceptible and infected individuals, and isolation of the infectious individuals following contact tracing. as a result of a contact tracing, a proportion, q , of individuals who are contacted in connection with a mers patient is quarantined. the quarantined individuals can move to compartments c q or s q , depending on whether they are exposed to the mers coronavirus or not. hence, the quarantined individuals, if uninfected, move to the compartment s q at a rate of c( − β(t)) q, where c is the contact rate, i.e. , the average number of contacts of the whole population per unit time, and β( t ) is the probability of the mers transmission per contact at time t . note that in the siq model, the mers transmission probability, β( t ), is time-dependent, monotone decreasing, and squashing-type. obviously, using timedependent transmission probability is more reasonable than using the constant one, because it can reflect the change of individuals' hygienic behavior with time. as shown in fig. , if infected, the quarantined individuals move to the compartment c q at a rate of c β( t ) q . also, the remaining proportion ( i.e. , the proportion missed from the contact tracing), − q, can move to compartment i or stay in compartment s , depending on whether they are exposed to the mers coronavirus or not. the transmission dynamics of the siq model is illustrated in fig. , and its state equations are as follows: the first equation of ( ) describes the rate of change of the susceptible compartment population, with four terms on its right-hand side. its first term concerns the transition from s to s q due to quarantine of susceptible individuals. this term can be explained in terms of a bilinear incidence law having a contact rate c together with β( t ), the probability of the mers transmission per contact at time t , and q , the probability of quarantine per contact. the second and third terms model the transition from s to c q and the transition from s to i , respectively. the fourth term represents the transition from s q to s , and this transition means the release from quarantine into the wider community. in the second equation of ( ) , the rate of change of the infectious compartment population is described by two terms. the first represents the transition from the susceptible state to the infectious state, and the second term denotes the transition from i to c q due to detection and isolation of the infectious patients. the remaining equations of ( ) describe the rates of change of s q and c q in the super-compartment q , respectively, and the exact meaning of their terms can be explained similarly. the natural birth and death rates are not considered in the siq model, and this omission allows us to focus on the core theme of the paper. note that consideration of these additional aspects is relatively straightforward, and would lead us to some further related observations. for example, if the natural birth rate of a susceptible population, , and the natural death rate, d , are consid- ered, the resultant reduced siq system with a constant transmission probability, β , would have the disease-free equilibrium point as previously mentioned, the mers transmission probability, β( t ), of our siq model, is time-dependent, monotone decreasing, and squashing-type. since many factors ( e.g. , media coverage, increased awareness, etc.) can alter individuals' hygienic behavior, we employ the squashing-type function of fig. for β( t ). more specifically, we utilize where σ ( ·) is the logistic sigmoidal function ( bishop, ) defined as σ (x ) = / ( + exp (−x )) ; t β is the inflection point of β( t ); s β is the parameter determining the slope of β( t ) at its inflection point. note that the use of logistic sigmoidal functions is quite popular in the field of machine learning ( bishop, ) when one needs to represent monotone and squashing-type phenomena. also, note that using the logistic sigmoidal function of ( ) lead to the following simplification when we compute its derivative: this property can be utilized effectively in further studies on the qualitative properties of the siq model ( e.g. , study of the global stability of the disease-free and endemic equilibrium points of the siq model). an explanation of the siq parameters is given in table . by fitting the siq model to the reported data for the confirmed cases and the quarantined cases, we obtain the following tant approach that can be addressed along these lines is the event-dependent approach, where the transmission probability could be dependent on the number of the newly-added or accumulated mers cases. parameters: we performed simulations based on the estimated parameters. simulation results ( fig. ) show that the proposed siq model can explain the observed data ( fig. ) for the confirmed cases and the quarantined cases in the mers outbreak very well. our parameter estimation results show that the mers transmission probability, β( t ), is initially almost flat, then decreasing rapidly, and finally gradually reaching a saturation point (see the solid line of fig. ). this has a natural interpretation, in that as information on the mers outbreak becomes more widely known with the passage of time, health authorities' and individuals' effort s against the epidemic intensify accordingly, which results in the mers transmission probability decreasing in the squashing-type fashion, as in fig. . in retrospect, if the initial effort to reduce the mers transmission probability were more effective, the magnitude of β could be decreased further. in order to investigate this aspect, we additionally performed simulations for a scenario with β reduced to % of its estimated value (see the dashed line of fig. ). fig. shows that the infectious population could be reduced significantly if the aforementioned effort were successful. in order to clarify why it is important to consider the incidence rate of the type shown in ( ) , we also considered the constant beta case, and provided the corresponding simulation results ( fig. ) . comparing figs. and shows the superiority of using the time-dependent β. since quarantine and isolation strategies are the most important and effective measures against the outbreaks of disease when one does not have valid medicines and vaccine (see e.g. , castillo-chavez et al., ; day et al., ; yan and zou, ; yan et al., ) , one can view the effort s of implementing quarantine and isolation strategies as the actions that control the entire model. in this paper, we utilize optimal control theory ( lenhart and workman, ; lewis and syrmos, ) for the possibility of improving our control effort s. note that recent applications of optimal control theory are increasingly used in communities of biological systems ( e.g. ( buonomo and messina, ; joshi et al., ; jung et al., ; kirschner et al., ; de pillis et al., ) ), and in particular, they have been widely used and discussed in the control of epidemics ( e.g. caetano and yoneyama, ; feng et al., ; gupta and rink, ; joshi et al., ; lenhart and workman, ) . by incorporating the control inputs, q * ( t ) and θ * ( t ) into our siq model ( ) , one can obtain the following state equations for the controlled model: note that for the optimal control of ( ) , it is enough to consider the first three variables only. hence, we consider the following controlled siq (c-siq) model: from the data fitting based on the siq model, we have already obtained the estimation results for the quarantine probability, q , and the isolation rate, θ . in retrospect, however, control-theoretic investigation is desirable for the purpose of improving our response to the outbreak. in the following, we consider the problem of improving the quarantine probability and isolation rate further with additional effort s ( q * ( t ) and θ * ( t )) by minimizing an objective function in the form of j = t f g(i(t ) , q * (t) , θ * (t)) dt. note that in this problem, the quarantine probability and isolation rate at time t are represented by and the control inputs to be determined via optimal control theory are the additional effort s described by q * ( t ) and θ * ( t ). here g ( · ) should be reasonably chosen to reflect the relative importance of the quarantine and isolation effort s over the infection. more precisely, in order to minimize an objective function comprising the infection cost ( i.e. , the infectious compartment population) and the cost of implementing quarantine and isolation strategies, we consider the following optimal control problem: subject to the c-siq state equations ( ) . in the cost rate of this problem, c q and c θ are the trade-off constants defining the relative importance of the implementation costs over the infection cost. note that the cost rate considers quadratic cost terms for the control inputs, which is a commonly used strategy in related control problems dealing with epidemicmodel-based systems ( e.g. , lenhart and workman, ) . also, note that the existence of an optimal control and corresponding optimal state trajectory comes from the convexity of the integrand of the objective function with respect to the control and the lipschitz property of the state system with respect to the state variables (see, e.g. , fleming and rishel, ) , and based on the existence, we can now rely on the pontryagin maximum principle (pmp) ( pontryagin et al., ) for an optimal solution. as is well known, the necessary conditions for an optimal solution of ( ) can be obtained via the pontryagin maximum principle. for this, the hamiltonian h of the optimal control problem ( ) is defined as and its costate equations can be obtained via - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - t s q (t) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - from the optimality conditions, ∂h ∂ q * = and ∂h ∂ θ * = , we can also obtain the following condition for optimal control: also, if upper bounds for the nonnegative control inputs are forced, then by confining the control input to be nonnegative and subject to a positive upper bound q max and θ max , the optimal control of ( ) can be written in the following form: from the above steps, we can conclude that any solution to the optimal control problem ( ) must satisfy the following: s( ) = s , by solving this boundary value ordinary differential equation (ode) problem numerically, we can obtain optimal control inputs for problem ( ) . in order to illustrate the optimal control policy, we simulated the optimally controlled c-siq system. the parameters considered for the simulations are set to be the same as the estimation results except the control inputs, q * ( t ) and θ * ( t ). for the trade- off constants of ( ) , we used c θ = , , c q = . the initial conditions for the simulations were also taken from the estimation results, i.e. , s = , , i = , and s q = . the simulations considered two scenarios. the first scenario does not have bounds on the control inputs, while the second scenario has the bounds of q max = . and θ max = . . with the goal of keeping the infection level low with reasonable control effort s, we solved the boundary value ode problem ( ) using bvp c , the matlab function to solve boundary value problems for ordinary differen-tial equations). figs. - show the simulation results for the first scenario. figs. and show that under the optimal control of the first scenario, the best method of fighting the infection is to initially enter large amounts of q ( t ) and θ ( t ), and later after days to slowly reduce them to zero. the resultant state trajectory of i ( t ) (the dashed line of fig. ) shows that, with the optimal control strategy, the infectious compartment population can be reduced significantly compared to the original case (the solid line of fig. ) . to consider the robustness of the quarantine and isola- tion control, we also conducted sensitivity analysis for the following cases: ( ) when c is % lower and % higher; ( ) when λ is % lower and % higher. for each case we simulated the resultant controlled system, and the results on the number of infectious individuals are shown in figs. and , respectively, for cases ( ) and ( ). comparing figs. and shows that c is more important for the quarantine and isolation control. simulation results for the second scenario, which deals with the bounded input case, are shown in show that under the optimal control of the second scenario, the best method of fighting the infection is to apply the maximum amounts of the control inputs from the start, and then to slowly reduce them after days to zero. the state trajectory of i ( t ) resulting from the optimal control is shown in fig. . note that the infectious compartment population can be reduced significantly even with the bounds on control inputs. from the simulation results ( figs. - ), we can conclude that the mers disease spread can be properly handled by the optimal control approach, and we can obtain a practical guideline, whereby quarantine and isolation effort s in the early stage are critically important in effectively controlling the mers outbreak. in recent years, global pandemic viral infections, including the severe acute respiratory syndrome, the h n influenza, and the ebola outbreak, have been devastating but provided valuable experience in outbreak responses. for public health control, increased vigilance by health professionals and voluntary compliance by the public are essential in implementing rapid effective response interventions. in this study, we carried out an epidemiological assessment of the mers-cov outbreak in korea in order to provide a mathematical framework for understanding the complex dynamics of the pathogen spread and establishing efficient guidelines for implementing quarantine and isolation strategies. the following have been observed by the assessment: • by fitting the siq model, which employs a squashing-type function of fig. for β( t ) , to the real data on the confirmed cases and the quarantined cases, we obtained reasonable performance, as shown in fig. . also, it turned out that the resultant estimated parameters belonged to plausible ranges. by comparison, the conventional siq model utilizing a constant transmission probability could not explain the observed data well. • our nonlinear epidemiological models showed that the mers transmission probability decreased in the squashing-type fashion and then approached a saturation point in a timedependent manner. as information on the mers outbreak be-came widely known in the nation, effort s against this epidemic, including individuals hygienic behavior, and interventions by health care facilities and by authorities were accordingly strengthened. in our siq-based analysis, the inflection point for transmission probability was found to be t β = . , corresponding to a couple of days after june . interest-ingly, june was the day when the korean government revealed the names of mers-affected hospitals to the public. after releasing the names of affected medical facilities, the rate of increase in new confirmed cases abated. as a practical guideline to avoid another similar unexpected outbreak, we draw the conclusion that combined effort s in the early stage are critically important, and sharing information including the names of affected hospitals or countries, clinical situations, and prevention methods might be important for global public health control. • we applied optimal control theory to the controlled siq model with the goal of minimizing the infectious compartment population and the cost of implementing the quarantine and isolation strategies. simulation results show that the number of the mers cases can be controlled reasonably well via the optimal control approach. in conclusion, this paper proposes a nonlinear epidemiological ode for the mers outbreak in korea, the siq model, in which the state variables are defined as the populations of four compartments ( s ( t ), i ( t ), s q ( t ), and c q ( t )), and the mers transmission probability, β( t ), is modelled by the time-dependent sigmoidal function. we performed the task of parameter estimation for the siq model, and the data fitting results explained the observed data for the confirmed cases and the quarantined cases in the mers outbreak very well. we also applied optimal control theory to the controlled siq model with the goal of minimizing the infectious compartment population and the cost of implementing the quarantine and isolation strategies. our simulation results show that mers propagation was controlled reasonably well via the optimal control approach. in future work, we will conduct further simulation studies, with the aim of revealing the strengths and weaknesses of the proposed method, and investigate stability and control issues for its various extensions, including a stochastic differential equation (sde) approach. we retrieved publicly available data ( ministry of health and welfare , moh ) from the centers for disease control and prevention and the ministry of health and welfare in the republic of korea. the data included information on the cumulative number of reported cases. the first mers case in korea was confirmed on may , and the numbers of newly confirmed cases and suspected patients who had been quarantined to prevent possible spread of the mers have reached cases and , cases, respectively, as of july . the data also included a brief description of each confirmed case with exposure date and onset of symptoms, and they were sufficient to estimate our siq model for the mers outbreak epidemiology. in this model, we assumed mers is unlikely to spread to another region. we implemented the parameter estimation procedure as a matlab program.we used fminsearch , a matlab function for unconstrained nonlinear optimization, along with some changes of variables in order to carry out the data fitting procedure for the siq model ( ) with the time-dependent variable β( t ) specified in ( ) . the performance index (pi) used in the optimization for parameter estimation was defined as follows: p i = w × ( square d error of c q ) + w × ( square d error of s q ) . the objective function of ( ) , pi , was based on the numbers of the confirmed mers cases and the quarantined cases between may and july. the weight values ( w = and w = ) were obtained empirically via a tuning process based on the training data. simulation results show that the above set of weight values yielded reasonably good fitting results. finally, note that a more sophisticated markov chain monte carlo (mcmc) algorithm ( e.g. , rasmussen et al., ) could be used for parameter estimation of the siq model. however, the use of fminsearch , which was simpler and more transparent, was sufficient for the purposes of this paper. pattern recognition and machine learning impact of vaccine arrival on the optimal control of a newly emerging infectious disease: a theoretical study optimal and sub-optimal control in dengue epidemics mathematical models of isolation and quarantine the impact of media on the control of infectious diseases when is quarantine a useful control strategy for emerging infectious diseases? timely identification of optimal control strategies for emerging infectious diseases deterministic and stochastic optimal control optimal control of epidemics effects of quarantine in six endemic models for infectious diseases optimal control methods applied to disease models optimal control of treatments in a two-strain tuberculosis model modeling infectious diseases in humans and animals optimal control of the chemotherapy of hiv amid panic, a chance to learn about mers optimal control applied to biological models optimal control media/psychological impact on multiple outbreaks of emerging infectious diseases ministry of health and welfare (moh) and center for disease control and prevention mers-cov outbreak in jeddah-a link to health care facilities chemotherapy for tumors: an analysis of the dynamics and a study of quadratic and linear optimal controls the mathematical theory of optimal processes inference for nonlinear epidemiological models using genealogies and time series effect of media-induced social distancing on disease transmission in a two patch setting media impact switching surface during an infectious disease outbreak control of epidemics by quarantine and isolation strategies in highly mobile populations optimal quarantine and isolation strategies in epidemics control isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome this work was supported by a korea university grant. key: cord- -oyid haj authors: al-abaidani, i.s.; al-maani, a.s.; al-kindi, h.s.; al-jardani, a.k.; abdel-hady, d.m.; zayed, b.e.; al-harthy, k.s.; al-shaqsi, k.h.; al-abri, s.s. title: overview of preparedness and response for middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in oman date: - - journal: int j infect dis doi: . /j.ijid. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: oyid haj several countries in the middle east and around countries worldwide have reported cases of human infection with the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov). the exceptionally high fatality rate resulting from mers-cov infection in conjunction with the paucity of knowledge about this emerging virus has led to major public and international concern. within the framework of the national acute respiratory illness surveillance, the ministry of health in the sultanate of oman has announced two confirmed cases of mers-cov to date. the aim of this report is to describe the epidemiological aspects of these two cases and to highlight the importance of public health preparedness and response. the absence of secondary cases among contacts of the reported cases can be seen as evidence of the effectiveness of infection prevention and control precautions as an important pillar of the national preparedness and response plan applied in the health care institutions in oman. several countries worldwide have reported cases of human infection with the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov). the exceptionally high fatality rate resulting from mers-cov infection in conjunction with the paucity of knowledge about this emerging virus has led to major public and international concern. the ministry of health in the sultanate of oman has announced two confirmed cases of mers-cov. the aim of this report is to describe the epidemiological aspects of the reported mers-cov cases in oman and to highlight the public health response and the activities done to face any future resurgence of mers-cov in the country. based on the world health organization (who) interim case definition for mers-cov as of july , , the first laboratory-confirmed case of mers-cov in oman was diagnosed on october , . a -year-old omani man from dakhliyah governorate complained of fever and cough of -day duration. he then developed right lower lobe pneumonia and multi-organ failure and died on november , . he had a history of type diabetes mellitus and uncontrolled hypertension, and he had previously undergone coronary artery bypass grafting. he did not have a history of travel outside the country or contact with animals. the second case was a -year-old omani man from north batinah governorate who presented on december , with a high-grade temperature and cough of -day duration. he later developed severe right upper lobe pneumonia and died on december , . he was a heavy smoker, but had no known medical comorbidities. the patient had attended a camel race in abu dhabi, uae, weeks before the onset of his symptoms. the ministry of health implemented a national mers-cov preparedness and response plan. this plan was based on the exceptionally high fatality rate resulting from mers-cov infection in conjunction with the paucity of knowledge about this emerging virus has led to major public and international concern. within the framework of the national acute respiratory illness surveillance, the ministry of health in the sultanate of oman has announced two confirmed cases of mers-cov to date. the aim of this report is to describe the epidemiological aspects of these two cases and to highlight the importance of public health preparedness and response. the absence of secondary cases among contacts of the reported cases can be seen as evidence of the effectiveness of infection prevention and control precautions as an important pillar of the national preparedness and response plan applied in the health care institutions in oman. strengthening five pillars of action, including public health surveillance and contact management, building laboratory capacity, infection prevention and control, case management, and risk communication. algorithms were developed describing response actions in the event of a suspected mers-cov case. checklists for the preparedness of health care facilities were developed and action plans were later developed to rectify the deficiencies. field visits were conducted immediately after confirmation of cases by the regional and national rapid response teams from the ministry of health, and contact surveillance and monitoring was conducted for days after the last exposure. laboratory surveillance for mers-cov started by building laboratory diagnostic capacity with the availability of the primers for mers-cov testing, and with the training of laboratory personnel countrywide on the triple-packing and shipment of samples. training on how to collect nasopharyngeal swabs for testing for mers-cov was conducted for emergency room physicians, internists, and intensivists in all district hospitals. national infection prevention and control guidelines were developed for dealing with suspected or confirmed cases of mers-cov. mask-fit testing was done for all healthcare workers who could be involved in taking care of patients with mers-cov. a project was initiated for triaging of patients presenting to emergency rooms or health centers with an acute respiratory illness. in , post hajj surveillance for mers-cov was done using nasopharyngeal swabs for people returning from hajj and presenting with respiratory symptoms. three hundred and fifty samples were tested by real-time pcr and all were negative for mers-cov. the surveillance system for severe acute respiratory infections (sari) was implemented in oman in january in four regional hospitals as sentinel sites; sari aims to determine the epidemiology of severe respiratory infections and the contribution of influenza and other etiological agents to severe respiratory infections in the country. it also aims to detect emergent influenza strains with pandemic potential or any other respiratory infections, and to detect any unusual morbidity or mortality due to acute respiratory illness. in , sari sentinel sites were used as a platform to test % of cases for mers-cov at the central public health laboratory; samples were tested and all were negative. in conclusion, we have described the epidemiological aspects of the two reported cases of mers-cov in oman and the preparedness efforts made by the ministry of health. strengthened infection control practices and having a powerful active surveillance program for acute respiratory illnesses is key to the rapid and prompt response for emerging respiratory infections. conflict of interest: none. middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov): summary and literature update revised interim case definition for reporting to who-middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) world health organization. interim global epidemiological surveillance standards for influenza key: cord- -qdmunb l authors: zhao, yongkun; wang, chong; qiu, boning; li, chufang; wang, hualei; jin, hongli; gai, weiwei; zheng, xuexing; wang, tiecheng; sun, weiyang; yan, feihu; gao, yuwei; wang, qian; yan, jinghua; chen, ling; perlman, stanley; zhong, nanshan; zhao, jincun; yang, songtao; xia, xianzhu title: passive immunotherapy for middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection with equine immunoglobulin or immunoglobulin fragments in a mouse model date: - - journal: antiviral res doi: . /j.antiviral. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: qdmunb l middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) is a highly lethal pulmonary infection caused by a coronavirus (cov), mers-cov. with the continuing spread of mers-cov, prophylactic and therapeutic treatments are urgently needed. in this study, we prepared purified equine f(ab’)( ) from horses immunized with mers-cov virus-like particles (vlps) expressing mers-cov s, m and e proteins. both igg and f(ab’)( ) efficiently neutralized mers-cov replication in tissue culture. passive transfer of equine immune antibodies significantly reduced virus titers and accelerated virus clearance from the lungs of mers-cov infected mice. our data show that horses immunized with mers-cov vlps can serve as a primary source of protective f(ab’)( ) for potential use in the prophylactic or therapeutic treatment of exposed or infected patients. middle east respiratory syndrome (mers)-cov is an emerging pathogen that causes severe pneumonia in humans in the arabian peninsula and in travelers from this region (assiri et al., a; zaki et al., b; zumla et al., ) . human-to-human spread has been documented (assiri et al., b) . while infections of immunocompetent patients generally present with only mild symptoms, the elderly and patients with pre-existing illnesses such as diabetes or renal failure are likely to develop more severe disease (assiri et al., a) . as of september , , cases with deaths ( . % mortality) had been reported to the world health organization, although the actual number of infections could be much larger since mild, asymptomatic or undiagnosed cases are likely to be common (drosten et al., ) . as yet there are neither licensed vaccines nor any prophylactic or therapeutic treatments effective against mers-cov. given the ability of coronaviruses to rapidly adapt to new hosts, a major public health concern is that mers-cov will further adapt to replication in humans, triggering a global severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars)-like pandemic (peiris et al., ; zaki et al., a) . as of now, the most promising treatment is the passive administration of anti-mers-cov neutralizing antibodies. several research groups have developed and produced anti-mers patientderived or humanized monoclonal neutralizing antibodies in vitro that were able to protect mers-cov infected mice (corti et al., ; li et al., ; zhao et al., ) . however, since these antibodies react with a single epitope on the mers-cov spike (s) protein and since coronaviruses are prone to mutate, this approach has raised concerns about possible antibody escape (corti et al., ; sabir et al., ) . recently, we showed that sera from middle east dromedary camels contained high levels of anti-mers-cov neutralizing antibodies. passive immunotherapy with sera from these animals significantly reduced virus loads and accelerated virus clearance from the lungs of mers-cov infected mice . this provides proof of concept that immune animal sera are potentially useful in the treatment of patients with mers (hayden et al., ) . passive immunotherapy with animal sera or antibodies has been successfully used to prevent rabies and to neutralize snake venom (both et al., ; gutierrez et al., ) . convalescent plasma used to treat patients with sars has been found safe and has demonstrated some efficacy in a study with a small number of patients (mair-jenkins et al., ) . however, neutralizing antibody titers in mers patients are generally low and the limited number of mers survivors makes this approach impractical (drosten et al., ) . here, we show that immunization of healthy horses with mers-cov virus-like particles (vlps) expressing mers-cov s, m and e proteins induces strong polyclonal neutralizing antibodies against mers-cov. since administration of whole antibodies can induce allergic responses in some humans, we further tested f(ab') fragments prepared by digestion of antibody with pepsin. prophylactic or therapeutic treatment of mers-cov infected mice with either igg or f(ab') significantly decreased the virus load in their lungs. mers-cov vlps were produced and purified as previously described . in brief, army worm sf cells were infected with a single recombinant baculoviruses co-expressing mers-cov structural protein genes s, m, and e, at a multiplicity of infection (moi) of . . culture supernatants were harvested at h post-infection and centrifuged at g for min to remove cell debris. following centrifugation of the clarified supernatants at , g for h at c the resulting vlp pellets were resuspended in pbs and loaded onto a e e % discontinuous sucrose gradient. after an additional centrifugation at , g for . h at c, bands between and % sucrose containing mers-cov vlp were collected. four -year-old healthy horses received multi-point intramuscular injections of . , . , , , and mg mers-cov vlps in ml pbs at weeks , , , , and , respectively. freund's complete adjuvant (sigma) was included in the first dose, and incomplete adjuvant in the remaining ones. sera were collected from the jugular vein weeks after each injection, and stored at À c before further analysis. mers-cov specific antibodies in the sera were measured by an indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (elisa) using purified mers-cov receptor-binding domain (rbd) protein (i.e., s protein residues e cloned into the pet- a expression vector and purified by ni-nta affinity chromatograph column). briefly, -well microtitration plates (corning costar, usa) were pre-coated with ml purified rbd antigen diluted in . mol/l carbonate sodium buffer (ph . ) to a final concentration of mg/ ml and incubated at c overnight. after blocking with skimmed milk for h at c, ml twofold serially diluted serum samples were added to the wells, and incubated at c for h. the plates were washed three times with pbs containing . % tween- (pbst), before addition of ml hrp-labeled rabbit antibody against horse igg (bioss, china; : , ) and incubation at c for h. after washing with pbst, ml , , , '-tetramethylbenzidine (tmb) (sigma, usa) as substrate was added to each well and incubated for min. the reaction was stopped with ml m h so . optical densities at nm were measured in an elisa plate reader (bio-rad, usa). horse antiserum was diluted with vol of normal saline ( . % nacl) and a half volume of saturated ammonium sulfate was then added and mixed gently at room temperature for min before centrifugation at g for min. the resulting sediment was redissolved in saline and mixed with a one-third volume of saturated ammonium sulfate. after incubation at ambient temperature for min and centrifugation at g for min, the second sediments were dissolved in normal saline and dialyzed against normal saline to remove any remaining ammonium salt. immunoaffinity resins were prepared by coupling mg rbd protein to . m sodium periodate-activated sepharose b ( g), and then incubating with ml sodium borohydride for min. after reaction with m tris (ph . ) for min, a purified igg sample was diluted -fold with pbs and incubated with the rbd resin overnight at c with constant rotation. the flowthroughs (anti-rbd depleted) were collected, and then the flowthroughs were tested against the rbd protein by elisa to ensure rbdspecific igg all bound with the rbd sepharose b. after washing with pbs, the bound antibodies (anti-rbd) were eluted in . m glycine-hcl buffer (ph . ). the eluates were neutralized with m tris buffer (ph . ), and then dialyzed against pbs. all samples were adjusted to the same protein concentration and sterilized by passage through microspin filters ( . mm pore size; millipore). neutralizing activity of the igg, rbd-specific igg, and flowthroughs were tested. the ph of the horse antiserum was adjusted to . with mol/l hcl. following incubation with pepsin ( iu/ml) at c for . h, the reaction was stopped by adjusting the ph to . with mol/l naoh. the solution was then applied to protein-a and protein-g columns sequentially to remove whole immunoglobulins. the purity of the resulting f(ab') protein was assessed by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (sds-page) followed by coomassie blue staining and the target fraction in the gel was analyzed in a thin layer chromatography scanner (transmission, zigzag scan, dual wavelength, swing width: mm, delta y: . mm) (cs- , shimadzu). specific pathogen-free week old balb/c mice were purchased from charles river laboratories international and maintained in the animal care facility, university of iowa. briefly, all mice were housed in thoren individually ventilated cages. caging and bedding were autoclaved. irradiated diet was fed. filtered water ( . mm filter) was provided with edstrom automatic watering system. hepa-filtered cage changing stations were used. all persons entering animal rooms worn autoclaved gowns, gloves, hair bonnets, face masks, and shoe covers. serum samples, purified igg or f(ab') were serially diluted in dmem and mixed with an equal volume of mers-cov containing pfu. following incubation at c for h, aliquots were added to cultures of vero cells in well plates and incubated at c in % co for h with gentle rocking every min. plates were then overlaid with . % agarose/dmem/ % calf serum. after further incubation for days, agarose plugs were removed using a small spatula, and the remaining plaques were visualized by staining with . % crystal violet. six-week-old female balb/c mice were lightly anesthetized with isoflurane and transduced intranasally with .  pfu of ad -hdpp in ml dmem as described elsewhere (zhao et al., ) . five days post transduction, mice were infected intranasally with mers-cov (  pfu) in a total volume of ml dmem. mice were monitored daily for morbidity (weight loss) and mortality. all work with mers-cov was conducted in the university of iowa biosafety level (bsl- ) laboratory. separate groups were injected with ml horse antiserum or mg igg or f(ab') intraperitoneally (ip) day before or after intranasal infection with  pfu mers-cov. control mice were given an equal volume of normal horse serum (sigma). to obtain virus titers, lungs were harvested from subgroups of animals at the indicated time points (see results) and homogenized into ml of phosphate buffered saline (pbs), using a manual homogenizer. lung homogenates were aliquoted into micro tubes and kept in À c. virus was titered on vero cells. cells were fixed with % formaldehyde and stained with crystal violet three days post-infection (p.i.). viral titers are expressed as pfu/g tissue for mers-cov (zhao et al., ) . due to the biosafety risk, mers-cov must be handled in a bsl- laboratory, whereas vlps can be rapidly generated under bsl- conditions as an immunogen inducing high antibody titers. in addition, the horse provides little risk to humans and produces high antibody yields, making these animals an effective source for production of hyperimmune sera (zheng et al., ) . rbd-specific igg titers in the sera were all above : , after five immunizations (fig. ) as assessed by elisa. rbd contains the major neutralizing epitopes of the s protein, as shown by the observation that absorption of sars patient convalescent sera with sars-cov rbd removes the majority of neutralizing antibodies (he et al., ) . independent research groups have also shown more directly that the mers-cov rbd sequence contains the major antigenic determinants for inducing neutralizing antibodies, and that neutralizing epitopes within mers-cov s are also localized primarily in the rbd region (du et al., ; mou et al., ) . here, we have demonstrated that anti-rbd antibodies function as major components of neutralizing antibodies. we found that rbd-specific igg neutralized mers-cov infection with half maximal inhibitory concentration of . mg/ml, and .  mg/ml for flowthroughs (fig. ) , suggesting that the rbd of s protein act as an important neutralization determinant of mers-cov. our results demonstrate that equine antibodies are polyclonal and recognize more antigen determinants in mers-cov s protein than single mabs, which could potentially prevent antibody escape. the integrity of igg and f(ab') fragments was evaluated using an sds-page gel (fig. a) . the purity of the f(ab') fragments after protein-a/g chromatography was > % after gel electrophoresis (fig. b ). passive transfer of blood products from other humans poses a safety concern, with possible contamination with agents of blood-borne diseases (e.g., hiv, hepatitis). heterologous antibody carries a potential risk of allergic reaction, but generation of f(ab') fragments, results in antibodies being less immunoreactive and safer for use in humans. while we successfully generated equine antibodies against mers-cov vlps, their protective effect against authentic mers- fig. . robust mers-cov rbd-specific antibody in immunized horse sera. horses (n ¼ ) were injected intramuscularly with mers-cov vlps and boosted every two weeks an additional times. sera were collected weeks after each immunization. rbd-specific antibodies in immunized horse sera were detected using elisa. cov infection remained untested. using a plaque reduction neutralizing assay, we confirmed that immune sera significantly neutralized mers-cov infection in vitro, with a half effective maximal dilution of : , (fig. a, b) . further, we found that equine igg and f(ab') also neutralized mers-cov infection with half effective maximal concentrations (ec ) of . mg/ml and . mg/ml for igg and f(ab') , respectively (fig. c, d) . collectively, these results show that equine antibody products exhibit highly potent neutralizing activity against mers-cov. next we asked if adoptive transfer of equine antibodies could protect mice from mers-cov infection prophylactically and therapeutically. by using a mouse model we previously generated (zhao et al., ) , we injected animals with immune serum (fig. a, b) , purified igg (fig. c, d) or f(ab') (fig. e, f) i.p. day before (fig. a , c, e) or after (fig. b, d, f) mers-cov challenge. in both prophylactic and therapeutic settings, passive transfer of equine immune antibodies resulted in a e log reduction of virus titers in the lungs of mers-cov infected mice, and accelerated virus clearance in the serum treated group (fig. a, b) . we did not observe any difference in body weight loss and pathologic changes on the exterior surface of the lungs in treated and untreated mice after fig. . neutralizing activity of the rbd-specific antibodies in igg. in vitro neutralization tests of total igg, rbd-specific igg, and flowthroughs, were determined in a series of -fold dilutions and % neutralization was calculated using graphpad prism. infeciton, since in this model, mice only develope mild lung disease. rapid virus replication and inflammatory cell infiltration in the infected lungs are the major parameters to measure (zhao et al., ) . since the half-life of f(ab') in vivo is relatively short and mers-cov is cleared within days in this model (zhao et al., ) , we did not inject f(ab') antibodies before day À or after day p.i. of note, the purified igg seemed to have lower protective potency than that of the immune serum in vivo (fig. ) . the concentration of igg in serum is > mg/ml. we used ml of immune serum (equal to mg igg) per mouse which is much higher than the immune igg we used ( mg/mice). the other reason could be we purified immune igg using saturated ammonium sulfate precipitation method, which needed to be performed under room temperature. we speculated that some iggs were degraded or misfolded, and unable to bind to mers-cov spike protein under this circumstance. while, immune sera were properly stored at À c and contained high concentration of bsa and other proteins, which made the antiserum more stable. to date, there are several anti-mers-cov antibodies developed from different origins. each antibody contains its own advantages and disadvantages. for monoclonal antibodies, mouse-derived monoclonal antibody needs to be humanized before human use (li et al., ) ; a human neutralizing antibody derived from a convalescent mers patient can be produced in large amount from cho cells (corti et al., ) . however, the single clone antibody raises the concern of viral escape mutant when applied to human. administration of transchromosomic bovine human immunoglobulins (luke et al., ) or dromedary immune serum resulted in rapidly viral clearance in infected mouse lungs. the disadvantage of these antibodies is that these animals are not readily available. compared to the antibodies described above, the administration of equine igg-derived f(ab') fragment proved to be a versatile and feasible method (lu et al., ; zhou et al., ) . it provides a useful platform to produce therapeutics against emerging infectious diseases. in summary, by immunizing healthy horses with mers-cov vlps, we have successfully developed the first equine igg-derived f(ab') fragment that neutralizes mers-cov in vitro and in vivo. both prophylactic and therapeutic treatments decreased virus loads and accelerated virus clearance in the lungs of mers-cov-infected mice. therefore, horses immunized with mers-cov vlps can serve as a useful initial source for developing protective f(ab') fragments, for the purpose of preparedness and to serve as a strategic reserve for a potential mers epidemic and other emergent pathogens. the authors declare no competing interests. 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kim, man jin; lee, jee-soo; lee, seung jun; seo, soo hyun; park, sung sup; seong, moon-woo title: viral rna in blood as indicator of severe outcome in middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection date: - - journal: emerg infect dis doi: . /eid . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: wuf s m we evaluated the diagnostic and clinical usefulness of blood specimens to detect middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in patients from the outbreak in south korea. viral rna was detected in blood from % of patients at initial diagnosis, and the detection preceded a worse clinical course. m iddle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) is a zoonotic, betacoronavirus lineage c rna virus that was first identified in saudi arabia in ( ) . mers-cov causes respiratory and renal illness in humans, and infection often progresses to severe pneumonia, acute respiratory distress syndrome, renal failure, or death in a subset of patients ( ) . risk factors, including patient age, preexisting health conditions, and high viral load in upper respiratory specimens, have been suggested to be related to disease severity and death ( , ) . however, pathogenesis and clinical characteristics promoting recovery from infection or progression to serious organ failure have not been well elucidated. respiratory specimens are preferred for viral rna detection and confirmatory diagnosis of mers-cov infection in humans ( ) . mers-cov has broad tissue tropism, including the kidney, intestinal tract, liver, histiocytes, macrophages, and t lymphocytes, but viral rna has been found inconsistently in blood, urine, and fecal specimens ( - ). reports have described small numbers of cases with extrapulmonary virus; therefore, it remains unclear whether extrapulmonary specimens have any diagnostic usefulness in determining infection or whether extrapulmonary viral detection has clinical implications in disease management. a large mers-cov outbreak occurred in in south korea. this outbreak comprised the first imported case and subsequent infection of patients ( ) . our study aimed to evaluate the diagnostic utility of blood specimens for mers-cov infection by using large numbers of patients with a single viral origin and to determine the relationship between blood viral detection and clinical characteristics. we collected pairs of edta whole blood and serum specimens from patients with mers-cov after admission to the national medical center in seoul, south korea. mers-cov infection initially was diagnosed by the korea centers for disease control and prevention using respiratory specimens ( ) . after admission, each patient was reassessed for epidemiologic information and clinically managed with monitoring. specimens were stored at − °c before analyses. viral rna was extracted and eluted with a magna pure lc . automated nucleic acid extractor and magna pure lc total nucleic acid isolation kit (both from roche diagnostics, mannheim, germany) according to the manufacturer's instructions. specimen volumes were μl edta whole blood and μl serum, and elution volumes were μl for edta whole blood and μl for serum. one-step, real-time reverse transcription pcr (rrt-pcr) was performed for the mers-cov gene regions (upstream envelope [upe] , open reading frame [orf] a, and nucleocapsid) with an agpath-id one-step rt-pcr kit (applied biosystems, foster city, ca, usa) and an abi real-time pcr system (applied biosystems). human ribonuclease (rnase) p was amplified in parallel for sample quality control ( , , ) . in each test, the viral rna was considered detected when amplification before cutoff was observed from at least different targets in mers-cov with pass of sample quality control. the robustness of rrt-pcr was demonstrated for qualitative concordance of positivity or negativity by using different types of specimens (online technical appendix table , http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/ / / - -techapp .pdf). we calculated the viral copy concentration in the blood using standard curves constructed from the cycle threshold (c t ) of serially diluted copies/μl of upe rna (provided by the university of bonn medical center, bonn, germany). author the results of the blood viral rna analyses did not affect clinical management. we assessed the relationships among clinical and molecular diagnostic factors with the ibm spss statistics program . (spss inc., chicago, il, usa). in each test, p< . was considered statistically significant. the institutional review board of the national medical center approved this study (h- - - ). we assessed patient demographics, their clinical features, and disease outcomes (tables , ; online technical appendix table ). the time difference was an average of . days (median , range - days) between when the initial diagnostic respiratory specimens and blood specimens were obtained. at admission, viral rna was detected in ( %) of edta whole blood and ( %) of serum samples from infected patients. two patients showed viral positivity in either specimen subtype of edta whole blood or serum; therefore, the overall detection rate for mers-cov was % ( / ) in blood. the concordance rate of viral assay was % ( / ) between edta whole blood and serum specimens. blood virus concentration was , copies/ml edta whole blood (range , - , copies/ml), equivalent to a median upe c t of . , and , copies/ml serum (range - , copies/ml, median upe c t . ). blood viral rna positivity at admission was associated with fever > . °c on the sampling date (p = . ), requirement for mechanical ventilation during the following clinical course (p = . ) and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (p = . ), and patient death (p = . , all by -tailed fisher exact test; figure) . blood viral rna positivity was not associated with viral c t in the initial diagnostic lower respiratory specimens, or requirement of oxygen supplementation during the following clinical course. between the blood viral rna-positive and -negative groups, we found no differences in age, duration from symptom onset to diagnosis of mers-cov infection, or an invasive procedure before the specimens were obtained (online technical appendix table ). viral loads in the lower respiratory specimens at the initial confirmatory diagnosis showed no effect on patient survival (figure) . patient death was not associated with length of time from symptom onset to diagnosis of mers-cov infection (online technical appendix table ). our results showed that the detection rate of blood viral rna was low in the early phase of infection in patients with a confirmed diagnosis, similar to results from a previous study ( ) . these findings contrasted with those of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection ( ) . therefore, in the case of mers-cov infection, blood does not have the highest diagnostic yield for the initial confirmatory diagnosis. the viral load in blood was low, even in detected cases. a proportion of mers-cov isolates in the korea outbreak harbored a c→t substitution in the third nucleotide of the orf a primer binding site (genbank accession nos. kt - ). this mismatch may partially contribute to the insensitivity of orf a assay observed in this study. an alternative sensitive target replacing orf a might be useful in studies using blood specimens. blood viral rna has been detected in a few case reports of mers-cov fatalities ( ) ( ) ( ) . our data of specimens from cross-sectional time points focusing on early viremia showed that blood viral rna was present in a subpopulation of patients and that these patients had significantly poorer prognoses, as demonstrated by the need for more frequent mechanical ventilation and the increased risk for death. further large studies using serial daily specimens that are collected throughout the admission period-, both upper and lower respiratory specimens and paired measurement of viral rna and antibody in blood-might help overcome the limitation of the current study, which included relatively small numbers of deceased patients ( % [ / ]). our data showed a detection rate of % for viral rna in blood at initial diagnosis, which was insufficient for initial confirmatory diagnosis. blood viral rna at the early phase was related to a worse clinical course in infected patients and might be a good prognostic indicator of severe outcome. measuring blood viral rna at hospital admission might be useful. middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus-infected patients, south korea, . a, b) survival difference between the blood viral rna-positive (solid line) and -negative (broken line) groups. survival was defined as the time from initial confirmatory diagnosis to death before hospital discharge (a) (kaplan-meier survival analysis, log rank p = . ; breslow p = . ) and as the time from symptom onset to death (b) (kaplan-meier survival analysis, log rank p = . ; breslow p = . ). c, d) survival difference between the high respiratory viral load (solid line) and low respiratory viral load (broken line) groups. viral loads were classified into groups: patients who harbored viral loads above the median load of patients and patients who harbored below. survival was defined as time from initial confirmatory diagnosis to death. cycle threshold (c t ) values were calculated for real-time reverse transcription pcrs targeting the upstream of envelope region (c) and open reading frame a region (d) (kaplan-meier survival analysis, log rank p = . ; breslow p = . ). tick marks along data lines indicate data-censored time points. isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome mortality risk factors for middle east respiratory syndrome outbreak, south korea association of higher mers-cov virus load with severe disease and death, saudi arabia world health organization. laboratory testing for middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus. interim guidance (revised) differential cell line susceptibility to the emerging novel human betacoronavirus c emc/ : implications for disease pathogenesis and clinical manifestation middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus efficiently infects human primary t lymphocytes and activates the extrinsic and intrinsic apoptosis pathways mers-cov study group. clinical features and viral diagnosis of two cases of infection with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: a report of nosocomial transmission clinical features and virological analysis of a case of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection mers-cov biology group. kinetics and pattern of viral excretion in biological specimens of two mers-cov cases middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus outbreak in the republic of erratum in: osong public health res perspect detection of a novel human coronavirus by real-time reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction real-time reverse transcription-pcr assay panel for middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus viral shedding and antibody response in patients with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection quantitative analysis and prognostic implication of sars coronavirus rna in the plasma and serum of patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome we thank christian drosten for providing the in vitro transcribed rnas of mers-cov genes. the public health image library (phil) key: cord- - znb authors: omrani, a.s.; shalhoub, s. title: middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov): what lessons can we learn? date: - - journal: j hosp infect doi: . /j.jhin. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: znb the middle east respiratory coronavirus (mers-cov) was first isolated from a patient who died with severe pneumonia in june . as of june , a total of , mers-cov infections have been notified to the world health organization (who). clinical illness associated with mers-cov ranges from mild upper respiratory symptoms to rapidly progressive pneumonia and multi-organ failure. a significant proportion of patients present with non-respiratory symptoms such as headache, myalgia, vomiting and diarrhoea. a few potential therapeutic agents have been identified but none have been conclusively shown to be clinically effective. human to human transmission is well documented, but the epidemic potential of mers-cov remains limited at present. healthcare-associated clusters of mers-cov have been responsible for the majority of reported cases. the largest outbreaks have been driven by delayed diagnosis, overcrowding and poor infection control practices. however, chains of mers-cov transmission can be readily interrupted with implementation of appropriate control measures. as with any emerging infectious disease, guidelines for mers-cov case identification and surveillance evolved as new data became available. sound clinical judgment is required to identify unusual presentations and trigger appropriate control precautions. evidence from multiple sources implicates dromedary camels as natural hosts of mers-cov. camel to human transmission has been demonstrated, but the exact mechanism of infection remains uncertain. the ubiquitously available social media have facilitated communication and networking amongst healthcare professionals and eventually proved to be important channels for presenting the public with factual material, timely updates and relevant advice. the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) was first identified in september . as of june , a total of , mers-cov infections have been reported to the world health organization (who). despite an accumulation of clinical experience and scientific knowledge, new mers-cov infections continue to be reported almost on daily basis. what lessons can we learn after three years of clinical experience and scientific research? lesson one: no substitute for continuous vigilance a -year-old man was admitted on june th, , to a hospital in jeddah, saudi arabia, with severe pneumonia and multi-organ failure. the patient died after days of hospitalization. indirect immunofluorescence assays and real-time polymerase chain reaction (pcr) for widely occurring respiratory viruses failed to identify an infective aetiology. interestingly, cytopathic changes consistent with viral replication were noted in llc-mk and vero cell cultures of the patient's respiratory samples. slides of the infected cell cultures reacted strongly with the patient's serum but not with any of control sera stored in the same hospital. however, pancoronavirus pcr yielded positive results. the pcr fragments were sequenced at the erasmus medical centre in rotterdam, the netherlands, and phylogenetic analysis showed that the novel coronavirus belonged to lineage c of the genus betacoronavirus. , on september , an email was posted on program for monitoring emerging diseases mail (promed-mail) announcing the discovery of a novel human coronavirus. meanwhile, a critically ill -year-old qatari man was transferred by air ambulance on september th, , to a hospital in england. he had developed respiratory symptoms on september rd followed by multi-organ failure. his upper and lower respiratory tract samples were negative for influenza a/b, parainfluenza e , rsv a/b, human metapneumovirus, enterovirus, rhinovirus, adenovirus, human bocavirus, and the human coronaviruses (nl , e, oc , hku ). on september st, , one day after the above promed-mail posting, the patient's respiratory samples tested positive by pancoronavirus pcr. once sequenced, a base-pair fragment from this isolate showed . % homology with the erasmus medical centre's isolate. the third patient was a -year-old man who presented to a hospital in riyadh, saudi arabia, on october th, , with severe pneumonia and renal failure. mers-cov was detected in samples from the patient's upper and lower respiratory tract. prior to all of this, an outbreak of respiratory illness was reported in april from an intensive care unit in a hospital in zarqa, jordan. a retrospective epidemiological investigation in november identified probable cases, two of whom had died. mers-cov was detected by reverse transcription (rt)epcr in stored samples from the two deceased patients. seven more were subsequently confirmed by serological testing. a pattern began to emerge, characterized by severe pneumonia, multi-organ failure, and an epidemiological link to a country in the middle east. in may , the virus, which had been initially known as human coronaviruseerasmus medical centre (hcov-emc), was named the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov). notably, phylogenetic analysis of the first five available mers-cov sequences suggested a common ancestor dating back to mid- . furthermore, anti-mers-cov antibodies were detected in out of , serum samples [ . %; % confidence interval (ci): . e . %] obtained between december and december from provinces in saudi arabia. the authors extrapolated that just fewer than , individuals ( , ; % ci: , e , ) in saudi arabia could be seropositive for mers-cov. it is therefore reasonable to assume that human mers-cov infections had taken place in the region for some considerable time before it was identified. it is possible that the identification of the virus might have been delayed even more, had it not been for the meticulous investigation by a single virologist, dr a.m. zaki, of the first reported case of mers-cov. the first lesson one has to learn from mers-cov and its discovery is that continuous vigilance and perseverance with diagnostic investigation of undiagnosed infectious diseases are essential to identify emerging pathogens. lesson two: yet again, prevention is better than cure clinically, mers-cov infection may range from an asymptomatic or mild upper respiratory illness to a rapidly progressive and fatal disease. e the majority of hospitalized patients with mers-cov infection present with fever and respiratory symptoms including cough and shortness of breath with clinical and radiological evidence of pneumonia. , fatigue, myalgia, headache, and gastrointestinal symptoms such as vomiting and diarrhoea are also frequent. , respiratory and renal failure are frequent complications of severe mers-cov infection, in addition to acute liver injury, cardiac dysrhythmias, and coagulopathy. e overall mortality is around . %, but exceeds % in critically ill patients and in those with significant comorbidities. , e for reasons yet to be understood, mers-cov infection is rare in children. , in-vitro studies have identified numerous agents with anti-mers-cov activity including interferon, ribavirin, mycophenolate, cyclosporine and lopinavir. the combination of interferon and ribavirin showed promising results in experimentally infected macaques. however, in retrospective clinical studies the combination was not associated with significantly improved overall survival. , treatment of patients with mers-cov infections remains largely dependent on supportive measures. diagnosis is confirmed by detection of mers-cov rna in respiratory samples by real-time pcr targeting the upe and orf b genes. samples obtained from the lower respiratory tract have higher viral loads and better diagnostic yield than those obtained from the throat or nasopharynx. , , moreover, viral shedding is considerably prolonged in symptomatic and severely ill mers-cov patients compared with asymptomatic infected contacts. interestingly, detection of mers-cov in blood has been associated with worse clinical outcome. , mers-cov may also be detected in stool for up days and in urine for up to days from disease onset. under certain conditions, mers-cov can survive on plastic and steel surfaces for up to h. in the absence of appropriate precautions, the environment surrounding a symptomatic mers-cov patient can therefore become extensively contaminated with viable, potentially infectious virus. human-to-human transmission of mers-cov has been well documented in family clusters, community settings and more often in healthcare settings. e , , , common denominators in the largest hospital outbreaks have been overcrowding, especially in emergency departments, and poor adherence to infection control standards. , , , however, mers-cov continues to have relatively limited infectiousness. for example, screening identified secondary mers-cov infections in only % of close family contacts and % of healthcare contacts. , moreover, no secondary cases were identified following extensive epidemiological investigations of imported cases in the uk, germany, france, greece, the netherlands, and the usa. e it has been phylogenetically demonstrated that mers-cov transmission chains have not extended beyond two to three months and that the virus has remained genetically stable over the past three years. , given an effective reproduction number (r ) of less than one, human-to-human mers-cov could be readily interrupted with effective preventive interventions. , indeed, even the most explosive hospital outbreaks of mers-cov infection, such those that occurred in jeddah and riyadh in april to may , were brought under control through a strategy based on early case detection and implementation of appropriate infection prevention and control measures; namely contact and droplet precautions for general care in addition to airborne precautions for aerosolgenerating procedures such as intubation and respiratory tract suctioning. e the poor prognosis associated with mers-cov, especially in patients with multiple comorbidities, and the lack of effective anti-viral therapy make appropriate infection prevention and control all-important. just as is true for most infectious diseases, mers-cov reminds us again that prevention is better than cure. the initial case definitions for mers-cov case finding and reporting focused on patients who are hospitalized, had evidence of acute pulmonary disease with an epidemiological link to confirmed cases or to countries in the middle east. , as more clinical experience and epidemiological data became available, updated definitions removed the requirement for hospitalization. the reporting of several community and hospital clusters during the first half of the year , often without identifiable human or animal sources, led to speculation that individuals with no or only mild respiratory symptoms might have a role in mers-cov transmissions. , , this was reflected in the who revised interim definition published in july where patients with acute febrile illness of any severity were included; in addition to a recommendation to proactively test asymptomatic close contacts of confirmed mers-cov infections. memish et al. later showed that mers-cov was detectable for up to days in % of asymptomatic contacts. in another report, an asymptomatic healthcare worker had detectable mers-cov for more than five weeks. although mers-cov transmission from an asymptomatic individual remains a strong probability, this has never been documented. , in the meantime, clinicians were becoming increasingly aware that mers-cov infections were being diagnosed in patients whose clinical presentations did not conform to those definitions, including the absence of fever, lack of respiratory involvement and the predominance of gastrointestinal or nonspecific generalized symptoms. , , in the aftermath of the surge of mers-cov infection in jeddah and riyadh in april and may , the ministry of health in saudi arabia revised its case definition and surveillance guidance to recommend mers-cov testing in any of four patient categories: e patients with clinical or radiological evidence of community-acquired pneumonia; e patients with clinical or radiological evidence of healthcare-associated pneumonia; e patients with acute febrile illness and myalgia, headache, diarrhoea, nausea, or vomiting, and unexplained leucopenia or thrombocytopenia; e contacts of individuals with confirmed or probable mers-cov infection who develop upper or lower respiratory symptoms within two weeks of exposure. as better understanding of the epidemiology of mers-cov developed, it became obvious that a considerable proportion of cases were probably missed. , during the steep learning curve of an emerging infectious disease, regularly updated guidelines are important. such guidelines are inevitably based on incomplete evidence and hence may not be comprehensive or applicable in all situations. clinical acumen and heightened medical awareness are essential for early detection of unusual mers-cov cases and to prevent delays in diagnosis and to mitigate additional exposures. a zoonotic origin was suspected soon after the identification of mers-cov. bats are known natural hosts for several coronaviruses and hence were the initial target for investigation. , more than faecal samples were collected from wild bats in the area around where the first mers-cov patient lived. a -nucleotide fragment of mers-cov rna was detected in one faecal pellet from an egyptian tomb bat. the sequenced amplification product was genetically identical to the mers-cov sequence obtained from the index human case. more recently, a closely related coronavirus was isolated from bats in south africa, suggesting that mers-cov ancestors might exist in old world bats. , to date, no further evidence is available to confirm the role of bats as natural hosts or reservoirs for mers-cov. on the other hand, the evidence implicating dromedary camels in mers-cov epidemiology is more consistent. a role for dromedary camels is supported by the following observations: À neutralizing mers-cov antibodies are highly prevalent in dromedary camels from across the arabian peninsula, north africa, and eastern africa. e mers-cov antibodies were detected in stored camel sera dating as far back as the early s. e the prevalence of mers-cov seropositivity is significantly higher in camels aged more than two years than in juvenile camels. , , À several groups have reported the detection of mers-cov by rtepcr in nasal and faecal samples from dromedary camels in the arabian peninsula. , , e one study reported mers-cov positivity in more than % of lung tissue samples obtained from dromedary camel carcasses. rtepcr was positive in camels that had prior evidence of mers-cov seropositivity, indicating that animal reinfection is possible. interestingly, the prevalence of mers-cov rna is significantly higher in juvenile than in adult camels. , , furthermore, all mers-cov strains obtained from dromedary camels are phylogenetically clustered within human isolates, supporting possible animalehuman intertransmission. it is important to note, however, that mers-cov seroprevalence studies in individuals with close contact with camels have yielded inconsistent results. a national serosurvey in saudi arabia found prevalence of mers-cov antibodies that was times higher in camel shepherds (p ¼ . ) and times higher in slaughterhouse workers (p < . ), compared with the general population. similarly, mers-cov serology was positive in individuals who had occupational exposure to dromedary camels in qatar but not in those without such exposure. on the other hand, mers-cov antibodies were not detected in sera obtained from individuals who had close contact with camels that had documented mers-cov infection two to three months earlier. likewise, screened slaughterhouse workers and other animal workers in western and southern saudi arabia were all seronegative for mers-cov antibodies. , collectively, the available data strongly suggest that mers-cov is highly prevalent in dromedary camels in the arabian peninsula and that transmission of infection from camels to humans, although inefficient, does occur. however, the exact mechanism and route of infection it is still unclear. infections. , , , one pertinent cause for concern has been the potential global spread of mers-cov during the annual hajj pilgrimage when millions of muslims from around the world gather in mecca, saudi arabia. e though those concerns are well founded, several surveillance studies over the past three years have not identified any mers-cov infections among hajj pilgrims while they are in saudi arabia or after their return to their home countries. e the situation was entirely different in the recent outbreak in south korea where a single imported case resulted in a total of laboratory-confirmed cases of mers-cov infection, including deaths. the index patient was a -year-old man who developed respiratory symptoms seven days after returning to seoul from a two-week visit to bahrain, saudi arabia, united arab emirates, and qatar. he sought medical care in several hospitals before he was diagnosed with mers-cov infection. , a combination of late recognition, overcrowding in emergency departments and hospital wards, multiple incidents of patient movement between different healthcare facilities, and delayed implementation of adequate infection control precautions culminated in the largest single outbreak of mers-cov infection. , , e the outbreak involved patients, visitors, care-givers and healthcare workers, and spanned across six different hospitals in three south korean cities. , notably, phylogenetic analysis of mers-cov strains from south korea revealed no significant biological changes compared to previously sequenced viruses. the outbreak in south korea was eventually controlled through a series of measures including aggressive contact identification, screening and strict isolation, and rigorous infection control precautions. , , within a few weeks, south korea went from a country with no reported mers-cov cases to one that has the second largest number in the world. , with air travel becoming readily accessible and affordable, the south korean experience demonstrates vividly that in the context of an infectious respiratory illness, there is simply no room for complacency. adequate assessment of patients presenting with febrile illness must include their recent travel history to enable early application of proper control measures and to expedite laboratory confirmation and appropriate clinical management. the past decade has witnessed an exponential rise in internet-based social media sites such as facebook, twitter, and youtube. healthcare professionals are increasingly using social media applications to follow medical developments and emerging scientific literature and to share their own research findings, observations, and opinion. the general public often uses these tools as news outlets to seek and share medical and scientific information. however, in the context of mers-cov, social media have been a double-edged sword. for example, social media were at some point rife with inaccurate information that included rumours of hospitals closed due to mers-cov outbreaks and certain social events being nodes for mers-cov transmission. the authors are aware of examples of information and photos shared on social media resulting in patients losing their right to privacy and confidentiality. patients often cancelled their clinic appointments or scheduled surgical procedures for fear of acquiring mers-cov while in hospital. some avoided attending emergency departments despite having acute problems that required medical attention. some individuals posted videos and messages challenging the suggestion that camels may be a source of mers-cov infection. scepticism and mistrust in governmental agencies and the medical community were sometimes promoted and propagated. on the other hand, various government agencies, scientific organizations and healthcare professionals used social media to enhance networking and facilitate communication of epidemiological, medical and scientific developments; in addition to presenting the public with factual material, timely updates, and relevant advice. the saudi ministry of health, for example, posts daily updates on its website and through social media outlining details of current mers-cov cases. the korean ministry of health and welfare did the same during their mers-cov outbreak. such steps are important to gain the public's trust and to remove barriers to appropriate sources of information. taking on board the surging role of social media and using them effectively to disseminate appropriate information turns them into invaluable tools for controlling 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johani, sameera; alghamdi, mohammed g. title: development of a risk‐prediction model for middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in dialysis patients date: - - journal: hemodial int doi: . /hdi. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: wbi ird introduction the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers‐cov) infection can cause transmission clusters and high mortality in hemodialysis facilities. we attempted to develop a risk‐prediction model to assess the early risk of mers‐cov infection in dialysis patients. methods this two‐center retrospective cohort study included dialysis patients who were suspected of mers‐cov infection and diagnosed with rrt‐pcr between september and june at king fahd general hospital in jeddah and king abdulaziz medical city in riyadh. we retrieved data on demographic, clinical, and radiological findings, and laboratory indices of each patient. findings a risk‐prediction model to assess early risk for mers‐cov in dialysis patients has been developed. independent predictors of mers‐cov infection were identified, including chest pain (or = . ; p = . ), leukopenia (or = . ; p = . ), and elevated aspartate aminotransferase (ast) (or = . ; p = . ). the adequacy of this prediction model was good (p = . ), with a high predictive utility (area under curve [auc] = . %; % ci: . % to . %). the prediction of the model had optimism‐corrected bootstrap resampling auc of . %. the youden index yielded a value of . or greater as the best cut‐off for high risk of mers infection. discussion this risk‐prediction model in dialysis patients appears to depend markedly on chest pain, leukopenia, and elevated ast. the model accurately predicts the high risk of mers‐cov infection in dialysis patients. this could be clinically useful in applying timely intervention and control measures to prevent clusters of infections in dialysis facilities or other health care settings. the predictive utility of the model warrants further validation in external samples and prospective studies. an important lesson was learned from the world's largest middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) outbreaks that occurred in saudi arabia and south korea: that health care-associated infection is a major cause of rapid pathogen spread in health care settings with a high risk of cluster infections. in particular it was discovered that they spread rapidly in hemodialysis, inpatient, emergency, and intensive care facilities. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] dialysis patients were associated with a high risk of mortality compared to the national mortality estimates in the mers-cov population. , assiri et al. were able to track hospitals, units, rooms, beds, symptoms onset, and diagnoses status to map a large cluster of infections between april and may , . according to the authors, the clusters developed in the hemodialysis facility, where health careassociated infected patient who underwent long-term hemodialysis transmitted the virus to dialysis patients and the transmission then continued to other hospital settings. in a recent study, assiri et al. reported a high likelihood of transmission in dialysis patients and health care workers within the outpatient dialysis facility. among laboratory-confirmed mers-cov patients in south korea, only dialysis patient was identified, but no cluster viral transmissions were identified in other patients who utilized the same hemodialysis facility. park et al. developed a guideline to control cluster infections and prevent mers outbreaks in hemodialysis facilities. earlier studies on dialysis patients focused on virus transmission and clinical outcomes, while limited by the small number of mers cases. our understanding of early diagnoses of mers and identifying patients at high risk of infection is incomplete, particularly in a hemodialysis facility. a mers-cov risk assessment tool is urgently needed to accurately identify dialysis patients at high risk of infection and apply infection control measures to prevent future cluster transmission in these patients and patients in other health care facilities. exploring an efficient screening system to detect mers-cov infection at an earlier stage may result in immediate isolation and improve clinical outcomes and economic burdens. , a valid risk-predictive model for mers-cov infection in dialysis patients may increase the likelihood of early virus detection. the authors attempt to develop an algorithm that combines demographic, clinical, radiological, and laboratory data to assess the early risk of mers-cov infection in dialysis patients who are suspected of having mers-cov infection and were diagnosed by real-time reverse transcription-pcr (rrt-pcr) between september and june . the authors hypothesized that mers-cov infection in dialysis patients could be predicted by a set of clinical, radiological, and laboratory indices. this two-center retrospective cohort study included dialysis patients who were suspected of having mers-cov, according to the saudi ministry of health guidelines, . acute respiratory illness and/or chest radiological findings of pneumonia, . hospitalized with health care associated-pneumonia, . upper or lower respiratory tract illness within days after exposure to a confirmed/probable case of mers-cov infection, and . high fever ( c), headache, body aches, nausea/ vomiting, diarrhea, or with or without respiratory symptoms, leucopenia, and thrombocytopenia. data were abstracted into potential predictors of mers, including demographic data (age and gender); clinical presentations (fever, cough, short breath, chest pain, abdominal pain, diarrhea, vomiting, diabetes); radiology findings in chest (abnormal ct scan or x-ray); baseline laboratory measurements (number of white cells) (wbc) /l in the blood, blood platelet count /l, alanine transaminase (alt) u/l, and aspartate transaminase (ast) u/l). in order to evaluate whether mers-cov infection was associated with a decrease in wbc count, a cut-off of less than ( /l) indicates leukopenia. similarly, platelet count of less than ( /l) indicates thrombocytopenia, alt greater than (u/l) indicates elevated alt, and ast greater than (u/l) indicate elevated ast. data were analyzed using stata (statacorp. . stata statistical software: release . college station, tx: stata-corp llc). overall sample summary and subgroup analysis were provided in table . p value of independent samples t test/chi-square test and unadjusted odds ratio (or) were reported to test whether specific characteristics were associated with mers-cov infection in dialysis patients ( table ). the area under the curve (auc) and % confidence interval (ci) were used to evaluate the accuracy of each predictor in identifying mers-cov infection ( table ) . we developed the mers riskprediction model in dialysis patients using the stepwise logistic regression model. fifteen potential predictors of mers-cov were evaluated at a . . the goodness-offit of the final model was evaluated using the hosmer-lemeshow test. a p value of greater than % (a > . ) indicates the model fit the data well. the discrimination of the model was evaluated by the receiver operator characteristic curve and was compared with the each of the most important predictors (figure ). the risk model was internally validated in bootstrap samples drawn with replacement from the study sample (n ). the model was presented in the form of the predictive probability of mers-cov infection in dialysis, which is a function of the important selected variables, refer to the supplement file. the youden index was used to identify optimal probability cut-off value for the mers risk stratification. of the dialysis patients studied, % had respiratory symptoms, and . % had gastrointestinal symptoms at presentation. the sample age was relatively older at . . years and . % were males (table ) the auc in table shows the predictors of mers infections. it indicates that chest pain, diabetes, abnormal radiology findings, and elevated ast (auc . ) were the most powerful predictors of discriminating mers. when controlled for potential predictors (table ) , the final risk-prediction model retained independent variables (at a . ) that increased the risk of mers-cov infection. mers dialysis patients were more likely to have chest pain (or . ; p . ), leukopenia (or . ; p . ), and elevated ast (or . ; p . ). according to the hosmer-lemeshow test, the adequacy of this prediction model was good (p . ). the model shows high potential for predicting mers (auc . %; % ci: . % to . %). the prediction of the model had optimism-corrected bootstrap resampling auc of . %. figure shows that the riskprediction model improved the accuracy of risk classification as compared to the individual predictors. the predicted probability of mers can be calculated by: [ exp ( . - . chest pain - . leukopenia - . elevated ast)] . table presents cut-off values for risk probability. this is the first study to develop a risk-prediction model in dialysis patients who screened for mers-cov infection by rrt-pcr. the study included data on dialysis stepwise selection significant at a . . patients from centers, kfgh-jed and kamc-r. mers-cov infection is common in dialysis patients, , , and is associated with increased rapid spread, which can be prevented through early detection, isolation, and monitoring individuals at risk. subsequently, a predictive model was developed for mers-cov infection in hemodialysis facilities. the model shows promising accuracy in detecting high-risk dialysis patients with an auc of . %. the model identified the most important clinical and laboratory characteristics that could help in distinguishing mers-cov infection from other respiratory illnesses. dialysis patients with chest pain were associated with a -times higher risk of mers-cov infection than dialysis patients without chest pain. earlier studies reported that chest pain was one of the most common symptoms in the mers-cov population. , in agreement with a matched case-control study, we found no differences between mers and non-mers groups in regards to fever, shortness of breath, cough, and other gastrointestinal symptoms. dialysis patients with low wbc count or leukopenia was associated with a -times higher risk of mers-cov infection as compared to dialysis patients without leukopenia. this finding is in agreement with saudi ministry of health guidelines, as they developed a tool to identify and evaluate individuals for mers-cov infection, and several other reports, , , where the wbc was found to be lower in patients with mers-cov infection. our findings support the matched case-control study which showed that mers-cov patients are more likely to have leucopenia and transaminitis. in concordance with earlier studies, , , elevated ast was found to be a feature of mers-cov infection, where dialysis patients with elevated ast were associated with -times higher risk of mers-cov infection as compared with dialysis patients with no elevated ast. according to our risk-prediction model, alt has poor predictive utility. this association was also described by ajlan et al., where normal alt levels have been frequently encountered in mers patients. a prospective study is needed to understand further the link between abnormal ast and mers-cov infection in dialysis patients. the model with the mentioned predictors can be useful in clinical decision to identify high-risk dialysis patients for further investigations and interventions. we presented a simple form of a probability prediction model to calculate the potential risk of infection. for instance, a randomly selected dialysis patient who presented with chest pain, leukopenia, and elevated ast has a probability of mers of . . another case, a randomly selected dialysis patient who did not present with chest pain, leukopenia, or elevated ast has a probability of mers of . . the cut-off values of the probabilities that discriminate between the high-risk and low-risk mers were provided in table . according to the youden index, a cut-off value (p . ) produces sensitivity and specificity of . and . , respectively was found optimal to identify high-risk mers infection. diabetes and abnormal radiology were risk factors for mers-cov infection when we presented the unadjusted analysis. however, these factors were not significant after adjustment for other confounding factors. several limitations should be reported that could influence the prediction of the risk model. the model needs to be validated in a prospective mers-cov investigation. the study included two of the largest hospitals in saudi arabia, yet the model may not be generalizable to dialysis patients in other hospitals. although this study is the largest rrt-pcr study on dialysis patients who screened for mers-cov infection, yet it is limited by the small number of cases screened. the authors were not able to include many other potential confounding factors in the analysis because they were not available. we also acknowledge that the small number of dialysis patients and unequal distribution of mers between hospitals limit our report. despite the limitations mentioned, the prediction ability of the model appears to be promising in clinical decision making to identify suspected dialysis patients with mers-cov infection at an early stage of the infection. in summary, this risk-prediction model in dialysis patients appears to depend markedly on chest pain, leukopenia, and elevated ast. the model accurately predicts high-risk of mers-cov infection in dialysis patients. this could be clinically useful in applying timely intervention and control measures to prevent clusters of infections in dialysis facilities or other hospital settings. the predictive utility of the model warrants further validation in an external sample and a prospective study. hospital outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus managing mers-cov in the healthcare setting middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov): a cluster analysis with implications for global management of suspected cases guidelines for the laboratory diagnosis of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in korea outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome at tertiary care hospital multifacility outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome in taif, saudi arabia the predictors of -and -day mortality in mers-cov patients 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observational study early identification of pneumonia patients at increased risk of mers-cov infection in saudi arabia health care associated middle east respiratory syndrome (mers): a case from iran predictors of mers-cov infection: a large case control study of patients presenting with ili at a mers-cov referral hospital in saudi arabia clinical presentation and outcomes of middle east respiratory syndrome in the republic of korea epidemiological and clinical characteristics of patients with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in iran in middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infection: chest ct findings key: cord- - rsc x authors: kaslow, david c. title: certainty of success: three critical parameters in coronavirus vaccine development date: - - journal: npj vaccines doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: rsc x vaccines for viral pathogens have been licensed for use in humans. previously, two critical biological parameters of the pathogen and the host–pathogen interaction—incubation period and broadly protective, relative immunogenicity—were proposed to account for much of the past successes in vaccine development, and to be useful in estimating the “certainty of success” of developing an effective vaccine for viral pathogens for which a vaccine currently does not exist. in considering the “certainty of success” in development of human coronavirus vaccines, particularly sars-cov- , a third, related critical parameter is proposed—infectious inoculum intensity, at an individual-level, and force of infection, at a population-level. reducing the infectious inoculum intensity (and force of infection, at a population-level) is predicted to lengthen the incubation period, which in turn is predicted to reduce the severity of illness, and increase the opportunity for an anamnestic response upon exposure to the circulating virus. similarly, successfully implementing individual- and population-based behaviors that reduce the infectious inoculum intensity and force of infection, respectively, while testing and deploying covid- vaccines is predicted to increase the “certainty of success” of demonstrating vaccine efficacy and controlling sars-cov- infection, disease, death, and the pandemic itself. in the absence of an existing, safe, effective vaccine for a pathogen (i.e., absent proof of clinical efficacy and safety), the risks and uncertainties in developing a new vaccine can be broadly divided into two categories: "biologic uncertainty"-the inherent biological ability of the candidate vaccine to elicit a protective immune response in humans with a safety profile that results in a positive benefit-risk balance; and, "execution uncertainties and risks"-the successful performance of literally thousands of tasks required to develop the vaccine. the subfactors that determine "biologic uncertainty" are perhaps the most difficult to overcome because most are largely immutable. two dominant parameters that underlie "biologic uncertainty" are the safety/tolerability and the efficacy of a candidate vaccine. unlike execution risks, such as the underlying failure rate of a production run under a given set of operational conditions, biologic uncertainties have a relatively binary outcome-the candidate vaccine does or does not have a favorable benefit-risk profile-that remains largely unchanged under a given set of epidemiologic conditions. relatively because the outcome measures, such as efficacy and effectiveness, have inherent variability around the point estimate. this article revisits previously described key parameters of biologic feasibility proposed to determine the "certainty-of-success" (also referred to as the "probability of success") in developing prophylactic vaccines , but now in the context of coronaviruses. oftentimes safety and efficacy are inversely related, the socalled double-edged sword of attenuation : an improvement in one resulting in a loss of performance in the other. of the two, safety is often given priority over efficacy in regulatory review because the target populations of prophylactic vaccines are usually healthy. the risk tolerance for safety in the midst of an outbreak for a pathogen with a high r and a high case fatality rates may be higher than for vaccine use in routine immunization for relatively low-prevalence endemic diseases, particularly those with a low case fatality rate. despite the paramount importance of safety, this article will focus on estimating the "certainty of success" from the efficacy/effectiveness side of the benefit-risk balance. as noted above, the importance (and difficulty) of accurately estimating the performance of a candidate vaccine relative to the efficacy threshold in humans has been reviewed previously . herein the previously proposed paradigm that effective vaccines have been developed mainly for pathogens with lengthy incubation periods is re-explored as it pertains to active prophylactic immunization for coronaviruses, particularly sars-cov- . whereas in the original analysis, discussion of populationbased effects of immunization (e.g., herd effects) were considered, here the focus is mainly at the level of the individual vaccinee, with the notable exception of the population-based effect of force of infection (see glossary of terms), and the continued circulation of virus in the population on the durability of individual immunity. several simplifying assumptions are made, including that vaccinees are immunocompetent and share similar underlying condition profiles, that the kinetics of an effective acquired and anamnestic immune response is similar for different vaccine modalities, and that the immune responses elicited by vaccination prior to any previous pathogen exposure is at least similar to that acquired during natural infection. the previously proposed paradigm specifically considered, as part of the "certainty-of-success" analysis of biological feasibility, two critical properties of the many inherent biological properties of viral pathogens and the dynamic interaction with the human host: incubation period; and, broadly protective, relative immunogenicity. the combination of these properties appeared to have accounted for much of the successes so far achieved in vaccine development for viral pathogens (see fig. a ) . in the original analysis conducted more than a dozen years ago, an effective, durable vaccine against sars-cov was predicted to be on the cusp of biological feasibility when applying the -day incubation period rule. in the current specific analysis for sars-cov- vaccine development, infectious inoculum intensity is elevated to a critical parameter because of its putative implications in assessing the "certainty of success" of developing an efficacious covid- vaccine for use in an outbreak setting and in the design, conduct, and interpretation of covid- vaccine efficacy and effectiveness studies. incubation period and infectious inoculum intensity incubation period, defined as the time between exposure to the pathogen and onset of signs and/or symptoms of clinically apparent disease (see box . glossary of key terms), incorporates, in an empirically derived unit of time: ( ) multiple inherent biological properties of the pathogen; ( ) the dynamic interaction between the virus and the host; and ( ) real world conditions of transmission (see force of infection below). factors that determine the incubation period include the amount of infectious virus in a typical inoculum, the infectivity of the viral pathogen, the rate of viral replication, the rate of viral clearance by a variety of host mechanisms, including innate and adaptive immunity, the impact of viral immune evasion tactics, and the viral load that results in signs or symptoms of disease. the clinical signs and/or symptoms that define the endpoint of the incubation period also impact the reported value. not surprisingly, the incubation period can be quite variable, and retrospectively, difficult to precisely and accurately measure. in its simplest iteration, the incubation period can be viewed as a race between: ( ) the immune system's ability to generate a sufficient and appropriate innate and/or adaptive response; and ( ) the replication of the pathogen to a viral load that results in symptoms. as noted previously, an important inflection point occurs around days when considering incubation periods for viral pathogens. the "certainty of success" for viruses, such as influenza (median incubation period days, with a range of - days), that have short incubation periods do not benefit from the opportunity of an anamnestic response (see box . glossary of key terms). in addition, for vaccines against viral pathogens, particularly those with a short incubation period, protection against mild symptoms is often a much more difficult endpoint to achieve than protection against severe disease. in the absence of vaccine-induced, persistent, high-level immune effector function (e.g., circulating high-titer neutralizing antibodies and/or cytotoxic t-cell lymphocytes), early protection against lower level viral replication (i.e., early mild disease) may be more difficult to achieve than an anamnestic response (e.g., newly activated memory b-and t-cell responses) to protect against higher-level viral loads (i.e., more severe disease) that occur much later during infection. this model of being able to elicit high-level protection against severe disease, but not mild clinical symptoms (e.g., observed for rotavirus vaccines), will likely apply to sars-cov- . infectious inoculum intensity, at an individual-level, and force of infection, at a population-level, are factors that may inversely contribute to the length of the incubation period, the latent period, fig. "certainty of success" of vaccine development as a function of incubation period and broadly protective, relative immunogenicity. a two-dimensional analysis of major human viral pathogens based on incubation period (x-axis; time, in days or weeks, from exposure to clinical signs or symptoms) and broad, relative immunogenicity (y-axis; high, moderate or low-see reference for definition). the viral pathogens for which vaccine efficacy have been established are depicted in boxes with gray backgrounds; those for which vaccine efficacy has yet to be established are depicted in ellipses with white backgrounds. the area of graph associated with higher "certainty-of-success" for vaccine development (light gray) and lower "certainty-of-success" (dark gray) are separated by a thick black line. (reprinted from an open-access article licensed under a creative commons attribution-noncommercial . unported license . b effect of low and high infectious inoculum intensity on the assessment of the "certainty-of-success" (cos) of sars-cov- vaccines. interval bar (white) reflect the uncertainty in the inherent broadly protective, relative immunogenicity (see glossary of key terms) associated with sars-cov- natural infection. double-headed arrow (white with black outline) reflects the effect of infectious inoculum intensity higher (light gray) and lower (dark gray) "certainty-of-success" for vaccine development. anamnestic response: a secondary or subsequent immune response that yields a faster, greater, and longer lasting immune response upon re-exposure to an immunogen than that induced during the preceding primary immune response. broadly protective, relative immunogenicity: a semi-quantitative term that captures the genetic diversity of the virus, and two aspects of the host immune responses: ( ) the quality of the immune response that is elicited during and immediately after a primary infection; and ( ) the ability and duration of that elicited immune response to protect against subsequent symptomatic reinfection. certainty of success: an estimate of the confidence in successfully demonstrating biological activity of a candidate vaccine based on pre-defined endpoints of efficacy/effectiveness. force of infection: rate at which susceptible individuals in a population acquire an infectious disease in that population. incubation period: time interval between infectious agent exposure moment in an individual and appearance of first sign or symptom of disease in that individual. infectious inoculum intensity: magnitude (or area under the curve) in an individual of the infectious agent exposure at the exposure moment(s) associated with the duration of the incubation period in that individual. latent period: time interval between infectious agent exposure moment in an individual and onset of period of infectious transmissibility to others in the population, which may be shorter or longer than the incubation period. and directly contribute the severity of symptoms associated with infection , . equally, if not more relevant to "certainty of success" for vaccine development is the relationship between infecting dose and severity of disease , as demonstrated by influenza inoculum dose-related rate of mild-to-moderate disease in a controlled human infection model . with respect to coronaviruses, an inverse correlation between the length of the incubation period and the severity of disease was recently evaluated from data collected during the sars outbreak in hong kong. comparing the length of the incubation period between fatal cases and non-fatal cases suggested a correlation between shorter incubation and greater severity, allowing for potential confounding by age, sex and occupation . a similar finding was observed between the estimated incubation period of middle east respiratory syndrome cov (mers-cov) cases and mortality during the mers outbreak in south koreapatients who died had a shorter incubation period than patients who survived . with respect to sars-cov- , jiang et al. and amodio et al. have both noted that a longer incubation time may lead to a high rate of asymptomatic and sub-clinical infection among immunocompetent individuals; however, an inverse relationship between incubation period and severity of disease has yet to be demonstrated. while the relationship between incubation period and perhaps more importantly, the infectious inoculum intensity of srs-cov- and severity of covid- requires further validation, data consistent with an inverse relationship was highlighted by sanche et al. when noting that a potential caveat of their estimation of a shorter incubation period [ . days ( % ci . - . days)] for sars-cov- than most other published reports is because most of their case reports were collected from the first few persons detected in each province, which may have biased case detection toward patients with more severe symptoms. a noteworthy exception to the inverse relationship between incubation period and severity of disease comes from the observation that a longer incubation period among human influenza h n cases was associated with a greater risk of death. virlogeux et al. noted that h n virus infection differs from h n , sars, and mers coronaviruses in several respects, including tropism limited to the human upper airways, the absence of a cytokine storm, and the stronger association of severe h n disease with exacerbation of other underlying diseases, while h n , sars, and mers coronaviruses cause severe disease in otherwise healthy persons. as such, it is proposed here that the exception to the inverse relationship between incubation period and severity of disease is unlikely for sars-cov- . admittedly confounded by multiple other factors, the population-based force of infection appears, in at least two recent examples, to be inversely associated with vaccine efficacy/ effectiveness (ve/vef). in the case of rotavirus vef, a review of the first decade of post-licensure data from countries showed a gradient of median vef of %, %, and % in countries with low, medium, and high child mortality, respectively, for the monovalent vaccine based on a single human rotavirus strain, and a vef difference of % and % in countries with low and high child mortality, respectively, for a pentavalent vaccine based on five bovine-human reassortant rotavirus strains . prelicensure rotavirus vaccine ve data demonstrate a similar gradient , and, when analyzed by the pre-existing rotavirus disease burden (mortality) as an indicator of the force of infection, are consistent with an inverse association with ve, as suggested by feiken, et al. this inverse association was also recently suggested during the regulatory evaluation of the malaria vaccine, rts,s/as e . the european medicines agency (ema) noted that "ve tends to be lower in high transmission areas" when analyzing the pivotal mal- efficacy trial conducted in eleven research centers in seven sub-saharan african countries, where the force of infection (categorized by annual mean p. falciparum parasite rate, age-standardized in to -year olds ) differed by two orders of magnitude. lastly, this notion of an association between force of infection and severity of disease is consistent with multi-year observations of seroconversion rates for the four human endemic coronavirus and frequency of virus in hospitalized children . dijkman et al. reported that the frequency of infection observed via seroconversion in the study population, presumed to be associated with the relative force of infection in that population, had the same rank order of hcov-oc ≥ hcov-nl > hcov-hku ≥ hcov- e as the frequency of virus in hospitalized children, presumed to be associated with the severity of disease. given the extensive spread of sars-cov- , it should be possible to determine if a similar association between force of infection and severity of disease is observed during the current pandemic. broadly protective, relative immunogenicity a composite of additional biological features has been incorporated into a single semi-quantitative term, broadly protective, relative immunogenicity (see box . glossary of key terms; nominally categorized as high, moderate or low; also see table ), to provide a needed second dimension to refine the estimate of "certainty of success". specifically broadly protective, relative immunogenicity incorporates both genetic diversity of the virus, and two aspects of the host immune response: ( ) the quality of the immune response that is elicited during and immediately after a primary infection; and ( ) the ability and duration of that elicited immune response to protect against subsequent symptomatic reinfection. factors relevant to coronaviruses, particularly sars-cov- , that could contribute to categorizing broadly protective, relative immunogenicity might include the number of circulating coronavirus strains that cross-react or cross-protect against other coronaviruses , the propensity for coronaviruses to propagate mutants during the incubation, latent, disease and recovery periods, the frequency of asymptomatic infections due to viral clearance by an adaptive immune response during the primary infection and during reinfection, and the durability of the protective immune response. as to genetic diversity, coronaviruses have the largest positivesense, single-stranded rna (+ss rna) genomes known to cause disease in humans, from up to kilobases (kb), with the genus betacoronavirus sars-cov- at . kb (see table ). the long coronavirus genome displays a high degree of plasticity, particularly the spike or s protein (see below), which can adapt with relative ease to exploit different cellular receptors, likely underlying the propensity of the four genera of animal coronaviruses to jump hosts . while the bat-and rodentderived alpha-and beta-coronaviruses have likely attempted to jump into humans frequently, three cross-species transmission events, over the past dozen and a half years, have resulted in outbreaks of sars-cov, mers-cov, and sars-cov- in the human population. four well adapted "common cold"-type coronaviruses also widely circulate in humans (i.e., hcov- e, -nl , -oc , and -hku ) . of the nine open-reading frames encoded in the coronavirus genome and the four structural proteins, the spike or s protein, particularly the receptor-binding domain (rbd) in the s subunit and the s subunit, is of specific interest because this essential structural protein, expressed in multiple copies on the lipid bilayer envelope of the virus, determines in part the host range through its role in host cell attachment, fusion, and entry - . in the case of sars-cov- , evolution within the modular structure of the s protein, the main target of protective immunity, may be driven by the known error rates of coronavirus rna-dependent rna polymerases, and the marked capacity of coronaviruses to employ homologous recombination in the context of coinfections. while not nearly as genetically diverse as the +ss rna hepatitis c virus nor as stable as the +ss rna hepatitis a virus, sars-cov- is likely susceptible to moderate genetic diversity, despite the sars-cov- rbd already significantly higher binding affinity to the human angiotensin-converting enzyme (ace ) receptor than sars-cov rbd . so, although sars-cov- outbreak appeared after sars-cov, phylogenetically, sars-cov- appears to be an "older" virus more closely related to the progenitor bat cov than sars-cov . one surrogate for the level of broadly protective, relative immunogenicity is the frequency of reinfection. reinfection with the four circulating human "common cold"-type coronaviruses appears to be a frequent event. examples from the two human coronaviruses studied since the s, include a -year study of hcov-oc infection in tecumseh, michigan following an hcov- e outbreak in % of the study population . the incidence of hcov-oc infection in children < years of age was high, yet subsequent symptomatic reinfection, albeit mild except chronic bronchitis in some, was quite frequent in older children and in adults. when analyzed immunologically, > % of these subsequent symptomatic infections occurred despite prior neutralizing antibodies, calling into question the protective value of circulating neutralizing antibody (or the assays used) . reinfections were also frequently observed, commonly associated with respiratory symptoms, for these two human coronaviruses in young children , as well as in a longitudinal study of working adults . similar but less robust epidemiological findings have been reported from the more recently described endemic human coronaviruses, hcov-nl (first described in ) and hcov-hku (first described in ) (see also table for references). controlled human infection model (chim) studies provide another source of evidence to inform categorization of broadly protective, relative immunogenicity. in the case of hcov- e, chim studies in adults document susceptibility to symptomatic reinfection despite the presence of detectable antibodies, although homologous re-challenge a year later led to only asymptomatic reinfection . as noted by callow et al. the human challenge data are consistent with the notion that adults have human coronavirus infections on a - year cyclic pattern and that "protective amounts of antibody may have disappeared by years, and that if we had been able to reinoculate the volunteers after a further year, the reinfection rate would have been even higher". the totality of the findings from natural and controlled challenge infections, in conjunction with a moderate degree of genetic diversity in these four endemic human coronaviruses, led to a "low" broadly protective, relative immunogenicity categorization in table . similar to the four endemic coronaviruses, the quality and the durability of the protective immune response after natural infection with the three human epidemic coronaviruses appear to be "low" or at best "moderate", the difference being that severe disease has been observed more frequently for sars-cov, mers-cov, and sars-cov- than the common cold human coronaviruses. several longitudinal sero-epidemiology studies after the sars-cov outbreak reported a high post-convalescent seroconversion rate with igg peaking at - months in patient serum samples. in a small sample size study evaluating neutralizing activity in serial serum samples from patients with sars, > % contained neutralizing antibodies (nab) against sars-cov and most of the nab activities could be attributed to immunoglobulin g (igg) . however, the duration of circulating igg appeared relatively short-lived as the longest longitudinal study reported that at years, the igg positivity had declined to . % . if the incubation period of sars-cov is sufficiently long to allow a protective anamnestic response, then subsequent re-exposure would likely lead to an asymptomatic infection. similar seroconversion and nab rates have been published for mers-cov, with several studies suggesting that antibody levels and longevity following mers-cov infection are correlated with disease severity [ ] [ ] [ ] . okba et al. reported that all fifteen severe mers-cov incubation period: median (range); italicized are published but unconfirmed incubation periods. route of transmission: dc direct non-genital contact of secretions, fo fecal-oral, r respiratory droplets. rna genome: +ssr positive single-stranded rna, -ssr negative single-stranded rna, α alphacoronavirus, β betacoronavirus. broadly protective, relative immunogenicity: using a delphi-type approach, incorporates in a single, semi-quantitative term [high; moderate (mod); low; or to be determined (tbd)]: (a) the genetic diversity of the virus (see column labeled "genetic stability"); and (b) two aspects of the host immune response: ( ) the quality of the immune response that is elicited during and immediately after a primary infection (see first term in column labeled "immune response"); and ( ) the ability and duration of that elicited immune response to protect against symptomatic reinfection (see second term in column labeled response"). cases tested positive in all tested platforms up to year after disease onset, indicating a robust immune response of high antibody titers in severe cases; however, low or undetectable seroconversion rates and undetectable neutralizing antibodies were observed after most asymptomatic and some mild mers-cov infections. early data from the current sars-cov- pandemic suggest a similar pattern of immune responses in severe and mildly symptomatic sars-cov- patients . given these data, it is tempting to speculate that a lower infectious inoculum intensity leads not only to a longer incubation period and less severe disease, but also to a less robust broadly protective, relative immunogenicity after natural infection. active immunization that optimally balances efficacy with reactogenicity/tolerability may represent the best of both worlds-robust broadly protective, relative immunogenicity without the severity of disease by administration of a high inoculum intensity without infectiousness. while it is too soon to have significant empiric data on the durability of sars-cov- immune responses to protect against symptomatic reinfection, the durability after natural infection as well as the long-term efficacy of active immunization may be influenced by the extent to which sars-cov- and/or related cross-reacting human coronaviruses continue to circulate in the population or "herd". under conditions in which insufficient herd immunity exists to curtail or even eliminate circulation of these viruses in the "herd", repeated sub-clinical infections may serve to maintain a protective immune response in an individual of the "herd". as the prevalence of these viruses diminishes in the "herd" as a result of adequate vaccine coverage and/or naturally acquired immunity, likely so will durability of protective immunity in the individuals in the "herd" as subsequent sub-clinical infections no longer occur and no longer serve to naturally "boost" an adequate protective immune response. in such situations where circulation of relevant coronaviruses significantly diminish, re-vaccination must be considered if a high "certainty-of-success" for long-term protection against future outbreaks is sought. a limitation of this rudimentary approach taken herein to assign a qualitative value to this composite biological feature of pathogens (fig. a) and sars-cov- (fig. b) is that it did not employ nor benefit from more powerful tools such as system biology analyses or mathematical models, which have been shown to provide important non-intuitive insights into host-virus interactions. such tools would need to be brought to bear on this topic for a more rigorous evaluation and for a more accurate and precise placement in the broad categories of high, moderate, and low levels of broadly protective, relative immunogenicity depicted in fig. a, b. estimating certainty-of-success by simultaneously considering the incubation timeline with the genetic diversity and the quality and durability of the host immune response, an approach to estimating the "certainty of success" based on biological feasibility emerges ( fig. ) . the model predicts an inverse relationship between the length of the incubation period and the level of the broadly protective, relative immunogenicity needed to achieve an equivalent "certainty of success". that is, for those pathogens that have a short incubation period and less opportunity for protection through an anamnestic response, a higher broadly protective, relative immunogenicity is needed to have a high "certainty-of-success"; likewise, for those pathogens having a long incubation period that benefit from protection through an anamnestic response, a lower broadly protective, relative immunogenicity is needed to have a high "certainty-ofsuccess". the association between incubation period and "certainty-ofsuccess" is just that-an association. although the proposed model may well accommodate the dataset presented in fig. a , cause and effect clearly has not been demonstrated. in fact, many of the viral pathogens that have short incubation periods also cause hit-andrun, local mucosal infections. these pathogens (e.g., rhinovirus, influenza, rsv, piv, and mpv) cause relatively brief illnesses and have limited tropism. whether the latter is the key parameter of biologic feasibility that determines "certainty-of-success" for developing prophylactic vaccines for these pathogens remains to be determined. as described in detail previously , given its short incubation period and low broadly protective, relative immunogenicity (see table ), influenza is a particular outlier in estimating "certainty of success" because of a relatively predictable transmission season, and the availability of annual immunization with an updated vaccine just prior to exposure in high-resource settings. in many low-resource settings, the latter is not an option and a fit-forpurpose influenza vaccine that does not require annual updating and annual administration has yet to be developed. predictions for the biological feasibility of developing effective covid- vaccines in the end, "predictions ought to count more than accommodations, because of the risk of 'fudging' that accommodations run and predictions avoid ". with this mind, four guiding principles and three implications on the design, conduct and interpretation of vaccine clinical trials (see box ) are offered for pressure-testing the three factors identified herein (see fig. b) , as sars-cov- candidate vaccines advance into proof-of-efficacy studies. while many other factors that are not easily controlled will affect the robustness of the principles and implications proposed, some box proposed guiding principles and implications for covid- vaccine clinical trials proposed guiding principles in determining "certainty of success" . reducing the infectious inoculum intensity will: a. lengthen the incubation period. b. lengthen the latent period. c. increase vaccine efficacy. . lengthening the incubation period (see "note" below) will: a. reduce the risk of severe disease. b. increase the opportunity for anamnestic responses upon subsequent infectious inoculum exposure. . lengthening the latent period will: a. increase the herd effect of naturally acquired immunity and/or vaccine-induced protective immunity. . increasing the opportunity for anamnestic responses will: a. increase vaccine efficacy beyond that predicted by circulating antibody levels. b. increase durability of protective immunity while the pathogen still circulates in the population. implication for vaccine trial design, conduct, and interpretation: . assessing/estimating the incubation period during vaccine efficacy trials could provide insights into the infectious inoculum intensity and could provide insights into benefit-risk assessments for different use cases (e.g., high-risk first responders and healthcare workers with high-level exposure vs. general use to protect against low-level exposure during reopening after mitigation vs. routine use during interpandemic period). . determining vaccine efficacy for specific use cases and comparing vaccine efficacy of different vaccines should account for the infectious inoculum intensity in that specific use case setting and in the vaccine efficacy trial setting, respectively. . evaluating the correlates of protection (particularly in infectious inoculum intensity settings in which the incubation period is ≥ days) should include measures of anamnestic responses, in addition to circulating functional antibody levels. note: by reducing the infectious inoculum intensity [through individual measures (e.g., handwashing, other hygiene practices, and personal protective equipment) and/or population-based measures to reduce the force of infection] or by naturally acquired or vaccine-induced protective immunity. consideration to the factors under human control would seem prudent. the one factor that emerges for consideration in sars-cov- vaccine development and implementation is reducing the infectious inoculum intensity (and force of infection, at a populationlevel) to lengthen the incubation period, reduce the severity of illness, and increase the opportunity for an anamnestic response upon exposure to the circulating virus. successfully implementing individual-and population-based behaviors that reduce the infectious inoculum intensity and force of infection, respectively, while testing and deploying covid- vaccines may be a critical human-controlled factor in assuring the "certainty of success" through immunization in 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quantification of the extent of the epidemic, surveillance biases, and transmissibility update: severe respiratory illness associated with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov)-worldwide d.c.k. conceived, wrote, reviewed, approved, and is accountable for this paper. d.c.k. is an employee of path (a not-for-profit organization), has no financial interest in any for-profit organization, and declares no competing interests. correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to d.c.k. publisher's note springer nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.open access this article is licensed under a creative commons attribution . international license, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the creative commons license, and indicate if changes were made. the images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's creative commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. if material is not included in the article's creative commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. to view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons. org/licenses/by/ . /. key: cord- -n tp nx authors: ko, jae-hoon; müller, marcel a.; seok, hyeri; park, ga eun; lee, ji yeon; cho, sun young; ha, young eun; baek, jin yang; kim, so hyun; kang, ji-man; kim, yae-jean; jo, ik joon; chung, chi ryang; hahn, myong-joon; drosten, christian; kang, cheol-in; chung, doo ryeon; song, jae-hoon; kang, eun-suk; peck, kyong ran title: serologic responses of mers-coronavirus-infected patients according to the disease severity date: - - journal: diagnostic microbiology and infectious disease doi: . /j.diagmicrobio. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: n tp nx abstract we evaluated serologic response of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov)-infected patients according to severity groups: asymptomatic infection (group ), symptomatic infection without pneumonia (group ), pneumonia without respiratory failure (group ), and pneumonia progressing to respiratory failure (group ). none of the group patients showed seroconversion, while the seroconversion rate gradually increased with increasing disease severity ( . %, . %, . %, and % in group , , , , respectively; p = . ). group patients showed delayed increment of antibody titers during the fourth week, while group patients showed robust increment of antibody titer during the third week. among patients having pneumonia, % of deceased patients did not show seroconversion by the third week, while % of the survived patients were seroconverted (p = . ). since the first reported case of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in (zaki et al., ) , small and large outbreaks have occurred, resulting in mers-cov infections and related deaths to date (who, ) . to understand this fatal respiratory viral infection, several serologic investigations have been conducted (corman et al., ; min et al., ; park et al., ; payne et al., ) . however, practical analysis of serodiagnostic parameters for clinical usage was limited in previous studies, due to insufficient sample size or clinical information. we managed mers-cov-infected patients, which is the largest number of patients as a single center during the korean mers outbreak (total patients identified) kim et al., ; park et al., ) , and reported that mers-cov-infected patients experienced distinct clinical courses, ranging from asymptomatic infection to severe pneumonia requiring mechanical ventilation . based on these findings, we evaluated serologic response of mers-cov-infected patients according to the disease severity to investigate potential role of serodiagnostic parameters as prognostic markers. among mers-cov-infected patients who were admitted to samsung medical center, a -bed tertiary care university hospital, during the korean mers outbreak , we obtained sera from patients. mers-cov infections were confirmed on the diagnostic microbiology and infectious disease ( ) [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] basis of real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (rrt-pcr) assays targeting upstream of the e gene (upe) and the openreading frame gene a (orf a) (corman et al., a; madani, ) . epidemiologic investigation data and electronic medical records were reviewed to obtain exact exposure date, symptom onset, clinical course, and outcome data for the patients. one or residual serum samples per week of illness were used for serologic testing during hospitalization periods. follow-up serum samples obtained at outpatient clinics were also tested up to months from symptom onset. the institutional review board of samsung medical center approved the present study. the clinical course of mers-cov-infected patients was assessed weeks after symptom onset and patients were divided into disease severity groups: asymptomatic infection (group ), symptomatic infection without pneumonia (group ), pneumonia without respiratory failure (group ), and pneumonia progressing to respiratory failure (group ) . for practical purposes, respiratory failure was defined as the need for mechanical ventilation. only patients in group experienced fatal outcomes ( / , . %), and interval from symptom onset to death was days in median ). proportion of underlying immunocompromising conditions including diabetes, solid cancer, or hematologic malignancies was not different between groups . the distinct clinical presentation of the severity groups are presented in supplementary figs. and , and supplementary table , in addition to the previous report . seroconversion status was determined based on neutralization activity: if none of the serum samples from a mers-cov-infected patient, necessarily including sera obtained after the third week of illness, showed neutralization activity, the patient was considered to have negative seroconversion; if none of the serum samples obtained by the end of the third week of illness showed neutralization activity and no samples were available for neutralization tests thereafter, the patient was considered to have an indeterminate response (i.e. interpretation not applicable); if any serum showed neutralization activity, the patient was considered to have positive seroconversion. patients with an indeterminate response were excluded from calculation of the seroconversion rate. this definition is based on the premise that no patients had previous exposure to mers-cov, as this was the first mers outbreak in korea as a non-endemic country. during the outbreak, mers-cov exposure dates and symptom onsets were clearly identified in most patients, owing to thorough contact investigation and monitoring of exposed individuals park et al., ) . mers-related symptoms included fever, myalgia, cough, sputum, and diarrhea. to provide a common point of reference, we used 'days post onset of illness (dpoi)' to evaluate mers-covinfected patients. for asymptomatic patients, the day of diagnosis of mers-cov infection was considered as day of symptom onset . anti-mers-cov elisa igg and iga (euroimmun, lübeck, germany) were based on soluble mers-cov spike protein s domain expressed in hek- t cells (muller et al., , muth et al., ; raj et al., ) . sera were tested according to the manufacturer's instructions with : dilutions. secondary detection was done with peroxidase-labeled anti-human igg and iga. cutoff values of od ratio . for elisa igg and . for elisa iga were applied in the present study, as these values exhibited optimal performance in predicting neutralization activity . anti-mers-cov ifa igm (euroimmun) was performed with slides carrying vero cells infected with full mers-cov (corman et al., b; meyer et al., ; muller et al., muller et al., , . sera were tested according to the manufacturer's instructions with : dilutions. weekly positive ifa intensity was considered cutoff intensity value of ifa igm, which exhibited optimal performance in predicting neutralization activity . mers-cov prnt was performed as previously described muller et al., muller et al., , . pre-dilution before setting up the log dilution series was : , defining : as the lowest possible significant titer for categorizing a sample as positive . for comparison of clinical variables between groups, one-way analysis of variance (anova) or kruskal-wallis test was used for continuous variables, and chi-square or fisher's exact test was used for categorical variables. six-week survival probability was calculated using the kaplan-meier method. the cox proportional hazard model and logrank test were used to examine the association of seroconversion status with the -week mortality of mers patients having pneumonia. all pvalues were -tailed, and those b . were considered to be statistically significant. r- . . for windows (rstudio, boston, ma, usa) was used for all statistical analyses. seroconversion status of mers-cov-infected patients is summarized in table . none of the group patients showed seroconversion, and the seroconversion rate gradually increased with increasing disease severity ( . %, . %, . %, and % in groups , , , and , respectively; p = . ). seroconversion was observed from to dpoi ( dpoi in median), mostly during the third week of illness ( . % of seroconverted patients with a known timeline). group patients showed slightly delayed timing of seroconversion compared to group patients ( . and . dpoi in median, respectively, without statistical significance), and seroconversion during the fourth week of illness was exclusively observed in group . serologic responses of seroconverted patients are depicted according to the severity groups with -day intervals in fig. . serologic response occurred from the third week of illness, and antibody response is weaker in patients with mild symptomatic patients (group ) than patients with pneumonia (groups and ). group patients showed robust increment of antibody titer during the third week (compared to the nd week, the median od ratios of elisa igg and iga increased more than -fold, and ifa igm and prnt increased from negative to + and : , respectively), and the titers did not significantly increase thereafter (in comparison of the median values of third week and fourth week, no statistical significance was observed). meanwhile, group patients showed delayed and continuous increment of antibody titers from the third week: the median values of each serologic test were significantly higher during the fourth week compared to those of the third week in group (all p b . ). in comparison between groups and , antibody titers of group patients during the third week were numerically lower than those of group , although only elisa igg showed statistically significant difference (p = . ). the antibody titers of group patients continuously increased, showing numerically higher titers compared to those of group patients during the fourth week (without statistical significance). detailed serologic test results for each patient are presented according to timeline and severity groups in supplementary tables to . as seroconversion rates were low in mild severity groups ( % in group and % in group ), outcome analysis was performed in patients having pneumonia (groups and ). only % of deceased patients showed seroconversion by the end of the third week of illness, while % of survived patients seroconverted (p = . , table ). this difference also could be discriminated by elisa igg (with od ratio cutoff value of . , p = . ) and elisa iga (with od ratio cutoff value of . , p = . ). ifa igm response was not significantly different between survivors and non-survivors (with intensity cutoff value of weakly positive, p = . ). in a kaplan-meier analysis comparing seroconverted patients and non-converted patients by the third week of illness, seroconverted patients showed significantly higher survival probability compared to patients with negative seroconversion (fig. , p b . by log-rank test). negative seroconversion in pneumonia patients by the third week of illness showed a hazard ratio of . ( % ci . - . , p = . , by the cox proportional hazard model) in predicting -week mortality. since previous hospital-associated outbreaks of mers occurred in endemic countries, where primary infections flow from community into hospitals, detailed clinical data of each patient were hard to obtain (corman et al., ) . however, during the korean mers outbreak, the first outbreak in a non-endemic country, epidemiologic links and entire clinical course of each patients could be clearly identified park et al., ) . owing to the detailed epidemiologic and clinical information about patients, we could find out different serologic response depending on disease severity and outcome. although different seroconversion rates depending on disease severity can be inferred from previous serologic investigation (min et al., ) , the number of evaluated mers patients was limited to and neutralization testing was not performed. in that study, a robust increment of elisa igg titer with a -fold increase in od ratio was exclusively observed among patients with severe pneumonia, while mild infections exhibited a modest increment in od ratio, if any. likewise, we noted that asymptomatic mers-cov-infected cases did not show serologic response including prnt within months, and the seroconversion rate increased with the disease severity. although the number of asymptomatic patients was limited to in the present analysis, it is less likely that asymptomatic patients will experience seroconversion considering that even group patients with obvious mers-related symptoms showed low seroconversion rate of %. this finding correlates with another serologic study that evaluated rrt-pcr-confirmed mers patients (choe et al., ) . in that study, antibody titers in of patients with mild illness were undetectable. in addition, most contact surveys of mers-cov could not detect additional rrt-pcr-negative prntpositive mers-cov infections (breakwell et al., ; buchholz et al., ; choi et al., ; . these findings imply that serologic surveys to detect subclinical infections among asymptomatic individuals would not be effective. serologic response was delayed in group patients, and negative seroconversion by the third week of illness was associated with fatal outcome among patients with mers pneumonia (hr . , % ci . - . , p = . ). delayed commencement of serologic response in severe disease was also suggested by previous report by park et al. (park et al., ) . although seroconversion timing was not statistically significantly delayed in group patients in the present study, delayed increment of igg, iga, and igm titers after the third week was demonstrated in group . however, the delayed serologic response in group could not be used as predictor for respiratory failure, as respiratory failure progressed during the nd week of illness ( dpoi in median). meanwhile, negative seroconversion in mers pneumonia by the third week of illness was associated with fatal outcome in the present analysis. impaired serologic response in deceased patient was also noted in the paper of corman et al., but insufficient clinical information, especially day of symptom onset, hampered more detailed analysis in association with timeline (corman et al., ) . in this study, we could obtain exact clinical information including day of symptom onset, and figured it out that seroconversion status by the third week of illness (by dpoi) can serve as a prognostic marker. another important point is that mers-cov-infected patients in the present analysis died later than previous reports, probably owing to antiviral therapy or aggressive critical care including extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ecmo). the median interval from symptom onset to death was days in the present study, which is much longer than . days in previous reports (zumla et al., ) . although rapidly deteriorating mers cases would die before the third week of illness, there certainly is a population that benefit from prognosis prediction by serologic response. aggressive managements including ecmo should be considered for pneumonia patients without seroconversion by the third week of illness. although seroconversion status can be confirmed by neutralization tests, it cannot be readily performed worldwide (corman et al., table seroconversion status of mers-cov-infected patients according to the disease severity group. classification by the disease severity group asymptomatic (n = ) group symptomatic (n = ) group pneumonia (n = ) group resp. failure (n = ) ). in the present analysis, seroconversion status of the third week assessed by elisa igg and iga was similar with that by prnt. these elisa tests can be practically used for predicting poor prognosis of mers pneumonia in the field of patient management. as a retrospective study, serum samples of each patient could not be collected with same interval. however, we applied strict criteria for seroconversion, excluding patients who did not have follow-up samples after the third week of illness as indeterminate response. in the previous report with the same patient population, we also suggest predictive factors for disease progression using clinical variables within days from symptom onset . together with the present paper, these factors could be used complementarily in managing mers-cov-infected patients. in addition, although we identified that seroconversion status by the third week was associated with fatal outcomes of mers pneumonia, we could not perform multivariate analysis due to limited sample size. this finding need to be further evaluated with enough patient numbers of mers pneumonia. in conclusion, in a serologic investigation of mers-cov-infected patients, mild cases showed low seroconversion rates, while fatal cases showed impaired serologic responses. this work was supported by a samsung biomedical research institute (sbri) grant [#smx ]. cd reports funding by eu grants antigone (ga no. ) and prepare (ga no. ). there are no potential conflicts of interest relevant to this article to report. lack of transmission among close contacts of patient with case of middle east respiratory syndrome imported into the united states contact investigation of a case of human novel coronavirus infection treated in a german hospital mers-cov outbreak following a single patient exposure in an emergency room in south korea: an epidemiological outbreak study mers-cov antibody responses year after symptom onset clinical presentation and outcomes of middle east respiratory syndrome in the republic of korea viral shedding and antibody response in patients with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection detection of a novel human coronavirus by real-time reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction assays for laboratory confirmation of novel human coronavirus (hcov-emc) infections the characteristics of middle eastern respiratory syndrome coronavirus transmission dynamics in south korea serologic evaluation of mers screening strategy for healthcare personnel during a hospital-associated outbreak suggested new breakpoints of anti-mers-cov antibody elisa titers: performance analysis of serologic tests. suggested new breakpoints of anti-mers-cov antibody elisa titers: performance analysis of serologic tests predictive factors for pneumonia development and progression to respiratory failure in mers-cov infected patients case definition and management of patients with mers coronavirus in saudi arabia antibodies against mers coronavirus in dromedary camels comparative and kinetic analysis of viral shedding and immunological responses in mers patients representing a broad spectrum of disease severity mers coronavirus neutralizing antibodies in camels, eastern africa survival probability according to the seroconversion status was evaluated in mers-cov-infected patients having pneumonia, whose seroconversion status during the third week of illness is identifiable. seroconverted patients showed significantly higher survival probability compared to patients with negative seroconversion (p b . by log-rank test) presence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus antibodies in saudi arabia: a nationwide, cross-sectional, serological study infectious middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus excretion and serotype variability based on live virus isolates from patients in saudi arabia control of an outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome in a tertiary hospital in korea kinetics of serologic responses to mers coronavirus infection in humans persistence of antibodies against middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus dipeptidyl peptidase is a functional receptor for the emerging human coronavirus-emc who, middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome we would like to express our sincerest condolences to the patients and families who suffered from the mers outbreak. we also greatly appreciate the hcp and staff members at samsung medical center and all other hospitals who worked together to overcome the mers outbreak. finally, we would like to thank jinseob kim for statistical advice and figure development, as well as mingu kang for ifa testing. supplementary data to this article can be found online at http://dx. doi.org/ . /j.diagmicrobio. . . . key: cord- - skyagsz authors: fragaszy, ellen; hayward, andrew title: emerging respiratory infections: influenza, mers-cov, and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis date: - - journal: the lancet respiratory medicine doi: . /s - ( ) - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: skyagsz nan reverted to their baseline on the apnoea-hypopnoea index. the high response rate to this intervention (apnoea-hypopnoea index fell to less than % and number of events per h fell below in % of patients) seems at least partly due to a careful selection process at enrolment, excluding those with concentric collapse of the airway by endoscopic airway examination during drug-induced sleep, the very obese (body-mass index > kg/m ), and those with tonsillar enlargement. further work will be needed to clarify the determinants of treatment response and the short-term and longterm rates of adverse eff ects. however, an advantage of such a treatment is a single surgical procedure to treat the disorder as opposed to the requirement for nightly administration of a mechanical treatment. cpap is still a mainstay of osa treatment, but clinicians clearly now have a wider range of therapeutic options that one day might well be predicted by careful patient phenotyping. clinical decision making might become more complex, but chronic care of patients with osa will be enhanced by recognition that one treatment does not necessarily have to fi t all. the importance of the animal-human interface has also been shown through the emergence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov). meyer and colleagues reported that antibodies against mers-cov were common in samples taken from dromedary camels in ( % of camel serum samples had detectable antibodies to mers-cov with % having high neutralising titres), well before the fi rst human cases were identifi ed in . azhar and colleagues reported identical full genome sequences from mers-cov isolates taken from a patient who died of mers-cov and the symptomatically infected dromedary camel belonging to the patient. this provided strong evidence that mers-cov could be transmitted from camels to humans and establishes camels as a potentially important source of infection, although other species such as bats might also be implicated. fortunately, unlike the infl uenza pandemic strain (h n pdm ), neither mers-cov nor infl uenza a h n (or any other infl uenza subtypes recently identifi ed to infect humans) have evolved the ability to spread effi ciently between humans. national preparedness plans for infl uenza pandemic involved widespread stockpiling of antivirals, and the pandemic provided an opportunity to study their eff ectiveness. new research on the eff ectiveness of neuraminidase inhibitors to reduce mortality in patients admitted to hospital with infl uenza a h n pdm has been encouraging. although the eff ectiveness of antivirals to reduce mortality would ideally be derived from randomised controlled trials, a recent meta-analysis of trials was only able to collect data for fi ve reported deaths, only one of which was due to a respiratory cause. the comparative rarity of such events highlights the need for high quality observational research to inform policy and practice. muthuri and colleagues collected individual-level data from around the world on patients admitted to hospital with infl uenza a h n pdm . after adjustment for treatment propensity and potential confounders, the results of their meta-analysis indicate that compared with no treatment, neuraminidase inhibitor treatment at any time during illness was associated with a reduction in mortality risk (adjusted odds ratio [or] · ). this association was strongest in adults (or · ), but weaker and not signifi cant in children. the timing of treatment was also important because early treatment (within days of symptom onset) was associated with a reduction in mortality (or · ) compared with later treatment-treatment given later than days and up to days after symptom onset was not associated with reductions in mortality compared with no treatment except in severely ill adult patients admitted to critical care (adjusted or · ). questions remain about the most eff ective and costeff ective means to ensure that those most likely to benefi t are treated early. by contrast with acute respiratory infections, which have the potential to emerge and spread rapidly, the inexorable emergence of drug resistant, multi-drug resistant (mdr), and now extensively drug-resistant (xdr) tuberculosis, has played out during the past seven decades since the discovery of streptomycin in . using whole genome sequencing of prospectively collected tuberculosis isolates from patients in russia, casali and colleagues provided evidence against the theory that acquiring drug resistance typically comes with a fi tness cost and reduced transmissibility. their fi ndings show the crucial need to strengthen tuberculosis control to prevent the emergence and spread of mdr and xdr tuberculosis. further evidence from south africa shows the long infectious periods and alarmingly high levels of mortality in patients with xdr tuberculosis: at months of follow-up, ( %) patients with xdr had died and a further ( %) had failed treatment. there has been a long-standing and continuing need to develop new drugs and treatment regimens for tuberculosis, which is underscored by this research. emerging respiratory infections highlight the complex interplay between organisms, the environment, animal and human host biology and behaviour and challenges in clinical management. interdisciplinary approaches are needed to address these multifaceted issues and to ensure that research fi ndings help to inform prevention, management, and control strategies. epidemiology of human infections with avian infl uenza a (h n ) virus in china eff ect of closure of live poultry markets on poultry-to-person transmission of avian infl uenza a h n virus: an ecological study can closure of live poultry markets halt the spread of h n ? antibodies against mers coronavirus in dromedary camels evidence for camel-to-human transmission of mers coronavirus eff ectiveness of neuraminidase inhibitors in reducing mortality in patients admitted to hospital with infl uenza a h n pdm virus infection: a meta-analysis of individual participant data oseltamivir for infl uenza in adults and children: systematic review of clinical study reports and summary of regulatory comments evolution and transmission of drug-resistant tuberculosis in a russian population long-term outcomes of patients with extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis in south africa: a cohort study key: cord- - zjpqnqp authors: hoteit, rouba; shammaa, dina; mahfouz, rami title: use of the human coronavirus (mers) genesig kit for mers-cov detection date: - - journal: gene rep doi: . /j.genrep. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: zjpqnqp introduction: mortality due to mers-cov infection is common especially among immunocompromised patients. the pathogenesis and the transmission mode of this virus are still not well understood. the name of the virus is derived from the area of its appearance and the genomic sequence that was used in the development of qrt-pcr assays for mers-cov detection was retrieved from the first detected case isolate. the employed assays target various regions including the area upstream of the envelope gene (upe) that is used for screening and the open reading frames (orf) a and b used for confirmation. aim: this study assesses the use of a mers-cov specific assay for screening of respiratory samples in anticipation of the possible spread of the virus in the region. methods: respiratory specimens were tested using the qualitative one-step qrt-pcr genesig human coronavirus (mers) kit (primerdesign™). results: out of the tested samples, were negative for mers-cov and one sample was found mers-cov positive. conclusion: the genesig human coronavirus (mers) kit is very useful for the screening of suspected respiratory cases in the middle east area as well as other regions. the middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) is a novel coronavirus first discovered in september in a cell-culture from a patient after his death from pneumonia in june in saudi arabia (assiri et al., ) . mortality due to mers-cov infection is common especially among immunocompromised patients (al-abdallat et al., ) . coronaviruses are the largest positive single-stranded rna viruses with a genome that can reach up to kb long. the genome entails a ′-terminal cap structure and is polyadenylated at its ′ end, and is occupied by two large overlapping open reading frames, orfs a and b (subissi et al., ) . mers-cov is part of the c lineage of the betacoronavirus genus and it is related to the hku and hku coronavirus detected in bats (omrani et al., ) . mers-cov and highly homologous mers-like cov were isolated in dromedary camels and african neoromicia capensis bats, respectively. although mers-cov is known to have zoonotic origins the pathway of transmission from the animal reservoir to humans is still not well understood. it is, however, suggested that a bat to camel to human route could explain the mers-cov outbreak in humans, due to the emerging camel trade between equatorial africa and saudi arabia during the last years (gralinski and baric, ) . mers-cov causes severe lower respiratory tract infection that sometimes requires admission to the intensive care unit. patients usually respond well to alpha interferon or cyclosporine treatment, however, no specific antiviral or vaccine is available for mers-cov (ohnuma et al., ) . more than cases from countries worldwide have been infected and diagnosed with mers-cov since june , and almost a third of those died (saad et al., ; who, c ) . patients with mers-cov infection tend to have leukocytosis, lymphopenia and some express thrombocytopenia and coagulopathy. moreover, creatinine levels, lactate dehydrogenase, alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase levels may be elevated and thus implying a liver or kidney disease (van den brand et al., ) . males and elderly are more commonly infected with mers-cov than females and younger people, and human-to-human transmission in the community is mainly in healthcare settings where poor infection control measures are implemented especially in intensive care units, and where overcrowding of patients may occur (saad et al., ) . other reported cases of mers-cov, especially the ones reported in europe or the us are more likely associated with the travel history to the middle east. the rate transmission of the virus from infected patients to their household contacts is as low as % (drosten et al., ) . rapid detection and implementation of proper infection control measures are two essential steps to limit and control mers-cov transmission in healthcare settings. this includes applying contact and airborne precautions such as wearing gloves, gowns and surgical masks upon entry to a room of mers-cov infected patient in isolation and removing such personal protective equipment upon leaving the room (zumla and hui, ) . protective measures outside healthcare settings include avoiding contact with dromedary camels, the host of mers-cov, and restraining from drinking camel urine or raw milk or eating raw or undercooked camel meat. moreover people working with camels must wear protective clothing and facial masks, and maintain a good personal hygiene (reusken et al., ) . ideally, lower respiratory specimens such as sputum, bronchoalveolar lavage, bronchial wash and tracheal aspirates are the most representative and appropriate for mers-cov testing (cdc, june , ) . the name of the virus is derived from the area of its appearance and the genomic sequence that was used in the development of qrt-pcr assays for mers-cov detection was retrieved from the first detected case isolate (lu et al., ) . the employed assays target various regions including the area upstream of the envelope gene (upe) that is used for screening and the open reading frames (orf) a and b used for confirmation . the aim of this study was to assess the use of a mers-cov specific assay for screening of respiratory samples referred to a major tertiary care center in anticipation of the possible spread of the virus in the region. rna was extracted from respiratory specimens using the qiaamp viral rna mini kit (qiagen, hilden, germany) that does not use phenol/ chloroform extraction or alcohol precipitation protocols. briefly, a lysis buffer was used to isolate non-degraded viral rna and inactivate rnases. the sample was then transferred to the qiaamp mini spin column under optimal conditions that ensured effective binding of the rna to the qiaamp membrane. possible contaminants were removed using two different wash buffers, then, a rnase-free buffer was employed to elute the rna. mers-coronavirus qualitative one-step qrt-pcr testing was done using the genesig human coronavirus (mers) kit (primerdesign™, london, uk). the hcov primers are designed for the specific and exclusive in vitro detection of the novel coronavirus isolates based on sequences for the emc strain by targeting the orf ab and the upe regions of orf . the orf ab and orf /e primer and probe sets are designed to be specific to the mers strain regardless of the species of origin and are detected through the fam channel. an internal rna extraction control is available in the kit and was added to the lysis buffer as an external source of rna template, during the extraction step, and co-purified with the sample rna to monitor this process as well as to rule out the presence of inhibitors in the realtime pcr step. for the latter purpose, a separate mix of primers for the internal control, with limited concentrations that allow for multiplexing with the target sequence primers without affecting the ability to detect the target even when present in low concentrations, was used. the detection of the internal control was through the vic channel. moreover, a primer mix for the endogenous control actin beta (actb) gene was used to evaluate the quality of the original biological sample. the detection of actb is through the vic channel, thus a separate reaction mix than that of the target is necessary to test for actb as multiplexing for actb and hcov primers is not possible. for each sample, three reaction mixes were prepared. for the detection of orf ab and orf /e two μl reaction tubes were prepared as follows: μl of oasig™ qrt-pcr mastermix, μl of hcov_ (orf ab or orf /e) primer/probe mix, μl of internal extraction control primer/probe mix, μl of rnase/dnase free water and μl rna material. to detect the endogenous actb control, a separate μl reaction mix was prepared, containing, μl of oasig™ qrt-pcr mastermix, μl of endogenous actb primer/probe mix, μl of rnase/dnase free water and μl rna material. the amplification conditions involved a reverse transcription step at °c for min, an enzyme activation step at °c for min and cycles of °c for s followed by °c for s. a positive control for orf ab and orf /e, as well as a negative control (rnase/dnase free water) was used with each run. the test requires min hands-on time and the pcr protocol lasts two hours after which the rotorgene-q (qiagen, uk) software is used for analysis. out of the tested samples, were negative for mers-cov and one sample was found mers-cov positive. the positive result was validated by the naval medical research unit (namru) laboratory, located in cairo-egypt, in collaboration with the world health organization (who). all other results were validated with a cap accredited referral laboratory in germany and the concordance rate was %. fig. represents a graph of the amplification of the mers-cov rna and the endogenous actb in the mers-cov positive sample. positive and negative controls were used and signal detection was done on the fam channel. the graph in fig. represents the detection of the internal rna extraction control (iec) in the fluorescence channel vic, for the same positive sample. iec was only added to the sample during extraction and not to the positive or negative controls. an acceptable ct value of the iec ranges between and . the genesig human coronavirus (mers) kit is a rapid and useful kit for the screening of suspected respiratory cases in the middle east area as well as other regions. the collaboration of different molecular microbiology laboratories with the world health organization (with viral cultures done as gold standard reference testing) has always been a rewarding and teaching experience. no extensive sensitivity and specificity work-up has been performed from our side on multiple samples due to the presence of a single mers-cov positive case; however, our lower limit of detection is compatible with the copies/ml reported by the manufacturer. the clinicians have advised that this detection limit is acceptable for their management algorithms. to our knowledge, this is the first report that describes the clinical application of the genesig kit in the mers-cov epidemic era. hospital-associated outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: a serologic, epidemiologic, and clinical description epidemiological, demographic, and clinical characteristics of cases of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus disease from saudi arabia: a descriptive study update: severe respiratory illness associated with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov)-worldwide transmission of mers-coronavirus in household contacts molecular pathology of emerging coronavirus infections real-time reverse transcription-pcr assay panel for middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus human infection with mers coronavirus after exposure to infected camels, saudi arabia inhibition of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection by anti-cd monoclonal antibody a family cluster of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections related to a likely unrecognized asymptomatic or mild case rna and neutralising antibodies in milk collected according to local customs from dromedary camels clinical aspects and outcomes of patients with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection: a single-center experience in saudi arabia one severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus protein complex integrates processive rna polymerase and exonuclease activities middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) c who infection control and mers-cov in health-care workers key: cord- -weat qs authors: kleine-weber, hannah; schroeder, simon; krüger, nadine; prokscha, alexander; naim, hassan y.; müller, marcel a.; drosten, christian; pöhlmann, stefan; hoffmann, markus title: polymorphisms in dipeptidyl peptidase reduce host cell entry of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus date: - - journal: emerg microbes infect doi: . / . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: weat qs middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) coronavirus (mers-cov) causes a severe respiratory disease in humans. the mers-cov spike (s) glycoprotein mediates viral entry into target cells. for this, mers-cov s engages the host cell protein dipeptidyl peptidase (dpp , cd ) and the interface between mers-cov s and dpp has been resolved on the atomic level. here, we asked whether naturally-occurring polymorphisms in dpp , that alter amino acid residues required for mers-cov s binding, influence cellular entry of mers-cov. by screening of public databases, we identified fourteen such polymorphisms. introduction of the respective mutations into dpp revealed that all except one (Δ - ) were compatible with robust dpp expression. four polymorphisms (k e, k n, a p and Δ - ) strongly reduced binding of mers-cov s to dpp and s protein-driven host cell entry, as determined using soluble s protein and s protein bearing rhabdoviral vectors, respectively. two polymorphisms (k e and a p) were analyzed in the context of authentic mers-cov and were found to attenuate viral replication. collectively, we identified naturally-occurring polymorphisms in dpp that negatively impact cellular entry of mers-cov and might thus modulate mers development in infected patients. middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) is an enveloped virus with a single-stranded rna genome of positive polarity. it belongs to the coronaviridae family (genus betacoronavirus), which is part of the order nidovirales. mers-cov was isolated in from the sputum of a year old man suffering from acute pneumonia and renal failure in saudi arabia [ ] . since its discovery, mers-cov has caused , human infections of which ( . %) had a fatal outcome (as of may, ) [ ] . dromedary camels are reservoir hosts of mers-cov and display only common cold-like symptoms upon infection but constitute the main source of human infections. transmission to humans occurs via close contact to animals or contaminated animal products [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . human-to-human transmissions seem limited and were mainly observed in health care settings, leading to mers outbreaks in hospitals [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . finally, differences in the tissue specific expression of the cellular receptor for mers-cov, dpp , were recently suggested to account for the differences in mers-cov transmission and disease induction in camels and humans, respectively [ , ] . in order to infect a host (cell) and replicate, mers-cov has to deliver its genome into the cellular cytoplasm for gene translation and genome replication. this process is facilitated by the viral spike (s) glycoprotein, a type-i transmembrane protein embedded in the viral envelope. for host cell entry, the surface unit, s , of mers-cov s binds to the cellular type-ii transmembrane protein dipeptidyl peptidase (dpp , cd ) [ ] . the structure of the interface between dpp and mers-cov-s was resolved on the atomic level and fifteen residues in dpp were found to make direct contact with residues in the viral s protein [ ] . upon dpp engagement, mers-cov s undergoes proteolytic activation through the cellular serine protease tmprss or the endosomal cysteine protease cathepsin l [ ] [ ] [ ] , which allows the transmembrane unit, s , of mers-cov s to fuse the viral membrane with cellular membranes. dpp is a prolyl oligopeptidase that is expressed in various tissues [ ] and involved in multiple biological processes including t-cell activation [ ] , control of the activity of growth factors, chemokines and bioactive peptides [ ] [ ] [ ] , and regulation of the glucose metabolism [ ] . mature dpp is embedded in the plasma membrane as a homodimer and each monomer consists of an n-terminal cytoplasmic domain, followed by a transmembrane domain and a large ectodomain, which can be further subdivided into a short stalk domain, a glycosylation-rich and a cysteine-rich region as well as the c-terminal catalytic domain (α/ β-hydrolase domain) [ ] . polymorphisms in the dpp gene were implicated in several diseases and conditions, including diabetes [ , ] and myocardial infarction [ ] but their potential impact on mers-cov infection has not been analyzed. we asked whether naturally-occurring amino acid polymorphisms in dpp residues making contact with mers-cov s have an impact on mers-cov entry. we identified fourteen polymorphisms by screening public databases and introduced the respective mutations into a dpp expression plasmid. we identified four mutations that reduced mers-cov s binding to dpp and mers-cov s-driven host cell entry without affecting dpp expression at the cell surface. t cells were transfected with expression vectors for wt or mutant dpp , or empty expression vector (negative control). at h post transfection, the culture medium was replaced and the cells were further incubated for additional h. then, the cells were washed with pbs and mixed with x sds-sample buffer ( . m tris-hcl, % glycerol, % sds, . % bromophenol blue, mm edta). cell lysis was achieved by incubating the samples for min at room temperature followed by incubation at °c for an additional min. the samples were further loaded on polyacrylamide gels and sds-page (sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis) was performed. next, the proteins were transferred onto nitrocellulose membranes (hartenstein gmbh) by immunoblotting. the membranes were further blocked by incubation in pbs-t (pbs containing . % tween and % skim milk powder) for min at room temperature. afterwards, the membranes were incubated overnight at °c with undiluted supernatant of a hybridoma cell line secreting anti-cmyc antibody e (for dpp detection) or pbs-t containing anti-ß-actin (actb) antibody (mouse, : , , sigma aldrich). following three washing intervals with pbs-t, the membranes were further incubated with pbs-t containing horseradish peroxidaseconjugated anti-mouse antibody (goat, : , , dianova) for h at room temperature before an in house-prepared enhanced chemiluminescent solution ( . m tris-hcl [ph . ], µg/ml luminol, mg/ ml para-hydroxycoumaric acid, . % h o ) was added and signals were recorded using the chemocam imaging system and the chemostar professional software (intas science imaging instruments gmbh). in order to quantify the signal intensity of the protein bands, the program imagej (fiji distribution) [ ] was used. to account for differences in the total protein content of the samples and variations, we normalized the dpp signals against the respective signals of the loading control (actb). t (human kidney cells, dsmz no. acc ), bhk- (hamster kidney cells, dsmz no. acc ) and vero (african green monkey kidney cells, kindly provided by andrea maisner, philipps-university marburg) were cultivated in dulbecco's modified eagle medium (pan-biotech) while caco- cells (human colorectal adenocarcinoma cells) were cultivated in minimum essential medium (thermofisher scientific). the media were supplemented with % fetal bovine serum (biochrom), u/ml of penicillin and . mg/ml of streptomycin (pan-biotech). all cell lines were incubated at °c and % co in a humidified atmosphere. for subcultivation and seeding, cells were washed with phosphate-buffered saline (pbs) and detached by incubation with trypsin/ edta solution (pan-biotech) (bhk- , vero and caco- ) or by resuspending the cells in culture medium ( t). transfection of t and bhk- cells was carried out by calcium-phosphate precipitation or with the help of icafectin- (in-cell-art) or fugene hd (promega). all dpp mutants were generated based on a pcdna . /zeo(+)-based expression vector in which the coding sequence for human dpp (genbank: xm_ . ) containing an c-terminal cmyc epitope was inserted into via bamhi/ecori restriction sites. the following aa (amino acid) substitutions were introduced via overlap-extension pcr: k e, k n, q k, t i, t s, a v, a p, a v, r k, y h, i t, i v and k n . in addition, a deletion mutant was generated that lacks aa residues - (Δ - ). information on dpp polymorphisms was retrieved from the ensembl database (https://www.ensembl.org/index.html) [ ] and the single nucleotide polymorphism database (dbsnp) of the national center for biotechnology information (ncbi) (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/snp) [ ] , and is based on data provided by the gnomad database (genome aggregation database, https://gnomad. broadinstitute.org/), topmed program (trans-omics for precision medicine, https://www.nhlbiwgs.org/), exac consortium (exome aggregation consortium, http://exac.broadinstitute.org/) [ ] and the g project ( , genomes project, http://www. internationalgenome.org/) [ ] (for detailed information see supplementary table ) . we further utilized pcaggs-based expression vectors for vesicular stomatitis virus (vsv) glycoprotein (g), mers-cov s wildtype (wt) and mers-cov s (d g) (the latter two either untagged or equipped with a c-terminal v epitope) that have been described elsewhere [ ] [ ] [ ] . in addition, a previously described expression vector for angiotensin converting enzyme was employed [ ] . similar to the strategy used for the generation of dpp mutants, we employed the overlap-extension pcr technique to introduce a single mutation into the mers-cov s open reading frame, thus generating untagged and v -tagged mers-cov s (d n). soluble s comprising the s subdomain of mers-cov s (aa residues: - ) fused to a human igg fc tag was generated by inserting the pcr-amplified s sequences into the pcg fc vector [ ] (kindly provided by georg herrler, university of veterinary medicine hannover) making use of the bamhi/sali restriction sites. in addition, we generated an expression vector for the enhanced green fluorescent protein (egfp) by inserting the egfp coding sequence, which was pcr-amplified from the pegfp-c vector (clontech), into the pcaggs plasmid using the ecori/xhoi restriction sites. all pcr-amplified sequences were subjected to automated sequence analysis (microsynth seqlab) to verify their integrity. sequences of primers used for cloning of the different constructs are available upon request. analysis of dpp surface expression by immunofluorescence analysis bhk- cells were grown on coverslips and transfected with the different dpp constructs or empty expression vector using icafectin- (in-cell-art) at h post seeding according to the manufacturer's instructions. after changing the culture medium at h post transfection, the cells were incubated for additional h. then, the culture medium was aspirated and the cells were washed with pbs, before they were fixed by incubated with pbs containing % paraformaldehyde (pbs/pfa) for min at room temperature. subsequently, the cells were washed with . m glycine/ pbs solution followed by a washing step with pbs. next, the coverslips were incubated with anti-dpp antibody (mouse, diluted : in pbs containing % bovine serum albumin [pbs/bsa], abcam) for h at °c. for this, the coverslip was put on a drop ( µl) of antibody solution that was added on a sheet of parafilm inside a humidity chamber (a glass dish in which the parafilm was placed on wet paper tissue). thereafter, the cells were washed x with pbs before incubation with alexafluor -conjugated antimouse antibody (goat, : , diluted in pbs/bsa, thermofisher scientific) for min at °c was performed. subsequently, the cells were washed x with pbs. finally, the cells were incubated with dapi ( ', -diamidino- -phenylindole, carl roth) and mounted in prolong gold antifade mountant (ther-mofisher scientific) before they were analyzed using a zeiss lsm (zeiss) confocal laser scanning microscope and the zen imaging software (zeiss). analysis of dpp surface expression by flow cytometry bhk- cells were transfected with expression vectors for wt or mutant dpp , or empty expression vector (negative control). at h post transfection, the culture medium was replaced and the cells were further incubated for additional h. then, the cells were washed with pbs, resuspended in pbs/ bsa and pelleted by centrifugation ( x g, min, °c). after aspiration of the supernatant, the cells were resuspended in pbs/bsa containing anti-dpp antibody (mouse, diluted : , abcam) and incubated for h at °c. next, the cells were pelleted, washed with pbs/bsa, pelleted again, resuspended in pbs/bsa containing alexafluor -conjugated anti-mouse antibody (donkey, diluted : , thermo-fisher scientific) and incubated for h at °c. subsequently, the cells were washed (as described above) and resuspended in pbs/pfa for h at °c for fixation. finally, the cells were washed (as described above) and resuspended in pbs/bsa for flow cytometric analysis using an lsr ii flow cytometer and the facs diva software (both bd biosciences). additional data analysis was carried out using the fcs express flow research software (de novo software). for quantification of dpp surface expression, the mean fluorescence intensity (mfi) value of the negative control was subtracted from all samples. for normalization of dpp surface expression, values obtained for cells expressing dpp wt were set as % and the relative surface expression of the respective dpp mutants was calculated accordingly. in order to generate soluble mers-cov s for binding studies, t cells were transfected with an expression vector for the s subunit of mers-cov s fused to the fc fragment of human immunoglobulin g (solmers-s -fc). at h post transfection, the culture medium was exchanged and the cells were further incubated for h before culture supernatants were harvested and freed from cellular debris by centrifugation ( , x g, min, °c). the clarified supernatants were loaded on vivaspin protein concentrator columns with a molecular weight cut-off of kda (sartorius) and centrifuged at , x g at °c until the sample was -fold concentrated. for the binding studies with solmers-s -fc, a similar protocol was followed as described for the analysis of dpp surface expression with the exceptions that sol-mers-s -fc was used instead of the primary antibody ( : dilution in pbs/bsa) and that an alexafluor conjugated anti-human antibody (goat, : dilution in pbs/bsa, thermofisher scientific) was employed as the secondary antibody. bhk- cells transfected with expression vectors for wt or mutant dpp , ace or empty expression vector (both negative controls) were analyzed by flow cytometry for solmers-s -fc binding using an lsr ii flow cytometer and the facs diva software (both bd biosciences). additional data analysis was carried out using the fcs express flow research software (de novo software). for quantification of solmers-s -fc binding, the mfi value obtained for cells transfected with empty expression vector was subtracted from all samples. further, binding of solmers-s -fc to cells expressing dpp wt was set as % and the relative binding efficiencies to cells expressing the respective dpp mutants or ace were calculated accordingly. t cells (grown in -well plates) were cotransfected with expression plasmids coding for solmers-s -fc and wt or mutant dpp . cells transfected with empty expression vector instead of dpp or sol-mers-s -fc (or both) served as controls. at , x g at °c, before µl of the supernatant were mixed with µl of protein a-sepharose ( g protein a-sepharose [sigma-aldrich] in ml pbs) while the residual µl of the cell lysate were mixed with µl x sds-sample buffer and incubated for min at °c (these samples were later analyzed to confirm comparable total protein levels [via detection of actb] as well as comparable dpp and solmers-s -fc levels before the co-immunoprecipitation [co-ip] step.). following incubation of the lysate/protein a-sepharose mixtures for h at °c in an overhead shaker, the samples were centrifuged for min at , x g at °c to pellet the protein a-sepharose/solmers-s -fc/dpp -complexes. after aspiration of the supernatant, µl of np lysis buffer (without protease inhibitors) were added and the cells were mixed by vortexing, before being centrifuged again. this washing routine was repeated three times, before finally µl of x sdssample buffer were added to the pelleted complexes and the samples were further incubated for min at °c. thereafter, the samples were subjected to sds-page and western blot analysis (see above). detection of dpp (lysate and co-ip samples) and actb (lysate samples) was carried out as described above. solmers-s -fc was detected (lysate and co-ip samples) by incubation with a peroxidase-conjugated anti-human antibody (goat, : , , dianova). signal intensities of the protein bands were quantified as described above. further, signals obtained for dpp were normalized against the respective signals for solmers-s -fc in order to account for variations in transfection efficiency and sample processing. for the binding studies with soluble dpp , a similar protocol was followed as described for the analysis of binding of solmers-s -fc with the exceptions that a soluble dpp fused to the fc region of human igg (soldpp -fc, acro biosystems) was used instead of solmers-s -fc ( : dilution in pbs/bsa) and that an alexafluor -conjugated anti-human antibody (goat, : dilution in pbs/bsa, thermofisher scientific) was employed as the secondary antibody. t cells transfected with expression vectors for wt or mutant (d g and d n) mers-cov s, or empty expression vector (negative control) were analyzed by flow cytometry for soldpp -fc binding using an lsr ii flow cytometer and the facs diva software (both bd biosciences). additional data analysis was carried out using the fcs express flow research software (de novo software). for quantification of soldpp -fc binding, the mfi value obtained for cells transfected with empty expression vector was subtracted from all samples. further, binding of soldpp -fc to cells expressing mers-cov s wt was set as % and the relative binding efficiencies to cells expressing the respective mers-cov s mutants were calculated accordingly. we employed a previously described protocol for the generation of vsv pseudotype particles (vsvpp) that is based on a replication-deficient vsv vector that lacks the genetic information for vsv-g but instead contains the genetic information for egfp and firefly luciferase (fluc) as reporters of transduction efficiency (vsv*Δg-fluc, kindly provided by gert zimmer, institute of virology and immunology, mittelhäusern/switzerland) [ , ] . in brief, t cells transfected with expression vectors for mers-cov s, vsv-g (positive control) or empty expression vector (negative control) were inoculated with vsv*Δg-fluc for h before being washed with pbs and further incubated for h with culture medium that was supplemented with anti-vsv-g antibody (i , mouse hybridoma supernatant from crl- ; atcc) (except for cells expressing vsv-g). the produced vsvpp were inoculated onto bhk- cells expressing wt or mutant dpp , or no dpp (empty expression vector, negative control) and incubated for - h before fluc activity in cell lysates was quantified as an indicator for transduction efficiency using the beetle-juice kit (pjk) and a plate luminometer (hidex) [ ] . bhk- cells were transfected with expression vectors for wildtype or mutant dpp (k e or a p), or empty expression vector (negative control) using fugene hd (promega) according to the manufacturer's instructions. at h posttransfection, the cells were infected with mers-cov (human betacoronavirus c emc/ , mers-cov emc- , genbank accession number: jx ) at a multiplicity of infection of . for h. thereafter, the inoculum was removed and the cells were washed x with pbs before fresh medium was added and the first sample (time point h postinfection) was taken. the cells were further incubated and additional samples were taken at and h postinfection. viral titers in the culture supernatant were analyzed by quantitative reversetranscriptase pcr, using the upe assay according to a published protocol [ ] . in brief, viral rna was isolated from cell culture supernatant using the nucleospin rna virus kit (macherey-nagel), reversetranscribed into cdna using the superscript iii one step rt-pcr system (thermofisher scientific) and analyzed on a lightcycler qpcr cycler platform (roche) with primers and conditions as specified for the upe assay [ ] . in vitro-transcribed standard samples containing defined amounts of mers-cov fragments ( , , , and , copies) were included for absolute quantification as genome equivalents (ge). the dpp protein structure ( pv ) [ ] and the structure of the complex formed by the mers-cov s receptor binding domain bound to dpp ( l ) [ ] were retrieved from the research collaboratory for structural bioinformatics protein database (rscb pdb, https://www.rcsb.org/). structure visualization and colorization was performed using the yasara software (http://www.yasara.org/index.html) [ ] and ucsf chimera version . (developed by the resource for biocomputing, visualization, and informatics at the university of california, san francisco) [ ] . one-way or two-way analysis of variance (anova) with dunnett's posttest was used to test for statistical significance. only p values of . or lower were con- identification of polymorphisms in dpp that alter amino acid residues which make contact with mers-cov s the binding interface between mers-cov s and the cellular receptor dpp was resolved by wang and colleagues using crystallography, revealing the interacting amino acid residues for each binding partner [ ] : fourteen residues of mers-cov s (y , n , k , l , d , r , e , d g , d , y , r , w and v ) interact with a total of fifteen residues in dpp (k , f , q , t , a , a , l , i , h , r , y , r , q , i and k ) [ ] , which are distributed over the glycosylation-rich domain and the cysteinerich domain ( figure a-c) . in order to identify polymorphic residues in dpp that contact mers-cov s, we screened public databases that provide information on polymorphic amino acid residues based on data derived from different bio projects (i.e. gnomad, topmed, exac, g; more information is given in the materials and methods section). by this method we found that nine out of the fifteen dpp residues interacting with mers-cov s are polymorphic (k , q , t , a , a , r , y , i and k ) ( figure c ). while five of these residues can be replaced by only a single different amino acid residue (q [k], a . circles with sticks represent glycosylation sites, while small numbers indicate the amino acid residues. triangles below the domains highlight the positions of amino acid residues that directly interact with mers-cov s (grey triangles mark residues for which no polymorphism has been reported, while red triangles indicate polymorphic residues). (b) side (left) and top (right) view of homodimeric dpp (the dotted line indicates the border between the two monomers and the cellular plasma membrane is schematically depicted below the side view model of dpp ). the protein model was constructed on the published crystal structure ( pv ) deposited in rscb pdb and the binding interface with mers-cov s has been highlighted (green). (c) close-up on the dpp residues that directly interact with mers-cov s and for which no polymorphic (yellow) or polymorphic (red) residues have been reported. in addition, the specific residues in dpp (regular letters and numbers), including the respective polymorphic residues (letters in brackets), and the corresponding interacting residues in mers-cov s (italicized letters and numbers) are indicated. (d) frequency of polymorphic dpp residues in the human population. public databases (see supplementary table and the materials and methods section for detailed information) were screened for the frequency of the polymorphic residues under study (y-axis). error bars indicate standard error of the mean (sem) and refer to polymorphic residues found in more than one database. table ). finally, the frequency of these polymorphisms in the human population is low, ranging roughly from : , (a v) to : , (t i) ( figure d and supplementary table ). we next introduced the polymorphisms in a dpp expression plasmid. western blot analysis and signal quantification revealed that all resulting dpp variants were robustly expressed and total expression levels were comparable (figure a-b) . as dpp needs to be transported to the plasma membrane to be engaged by mers-cov s for host cell entry, we next investigated whether the presence of the polymorphic dpp residues has an impact on dpp cell surface localization. for this, we performed flow cytometry and confocal laser scanning microscopy, using transfected bhk- cells and an antibody targeting the dpp ectodomain. we found that all dpp variants but one, a deletion variant lacking amino acid residues - (Δ - ), displayed comparable cell surface expression levels ( figure a-b) . we next investigated whether polymorphic dpp residues impact mers-cov host cell entry. for this, we made use of vesicular stomatitis virus (vsv) pseudotypes (vsvpp) bearing mers-cov s or vsv g, which does not bind to dpp and served as negative control [ ] . as expected, vsvpp harboring vsv g were able to efficiently transduce bhk- target cells irrespective of dpp expression. in contrast, transduction of bhk- cells mediated by mers-cov s critically depended on ectopic expression of human dpp , in accordance with published findings [ ] ( figure ) . notably, four dpp polymorphisms -k e, k n, a p and Δ - -severely reduced mers-cov s-driven transduction compared to dpp wt (figure ). in order to analyze whether the reduction in mers-cov s-driven host cell entry would translate into attenuated mers-cov replication, we next investigated two dpp polymorphisms (k e and a p) in the context of infection with authentic mers-cov. when followed over a period of two days post infection it was observed that mers-cov replication in bhk- cells expressing human dpp was significantly reduced when dpp contained either k e or a p ( figure ). after the identification of dpp polymorphisms that reduce s-driven cellular entry of rhabdoviral vectors as well as mers-cov replication, we next sought to investigate whether the attenuating phenotype was due to reduced binding of mers-cov s to dpp . for this, we used soluble mers-cov s, produced by fusing the s subunit, which contains the dpp binding domain, to the fc portion of human immunoglobulin g (solmers-s -fc). co-immunoprecipitation analysis demonstrated that dpp variants harboring polymorphisms k e, k n or a p, which were not compatible with efficient mers-cov s-driven host cell entry, displayed significantly reduced ability to interact with mers-cov s as indicated by weaker dpp signals upon protein a-sepharosemediated pull-down of dpp /solmers-s -fc (as compared to dpp wt, figure a-b) . notably, dpp variant Δ - could be as efficiently coimmunoprecipitated as dpp wt, indicating that its inefficient receptor function was solely due to its defect in proper surface transport. the findings obtained by co-ip analysis were confirmed by flow cytometry. it was revealed that polymorphisms that reduced mers-cov s-driven host cell entry (k e, k n, a p and Δ - ) and spread of authentic mers-cov (k e and a p) also reduced mers-cov s binding to cells expressing dpp on the cell surface ( figure c ). in addition, polymorphism a v, which decreased mers-cov s-driven transduction to a lesser extent than the aforementioned polymorphisms (figure ) , also reduced mers-cov s binding to dpp . thus, dpp polymorphisms k e, k n and a p reduce mers-cov s-driven host cell entry and mers-cov infection by diminishing mers-cov s binding to dpp . host cell entry of mers-cov critically depends on the interaction between the viral s protein and the cellular receptor dpp . a link between obesity or underlying diseases like diabetes mellitus, which both can affect dpp expression levels [ ] , and the risk of fatal outcome of mers-cov infection has been made [ ] . moreover, alanine scanning mutagenesis identified dpp residues critical for mers-cov entry, including k , l , i , r and r [ , ] . however, the impact of natural-occurring variations on host cell entry of mers-cov has not been addressed so far. we identified dpp polymorphisms that reduce s protein-driven host cell entry and replication of authentic mers-cov by lowering the binding efficiency of mers-cov s to dpp , suggesting that the dpp phenotype may impact the course of mers-cov infection. western blot analysis, flow cytometry and confocal laser scanning microscopy revealed that none of the polymorphisms studied, except deletion of amino acids - , had a significant impact on total or cell surface expression of dpp , at least in the context of dpp transfected cells. four polymorphisms located at three different sites in dpp (k e, k n, a p and Δ - ) severely reduced s protein-driven host cell entry. as dpp Δ - was shown to be incompatible with robust cell surface transport but able to interact with mers-cov s in co-ip analysis, we conclude that the reduction in entry efficiency is solely due to insufficient dpp surface levels. in contrast, reduction of host cell entry by k e, k n and a p could not be explained by reduced dpp expression and these polymorphisms were thus further investigated. mers-cov infection of bhk- cells transfected to express dpp wt and variants k e or a p revealed that k e or a p were not compatible with robust mers-cov replication. finally, co-ip analyses and binding studies with soluble mers-cov s showed that these dpp polymorphisms reduced s protein binding to dpp . when looking at the crystal structure of the complex consisting of the mers-cov s receptor binding domain bound to dpp , these observations do not come as a surprise. dpp residue k has been reported to contact mers-cov s residues g and d , including a salt bridge interaction with d [ ] . the exchange of k to either glutamate (e) . whole cell lysates (wcl) were prepared and analyzed for dpp expression by sds-page under non-reducing conditions and wb using a primary antibody targeting the c-terminal cmyc epitope and a peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibody. further, expression of beta-actin (actb) was analyzed as a loading control. shown are the expression data from a representative experiment. numbers at the left indicate the molecular weight in kilodalton (kda). (b) quantification of total dpp expression in wcl. after normalization of dpp band intensities with that of the corresponding actb bands. dpp wt expression was set as % and the relative expression of mutant dpp was calculated accordingly. presented are the combined data of three independent experiments with error bars indicating the sem. no statistical significance for differences in total expression between wt and mutant dpp was observed by one-way analysis of variance with dunnett's posttest (p > . , not significant [ns]). . surface expressed dpp was stained by subsequent incubation of the non-permeabilized cells with a primary antibody that targets the dpp ectodomain and an alexafluor -conjugated secondary antibody. fluorescent signals representing surface-expressed dpp were analyzed by flow cytometry and the mean fluorescence intensity (mfi) values for each sample were calculated. for normalization, the mfi value of the negative control was subtracted from all samples. further, surface expression of dpp wt was set as % and the relative surface expression of the dpp mutants was calculated accordingly. shown are the combined data of three experiments with error bars indicating the sem. statistical significance for differences in surface expression between wt and mutant dpp was tested by one-way analysis of variance with dunnett's posttest (p > . , not significant; p ≤ . , *). (b) dpp surface expression was further analyzed by immunofluorescence analysis. for this, dpp wt or dpp mutants were expressed in bhk- cells grown on coverslips (cells transfected with empty expression vector served as negative control). after fixation of the cells, surface expressed dpp was stained by subsequent incubation of non-permeabilized cells with a primary antibody that targets the dpp ectodomain and an alexafluor -conjugated secondary antibody. in addition, cellular nuclei were stained with dapi. finally, images were taken using a confocal laser scanning microscope at a magnification of x. or asparagine (n) likely abolishes/decreases the interaction with mers-s due to the different biochemical properties of k (positively charged, basic) versus e (negatively charged, acidic) and n (not charged, acidic) (supplementary figure ) . for dpp residue a , which has been reported to contact the mers-cov s residue e , no information on the type of interaction is available [ ] . here, we speculate that the bulky and distorted side chain of proline (in comparison to the small side chain of alanine) abolishes/decreases interaction with mers-cov s residue e (supplementary figure ) . in contrast to that, valine contains a small side chain and also has identical biochemical properties as alanine and thus might be efficiently contacted by e of mers-cov s, which is why we did not observe any impact of polymorphisms a v on mers-cov s-driven entry and mers-cov s mers-cov s binding/interaction (supplementary figure ). the observation that certain polymorphisms in dpp reduced mers-cov s binding and viral entry triggered the question whether residues in mers-cov s that are in direct contact with the respective dpp residues are also polymorphic. indeed, we obtained initial evidence to support such a concept. thus, we found that residue in mers-cov s which contacts dpp residue is polymorphic, with certain mers-cov variants harboring an asparagine instead of an . reduced mers-cov s-driven host cell entry is caused by inefficient s protein binding to dpp harboring polymorphic amino acid residues. in order to investigate whether reduced mers-cov s-driven host cell entry and mers-cov replication is due to inefficient mers-cov s binding to dpp harboring amino acid polymorphisms at the binding interface, we performed co-immunoprecipitation (co-ip) as well as binding experiments with a soluble s protein comprising the s subunit of mers-cov s fused to the fc region of human igg. (a) t cells were cotransfected with expression plasmids coding for soluble, fc-tagged mers-cov s (solmers-s -fc) and the indicated dpp variant containing a c-terminal cmyc-tag. cells that were transfected only with empty expression vector alone, or empty expression vector instead of either solmers-s -fc or dpp served as controls. at h posttransduction, cells were lysed and incubated with protein a sepharose. next, samples were subjected to sds-page and western blot analysis. dpp levels were detected via antibodies specific for the cmyc-tag, whereas solmers-s -fc was detected using a peroxidase-coupled anti-human antibody. similar results were obtained in three individual experiments. analysis of whole cell lysates (wcl) for expression of solmers-s -fc, dpp and ß-actin confirmed comparable ß-actin levels in each sample and comparable expression levels for solmers-s -fc and dpp . (b) for quantification of mers-cov s/dpp interaction we first normalized the dpp signals against the respective solmers-s -fc signals. then, mers-cov s/dpp interaction was set as % for wildtype (wt) dpp and the relative interaction efficiency for each dpp mutant was calculated accordingly. presented are the mean data from three independent experiments. error bars indicate the sem. statistical significance of differences in mers-cov s/dpp interaction between wt and mutant dpp was analyzed by one-way analysis of variance with dunnett's posttest (p > . , ns; p ≤ . , *; p ≤ . , ***). (c) soluble mers-cov s -fc was incubated with bhk- cells expressing wildtype (wt) or mutant dpp , or cells transfected with empty expression vector or an ace -expression plasmid (controls). to detect bound s protein, the cells were subsequently incubated with an alexafluor -conjugated anti-human antibody directed against the fc-tag. fluorescent signals representing bound solmers-s -fc were analyzed by flow cytometry and mfi values for each sample were calculated. for normalization, the mfi value of the negative control (empty expression vector) was subtracted from all samples. further, binding of sol-mers-s -fc to cells expressing dpp wt was set as % and the relative binding to cells expressing the dpp mutants was calculated accordingly. shown are the combined data of five independent experiments with error bars indicating the sem. statistical significance of differences in solmers-s -fc binding to cells expressing wt or mutant dpp was analyzed by one-way analysis of variance with dunnett's posttest (p > . , ns; p ≤ . , *; p ≤ . , **; p ≤ . , ***). aspartate residue at this position. d n reduced entry into cells expressing relatively low amounts of dpp but had no effect on entry into cells expressing high amounts of dpp (supplementary figure ) . moreover, and more interestingly, d n slightly rescued mers-cov s-driven entry from the negative effect exerted by dpp polymorphism k n (supplementary figure ) . similarly, residue in mers-cov s, which is known to interact with dpp residues and , was found to be polymorphic, and previous studies demonstrated that polymorphism d g reduced dpp binding but also increased resistance to neutralizing antibodies [ ] . notably, d g slightly increased entry via dpp harboring polymorphism y h and allowed mers-cov s to use dpp with polymorphism r k with the same efficiency as wt dpp . it should be stated that none of these effects was statistically significant and that dpp and mers-cov s polymorphisms occur with low frequency. although it is unlikely that the dpp polymorphisms have emerged as a result of evolutionary pressure from mers-cov infections, our results suggest that certain existing dpp polymorphism(s) might foster the emergence of mers-cov variants with altered biological properties. the polymorphisms studied here occur with relatively low frequencies of one per ∼ , (a v) to ∼ , (t i) individuals. however, detailed information on the geographic distribution or incidence in certain ethnical groups is largely missing. thus, dpp polymorphisms could contribute to the perplexing absence of mers cases in africa, where the virus circulates in camels [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . however, recent evidence suggests that sequence variations between african and arabian mers-cov might be a factor [ , ] . more importantly, it remains to be analyzed how frequent dpp polymorphisms that affect s protein binding occur in the middle east and whether they are associated with the clinical course of mers. isolation of a 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promotes release of virus-like particles from tetherin-positive cells s protein of severe acute respiratory syndrome-associated coronavirus mediates entry into hepatoma cell lines and is targeted by neutralizing antibodies in infected patients mutations in the spike protein of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus transmitted in korea increase resistance to antibody-mediated neutralization differential sensitivity of bat cells to infection by enveloped rna viruses: coronaviruses, paramyxoviruses, filoviruses, and influenza viruses sialic acid binding properties of soluble coronavirus spike (s ) proteins: differences between infectious bronchitis virus and transmissible gastroenteritis virus a vesicular stomatitis virus replicon-based bioassay for the rapid and sensitive determination of multi-species type i interferon the hemagglutinin of bat-associated influenza viruses is activated by tmprss for ph-dependent entry into bat but not human cells detection of a novel human coronavirus by real-time reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction discovery of dipeptidyl peptidase iv (dpp ) inhibitors based on a novel indole scaffold yasara: a tool to obtain structural guidance in biocatalytic investigations ucsf chimera-a visualization system for exploratory research and analysis ldl receptor and its family members serve as the cellular receptors for vesicular stomatitis virus host species restriction of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus through its receptor, dipeptidyl peptidase high circulating plasma dipeptidyl peptidase- levels in non-obese asian indians with type diabetes correlate with fasting insulin and ldl-c levels, triceps skinfolds, total intra-abdominal adipose tissue volume and presence of diabetes: a case-control study epidemiological, demographic, and clinical characteristics of cases of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus disease from saudi arabia: a descriptive study identification of residues on human receptor dpp critical for mers-cov binding and entry dipeptidyl peptidase- levels are increased and partially related to body fat distribution in patients with familial partial lipodystrophy type middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in dromedary camels in nigeria mers coronaviruses from camels in africa exhibit region-dependent genetic diversity antibodies against mers coronavirus in dromedary camels mers coronavirus neutralizing antibodies in camels seroepidemiology for mers coronavirus using microneutralisation and pseudoparticle virus neutralisation assays reveal a high prevalence of antibody in dromedary camels in egypt middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in dromedaries in ethiopia is antigenically different from the middle east isolate emc we are grateful to thank g. herrler, a. maisner and g. zimmer for providing plasmids and reagents. we further thank a.-s. moldenhauer for excellent technical support. no potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors. this work was supported, including the efforts of stefan pöhlmann and christian drosten, by the bundesministerium für bildung und forschung [grant numbers ki d and ki a], network project rapid (risikobewertung bei präpandemischen respiratorischen infektionserkrankungen). the funders had no role in study design, data collection and interpretation, or the decision to submit the work for publication. key: cord- -csgmc authors: george, parakkal jovvian; tai, wanbo; du, lanying; lustigman, sara title: the potency of an anti-mers coronavirus subunit vaccine depends on a unique combinatorial adjuvant formulation date: - - journal: vaccines (basel) doi: . /vaccines sha: doc_id: cord_uid: csgmc vaccination is one of the most successful strategies to prevent human infectious diseases. combinatorial adjuvants have gained increasing interest as they can stimulate multiple immune pathways and enhance the vaccine efficacy of subunit vaccines. we investigated the adjuvanticity of aluminum (alum) in combination with rasp- , a protein adjuvant, using the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus mers-cov receptor-binding-domain (rbd) vaccine antigen. a highly enhanced anti-mers-cov neutralizing antibody response was induced when mice were immunized with rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine in two separate injection sites as compared to mice immunized with rbd + rasp- + alum formulated into a single inoculum. the antibodies produced also significantly inhibited the binding of rbd to its cell-associated receptor. moreover, immunization with rasp- co-administered with the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine in separate sites resulted in an enhanced frequency of tfh and gc b cells within the draining lymph nodes, both of which were positively associated with the titers of the neutralizing antibody response related to anti-mers-cov protective immunity. our findings not only indicate that this unique combinatorial adjuvanted rbd vaccine regimen improved the immunogenicity of rbd, but also point to the importance of utilizing combinatorial adjuvants for the induction of synergistic protective immune responses. vaccination is one of the most successful strategy to prevent infectious diseases in the human population, including those caused by emerging viruses [ ] . among various vaccine types, such as inactivated virus, live attenuated virus, and viral vector-based vaccines, subunit vaccines using proteins or peptides are believed to be much safer as they do not contain any live virus components and/or cause undesirable severe side effects [ ] . however, unlike attenuated vaccines (composed of a virus or bacterium that replicates within the host) or inactivated vaccines (composed of either heat or chemically-inactivated parts of the pathogen), subunit vaccines (that are derived from known pathogen target antigens) are generally much less immunogenic, which can be improved with the addition of appropriate adjuvant(s) to the vaccine [ ] . adjuvants play an important role in enhancing the potency of subunit vaccines by improving humoral and/or cellular immune responses to the various subunit protein vaccines, decreasing the antigen dosages, and/or reducing immunization regimens [ , ] . aluminum salts (hereinafter alum) c bl/ mice were immunized intramuscularly (i.m.) twice, three weeks apart, with mers-rbd-fd ( µg; hereinafter rbd) formulated with or without alum (alhydrogel ® µg) (invivogen, san diego, ca, usa), rasp- ( µg), or with distinct adjuvant combinations. inoculums were prepared in a final volume of µl per mouse and µl was injected in the caudal thigh muscle of each hind leg in the appropriate site as outlined in table . control mice were injected with pbs in . % sds, the buffer solution of rasp- and is referred to as naive mice hereafter. complete adsorption of the rbd and rasp- proteins by alum was confirmed by sds-gel electrophoresis of the unbound protein samples after absorption with alum for min on a rotator at rt. sera samples were collected days post- nd immunization for analyses of anti-mers-cov neutralizing antibody titers, inhibition of mers-cov rbd-dpp receptor binding, and mers-cov rbd-specific antibody responses using mers-cov s as a target. the draining lymph nodes from each hind leg per mouse were also recovered at day post- nd immunization for analyses of the various cell profiles within. the neutralizing activity of sera from the immunized mice against mers-cov infection in vitro was carried out using our established pseudovirus neutralization assay [ , ] . briefly, t cells were co-transfected with a plasmid encoding the s protein of mers-cov (strain emc ) and a plasmid encoding env-defective, luciferase-expressing hiv- genome (pnl - .luc.re). the supernatants containing mers-cov s expressing pseudovirus collected h post-transfection were incubated with serially diluted mouse sera at • c for h. the virus-serum mixtures were then added into huh- cells expressing the mers-cov receptor dpp . the cells were refed with fresh medium h later, and after h, lysed using cell lysis buffer (promega, madison, wi, usa) before the supernatants were transferred into -well luminometer plates. after addition of luciferase substrate (promega, madison, wi, usa), the plates were measured for relative luciferase activity using infinite pro luminator (tecan, männedorf, switzerland). neutralizing activity was calculated using the calcusyn computer program [ ] and is expressed as % pseudovirus neutralizing antibody titers (nt ). sera from immunized mice were tested for their ability to inhibit the binding of the recombinant mers-rbd-fc protein to the cell-associated hdpp receptor in huh- cells using flow cytometry analysis [ ] . briefly, cells were incubated with the mers-rbd-fc protein ( µg/ml) in the presence or absence of diluted mouse sera ( : ) for min at room temperature. after three washes and staining with fitc-labeled goat anti-human igg fc secondary antibody ( : , thermo fisher scientific, waltham, ma, usa) for min at room temperature, the cells were measured for fluorescence in a flow cytometer (bd lsrfortessa system). mean fluorescence intensity (mfi) values of the fitc channel from cells incubated with mers-rbd-fc protein in the absence of diluted sera were treated as percentage binding. inhibition of binding was calculated as the percentage of reduced binding to hdpp receptor in the presence of diluted sera from the different immunization groups versus the maximum binding observed in the absence of sera. elisa to measure mers-cov rbd-specific antibody responses in immunized mouse sera was performed with mers-cov s as the target antigen and as previously described with some modifications [ , ] . the mers-cov s subunit of the mers-cov s protein contains the rbd region of the virus. briefly, -well elisa plates were coated with mers-cov s ( µg/ml) overnight at • c, blocked with % fat-free milk in pbs containing tween- (pbst) at • c for h, and then washed with pbst times. the plates were subsequently incubated at • c for h with serially diluted mouse sera, and horseradish peroxidase (hrp)-conjugated anti-mouse igg ( : ), igg ( : ), or igg c ( : ) antibodies (thermo fisher scientific, waltham, ma, usa). the substrate , , , -tetramethylbenzidine (sigma-aldrich, st. louis, mo, usa) was added to the plates after additional washes, and the reaction was stopped by the addition of n h so . absorbance at nm was measured using an elisa plate reader (tecan, männedorf, switzerland). endpoint titers were calculated as the reciprocal of the highest dilution of sera giving an optical density greater than the mean ± times the standard deviation of sera from naïve mice. draining lymph nodes from each hind leg per mouse were harvested at day post- nd immunization. the lymph nodes were dissociated into single cell suspensions using a syringe plunger, then passed through a µm cell strainer and resuspended in complete rpmi media containing % fetal bovine serum (r ). subsequently, . × cells were washed and resuspended in fresh r media in a -well cell culture plate for flow cytometry staining. . × cells were stained with a labeled antibodies: cd -af , cd b-pe-cy , cd c-bv , ly c-percp, cd -apc, ccr -pe, cd -bv , cd -bv , ly g-pe-cy , and b -bv . while × cells were stained with a cocktail of the following fluorescently labeled antibodies: cd -af , cd -pe-cy , cxcr -bv , pd- -bv , b -bv and gl- -af (all from biolegend, san diego, ca, usa) , and cd -bv (bd biosciences, dublin, ireland), in a brilliant violet cell stain buffer (bd biosciences, dublin, ireland) for min in the dark at room temperature. cells were then washed, resuspended in cell stain buffer (biolegend, san diego, ca, usa), and the number of stained cells was acquired using bd lsrfortessa cell analyzer (bd biosciences, dublin, ireland). the data were analyzed using flowjo software (tree star, ashland, or, usa). cd + cd c -ly c + cells were identified as monocytes, cd + cd c -ly c + cd + cells were identified as activated monocytes, cd + cd c -ly c + ccr + cells were identified as migratory monocytes, cd + cd + cells were identified as cd + t cells, cd + cd + cxcr + pd- + cells were identified as tfh cells, cd + b + cells were identified as b cells and cd + b + cd + gl- + cells were identified as gc b cells. one-way anova test with tukey's multiple comparison was used for statistical analysis using graphpad prism v (graphpad, san diego, ca, usa). spearman correlation was performed to determine the association of the fold increase in the frequency of tfh and gc b cells with neutralizing antibody titers using graphpad prism v (graphpad, san diego, ca, usa). p < . : *, p < . : **, p < . : ***, p < . : ****. nd: not detectable. to investigate whether rasp- in combination with alum enhances the humoral immune responses induced by the mres-rbd-fd (herein after rbd) vaccine, we immunized c bl/ mice twice. three weeks apart, using a formulation where rasp- and the rbd vaccine proteins were completely adsorbed to alum and then administered as a single inoculum (table ; group ). this adjuvanted vaccine was compared to that in which rasp- was co-administered with the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine as two inoculums and in two separate sites of the caudal thigh muscle (table ; group ). rbd formulated with either rasp- or alum alone, rbd alone, and pbs alone were included as controls. table . immunization of mice using different combinations and/or formulations of the vaccines and the site of injection: c bl/ mice were immunized intramuscularly (i.m.) with mers-rbd-fd (rbd) formulated with or without alum and/or rasp- alone or together in different combinations and/or formulations. mice were immunized twice, weeks apart according to the various g -g experimental groups either at the front (a: µl of inoculum) and/or the back (b: µl of inoculum) of the caudal thigh muscle in each hind leg. injection immunization of mice with rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine in separate sites (g , figure ) significantly resulted in the highest neutralizing antibody titers against mers-cov infection in vitro, nt = , . it was approximately four-fold higher than in mice that were vaccinated with rbd + rasp- + alum in a single inoculum (g − nt = ; figure ),~ -,~ -, and -fold higher when compared to rasp- -adjuvanted rbd vaccine, alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine, and rbd only, respectively (g − nt = , g − nt = , g − nt = , respectively; figure ). it appears that this unique rasp- and alum combinatorial adjuvants promoted synergy in the functional humoral response produced vs. the vaccines that utilized the other formulations and/or regimens, including the rasp- -adjuvanted rbd vaccine. ). it appears that this unique rasp- and alum combinatorial adjuvants promoted synergy in the functional humoral response produced vs. the vaccines that utilized the other formulations and/or regimens, including the rasp- -adjuvanted rbd vaccine. (table and x-axis legend). sera samples were collected days post- nd immunization and analyzed for neutralization of the pseudotyped mers-cov. the data represents the mean and standard error (sem) of nt titers from at least two independent experiments with to mice per group. "+" indicates the presence and "−" indicates the absence of the protein or adjuvants in the formulation. statistics was performed using one-way anova with tukey's multiple comparison. p < . : ***, p < . : ****, nd: not detectable. when the total igg response to the mers-rbd antigen was studied using the mers-cov s protein as the target protein, we found that although the rbd-specific total igg antibody titers were ~ times higher in mice that were vaccinated by co-administrating rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine in separate sites (g - , end point titer), they were not significantly different from those elicited by immunization with rbd + rasp- + alum administered in a single inoculum (g - , end point titer), or with the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine (g - , end point titer; figure s a ). nevertheless, the co-administration of rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine in separate sites significantly increased the rbd-specific total igg antibody titers by ~ -fold compared to rasp- -adjuvanted mers-rbd vaccine or ~ -fold compared to the rbd vaccine alone (g - , , g - and g - end point titers respectively; figure s a ); clearly showing that immunization using the unique rasp- and alum combinational adjuvants had a beneficiary effect in comparison to the rasp- (~ fold) or the alum (~ fold) adjuvanted vaccines. to elucidate the igg subtypes induced in the different immunization groups, we also analyzed the rbd-specific igg and igg c antibody titers. we observed that the highest titer of igg antibodies was induced when the rbd vaccine was formulated with alum alone or with rasp- + alum in one inoculum (g - , and g - , end point titers respectively; figure s b ), with the titers being (table and x-axis legend). sera samples were collected days post- nd immunization and analyzed for neutralization of the pseudotyped mers-cov. the data represents the mean and standard error (sem) of nt titers from at least two independent experiments with to mice per group. "+" indicates the presence and "−" indicates the absence of the protein or adjuvants in the formulation. statistics was performed using one-way anova with tukey's multiple comparison. p < . : ***, p < . : ****, nd: not detectable. when the total igg response to the mers-rbd antigen was studied using the mers-cov s protein as the target protein, we found that although the rbd-specific total igg antibody titers werẽ times higher in mice that were vaccinated by co-administrating rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine in separate sites (g - , end point titer), they were not significantly different from those elicited by immunization with rbd + rasp- + alum administered in a single inoculum (g - , end point titer), or with the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine (g - , end point titer; figure s a ). nevertheless, the co-administration of rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine in separate sites significantly increased the rbd-specific total igg antibody titers by~ -fold compared to rasp- -adjuvanted mers-rbd vaccine or~ -fold compared to the rbd vaccine alone (g - , , g - and g - end point titers respectively; figure s a ); clearly showing that immunization using the unique rasp- and alum combinational adjuvants had a beneficiary effect in comparison to the rasp- (~ fold) or the alum (~ fold) adjuvanted vaccines. to elucidate the igg subtypes induced in the different immunization groups, we also analyzed the rbd-specific igg and igg c antibody titers. we observed that the highest titer of igg antibodies was induced when the rbd vaccine was formulated with alum alone or with rasp- + alum in one inoculum (g - , and g - , end point titers respectively; figure s b ), with the titers being significantly higher when the vaccine was with both adjuvants and in one inoculum. the rbd-specific igg titers were significantly decreased when rasp- was used as an adjuvant in aqueous formulations; when the rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd were co-administered in separate sites (~ -fold decrease; g - , end point titers) or with the rasp- -adjuvanted rbd vaccine (~ -fold decrease; g - end point titers) when it was compared to the administration of rbd + rasp- + alum in a single inoculum (g - , end point titers; figure s b ). rasp- is known as an igg (th )-biased adjuvant [ ] . notably, igg c responses were only elevated when rasp- was also administered as an adjuvant (g - , g - , and g - end point titers), with the combinatorial adjuvanted vaccines performing similarly and best (g and g ; figure s c ). these data suggest that when rasp- is adsorbed to alum in a vaccine formulation (g ), the two adjuvants work in synergy not only to elicit a stronger igg response than the alum-adjuvanted vaccine formulation, but also for inducing the igg c antibody response as compared to alum-adjuvanted vaccine formulation alone (~ -fold increase), suggesting that the combination of rasp- and alum in a vaccine with the rbd antigen works in synergy to elicit a more balanced igg -igg c antibody response (igg /igg c ratio of in g vs. in g ; figure s d ). the reduced igg /igg c ratio is more pronounced in a vaccine formulation where rasp- is not adsorbed to alum but co-administered separately (igg /igg c ratio of in g ; figure s d ). sera samples from day post- nd immunization were also tested for their ability to inhibit the binding of mers-rbd-fc protein to the hdpp receptor-expressing huh- cells by flow cytometry. similarly to the enhanced induction of neutralizing antibodies, immunization with rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine in separate injection sites also increased the ability of the generated antibodies to inhibit the binding of the rbd protein to its receptor by~ -fold (g - %; figure ) as compared to rbd + rasp- + alum adjuvanted vaccine in a single inoculum or with alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine (g - % and g - %; figure ), and by > -fold as compared to the rasp- -adjuvanted rbd vaccine (g - %; figure ). when group g was compared to groups g and g , a synergy of the combinatorial adjuvants, though when rasp- is not adsorbed to alum, was evident. however, when rasp- was adsorbed to alum (g ), the functionality of the antibodies elicited by the vaccine is much reduced. the inhibitory activity in group g was reduced by~ %, albeit not significantly, as compared to g . (table and x-axis legend). sera samples were collected on day post- nd immunization and assayed for inhibition of the binding of mers-cov rbd-fc to huh- cells expressing mers-cov receptor dpp . the data represents the mean and standard error (sem) of percentage inhibition of binding from at least two independent experiments with to mice per group. "+" indicates the presence and "−" indicates the absence of the protein or adjuvants in the formulation. statistics was performed using one-way anova with tukey's multiple comparison. p < . : *, p < . : ****. nd: not detectable. the draining lymph nodes (ln) were harvested from each leg days post- nd immunization and analyzed for the number of monocytes as well as their activation and migratory status. migration of innate cells from the site of injection to the lns are required to initiate an effective adaptive immune response [ ] . the analyses demonstrated that there was no significant difference in the total number of monocytes (cd + cd c -ly c + ; figures s a and s a) recruited into the ln per mouse between the various immunization groups. however, the number of activated monocytes (c + cd c -ly c + cd + ) in the ln were significantly higher in mice where rasp- and the alumadjuvanted rbd vaccine were co-administered in separate sites than in mice immunized with rbd + rasp- + alum in a single inoculum, or with alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine (g vs. g and g , respectively; figure b ). notably, the number of activated monocytes in the ln of mice that received only the rasp- -adjuvanted rbd vaccine (g ) were similar to those present in mice where rasp- was administered without being adsorbed to alum (g ). it appears that alum does not add to the activation of the monocytes in any of the formulations tested (g , g or g ; figure b ). (table and x-axis legend). sera samples were collected on day post- nd immunization and assayed for inhibition of the binding of mers-cov rbd-fc to huh- cells expressing mers-cov receptor dpp . the data represents the mean and standard error (sem) of percentage inhibition of binding from at least two independent experiments with to mice per group. "+" indicates the presence and "−" indicates the absence of the protein or adjuvants in the formulation. statistics was performed using one-way anova with tukey's multiple comparison. p < . : *, p < . : ****. nd: not detectable. the draining lymph nodes (ln) were harvested from each leg days post- nd immunization and analyzed for the number of monocytes as well as their activation and migratory status. migration of innate cells from the site of injection to the lns are required to initiate an effective adaptive immune response [ ] . the analyses demonstrated that there was no significant difference in the total number of monocytes (cd + cd c -ly c + ; figures s a and s a ) recruited into the ln per mouse between the various immunization groups. however, the number of activated monocytes (c + cd c -ly c + cd + ) in the ln were significantly higher in mice where rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine were co-administered in separate sites than in mice immunized with rbd + rasp- + alum in a single inoculum, or with alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine (g vs. g and g , respectively; figure b) . notably, the number of activated monocytes in the ln of mice that received only the rasp- -adjuvanted rbd vaccine (g ) were similar to those present in mice where rasp- was administered without being adsorbed to alum (g ). it appears that alum does not add to the activation of the monocytes in any of the formulations tested (g , g or g ; figure b ). nevertheless, a synergistic effect was observed when rasp- was added to the rbd vaccine with or without alum with respect to ccr + (migratory) monocyte subset. the number of migratory monocytes (cd + cd c -ly c + ccr + ) in the ln were significantly higher in mice where rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine were co-administered in separate sites, rbd + rasp- + alum was administered in a single inoculum or the rasp- -adjuvanted rbd vaccine vs. the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine (g , g and g vs. g ; figure c ). the number of migratory monocytes in the ln of mice that received the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine were actually similar to those in the control group that received only rbd (g vs. g ). as observed with the number of activated monocytes, migratory monocytes in the lns of mice that received rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine co-administered in separate sites were significantly higher in mice than in mice received rbd + rasp- + alum administered in a single inoculum (g vs g ; figure c ). nevertheless, a synergistic effect was observed when rasp- was added to the rbd vaccine with or without alum with respect to ccr + (migratory) monocyte subset. the number of migratory monocytes (cd + cd c -ly c + ccr + ) in the ln were significantly higher in mice where rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine were co-administered in separate sites, rbd + rasp- + alum was administered in a single inoculum or the rasp- -adjuvanted rbd vaccine vs. the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine (g , g and g vs. g ; figure c ). the number of migratory monocytes in the ln of mice that received the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine were actually similar to those in the control group that received only rbd (g vs. g ). as observed with the number of activated monocytes, migratory monocytes in the lns of mice that received rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine co-administered in separate sites were significantly higher in mice than in mice received rbd + rasp- + alum administered in a single inoculum (g vs g ; figure c ). to investigate the possible contribution of tfh and gc b cells to the robust functional antibody responses induced in mice administered with rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine in separate injection sites, ln from days post- nd immunization were analyzed for the tfh ( figure a ) and gc b ( figure a ) cell frequencies. although the frequency of total cd + t cells within the ln was not significantly different between the various immunization groups (figure s b ), the frequency of the tfh (cd + cxcr + pd- + ) cells within the ln of mice administered with rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine in separate sites (g ) was . -fold higher than in mice administered with the rbd + rasp- + alum vaccine in a single inoculum, and . -and . -fold higher versus rasp- -and alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccines (g vs. g and g , respectively; figure b) . importantly, the fold increase in the tfh cells was positively and significantly associated with the neutralizing antibody titers against the pseudotyped mers-cov in two immunization groups, namely mice that were immunized with rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine in separate sites (g ; r = . , p = . ) and mice immunized with rbd + rasp- + alum vaccine in a single inoculum (g ; r = . , p = . ) ( figure c) . notably, the frequency of b cells (b + ) in the ln was also significantly higher in mice administered with rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine in separate sites than in mice administered with rbd + rasp- + alum in a single inoculum, or with the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine or with the rbd vaccine alone (g - % vs. g - %, g - %, and g - % respectively; figure b ). additionally, the frequency of b cells in mice immunized with rasp- -adjuvanted rbd was also significantly higher as compared to mice immunized with rbd + rasp- + alum in a single inoculum (g - % vs. g - % respectively; figure b ). formulating the vaccine with rasp- in an aqueous formulation (not adsorbed to alum) might have been critical for the increased number of b cells in these two vaccine formulations (g and g ). when the frequency of gc b cells (b + cd + gl- + ) in the draining ln ( figure c ) were analyzed, it appeared that immunization of mice with rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine in separate sites (g ) induced~ -fold increase in the frequency of the gc b cells versus immunization with rbd + rasp- + alum in a single inoculum and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine (g and g ), and~ -fold increase in gc b cells was induced versus immunization with the rasp- -adjuvanted rbd vaccine (g ; figure c ). interestingly, the alum-adjuvanted vaccines (g and g ) had > -fold increase in gc b cells in the ln compared to rasp- -adjuvanted rbd vaccine (g ; figure c ). importantly, only when rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine were co-administered in separate sites (g ) was the fold increase in the gc b cells positively and significantly associated with the neutralizing antibody titers against the pseudotyped mers-cov (r = . , p = . ). no significant association was observed in mice when the rbd + rasp- + alum vaccine was administered (g ) as a single inoculum (r = − . , p = . ; figure d ). "−" indicates the absence of the protein or adjuvants in the formulation. statistics was performed using one-way anova with tukey's multiple comparison. p < . : *, p < . : ***. spearman correlation was performed to determine the association of tfh cells with neutralizing antibody titers. adjuvants are essential components in both prophylactic and therapeutic vaccines since they ameliorate antigen-specific protective immune responses [ ] . however, choosing the appropriate adjuvant that can be employed safely and that enhances vaccine efficacy is still elusive and needs to be optimized experimentally first [ ] . besides a handful of adjuvants such as cpg, poly i:c, mpla and mf , aluminum-based (alum) adjuvants are being used in most of the adjuvanted vaccines for humans globally even today since its inception years ago [ ] . although beneficial effects of alum as an adjuvant were observed with the dtap, hepb, and hepa vaccines, a biased th -type immune response, absence of strong cellular responses, and the induction of adverse reactions were some of the limitations found with the various alum-adjuvanted vaccines [ ] . therefore, the utilization of a combination of adjuvants in vaccines that can improve the safety and efficacy of vaccines against emerging pathogens is being actively pursued by the research community [ ] . the use of combinatorial adjuvant system is beneficial since they can be tailored to target varied pattern-recognition receptors (prrs) with each being able to enhance antigen-specific responses (cellular and humoral) in a complementary or synergistic outcome [ ] . for instance, intranasal vaccination with emulsified fine particles like pelc in combination with ld-indolicidin enhanced protective influenza-specific serological immunity in mice [ ] . mpl and cpg combination adjuvants promoted homologous and heterosubtypic cross protection when used with the inactivated split influenza virus vaccine [ ] . the co-administration of alum and a tlr- adjuvant enhanced memory b cell response to lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (lcmv) antigen [ ] . alum in combination with mpla-ha-adjuvanted hbsag increased both the magnitude and the persistence of hbsag-specific immune responses against hepatitis b virus infection [ ] . the aim of the present study was to explore the synergistic potential of combining the o. volvulus-derived protein adjuvant, rasp- with alum as a novel combinatorial adjuvant system using mers-rbd-fd as the model vaccine antigen. we have previously shown that rasp- enhances the immune response when co-administered in an aqueous formulation with several bystander vaccine antigens [ ] [ ] [ ] . moreover, we have also reported that rasp- -adjuvanted trivalent influenza vaccine (iiv ) elicits a balanced igg /igg c response to iiv and protects mice following h n virus challenge, potentially via myd -independent tlr signaling [ , ] . in this study, we have shown that mice immunized with rbd + rasp- + alum in a single inoculum elicited neutralizing antibody titers against pseudotyped mers-cov that were not significantly different from mice that received either rasp- -adjuvanted rbd vaccine or alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine alone ( figure ) . notably, when rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine were co-administered in separate sites the vaccine ameliorated the production of neutralizing antibody titers by~ -fold as compared to the combinatorial adjuvant system administered in a single inoculum (figure ) . we also observed that mice that received two immunizations at three-week intervals of the combinatorial adjuvant system where rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine were co-administered separately elicited neutralizing antibody titers against pseudotyped mers-cov infection that were similar to, or slightly lower than, those elicited in mice that received three immunizations of the montanide isa -adjuvanted, or two immunizations of the mf -adjuvanted mers cov-rbd-fc or mers-rbd-fd vaccines [ ] . another noteworthy observation is that the heightened neutralizing antibody titers induced by the unique experimental combinatorial adjuvant system was achieved using µg of the mers-rbd-fd vaccine protein, compared to µg of mers-rbd-fc or mers-rbd-fd proteins used in previous studies [ ] . this suggests that the rasp- in this unique combinatorial adjuvant system enabled also rbd dose sparing and with two immunizations. we have previously reported that rasp- also facilitates iiv antigen dose sparing up to a -or -fold decrease, and with a single immunization of the rasp- -adjuvanted iiv , mice were still protected from a lethal h n influenza virus challenge [ ] . importantly, the antibodies elicited by the different combinatorial rbd-adjuvanted vaccines were also functional in their ability to inhibit the binding of mers-rbd to the human dpp receptor. mice that received rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine separately inhibited the binding bỹ -fold more as compared to mice administered with rbd rasp- + alum in a single inoculum (figure ). although mice that received alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine significantly inhibited binding ( % ± . ) compared to rasp- -adjuvanted rbd vaccine, they were not significantly different compared to the combinatorial adjuvant system administered in a single inoculum (figure ). the inhibition of binding, however, was only enhanced in the combinatorial adjuvant system where rasp- and alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine are co-administered separately. these data collectively suggest that adsorption of rasp- to alum in a combinatorial adjuvant system does not enhance the functional antibody responses elicited by alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine. while rasp- when not adsorbed to alum in a combinatorial adjuvant system was able to ameliorate the functional antibody responses. an important concern raised when anti-viral vaccine are developed, especially with the ongoing covid- crisis, is that some vaccine approaches may induce unwantedly adverse side effects due to antibody dependent enhancement (ade) and thus more severe pathology [ ] . since ade is generally correlated to the neutralizing antibody titers, studies have also shown that high neutralizing antibody titer may eliminate the potential induction of ade [ , ] . [ ] [ ] [ ] ] . in our study, we show immunization of mice with rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted mers-cov rbd vaccine in separate sites have induced nt neutralizing antibody titers greater than : , against pseudotyped mers-cov infection. we expect that such high-titer neutralizing may prevent mers-cov infection in vivo without causing any adverse effects. however, this will have to be proven experimentally in the future. in this study, we also observed that immunization with the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine elicits an rbd-specific igg -biased response, while the rasp- -adjuvanted rbd vaccine elicits a balanced rbd specific igg -igg c response ( figure s b,c) . notably, in the combinatorial adjuvant system where rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine are co-administered separately the balanced igg /igg c response ( figure s d ) was preserved, while mice that received the combinatorial adjuvant system in a single inoculum elicited an igg -biased response ( figure s b,d) . these results suggest that the presence of rasp- in an aqueous formulation shifts the dominant igg response elicited by the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine to a balanced igg -igg c response and this was more pronounced when rasp- was not adsorbed to alum. interestingly, the administration of the combinatorial adjuvant system showed differences in the ly c + activated monocyte but not in cd c + activated dc subsets ( figure s ). this may likely be due to the presence of rasp- in the vaccine, since we have previously shown that intra-muscular injection rasp- alone or the rasp- -adjuvanted trivalent influenza (iiv ) vaccine elicited an increased recruitment of monocytes than dcs at the site of injection ( h after injection) as compared to pbs control group or iiv alone [ ] . in the present study, the administration of the combinatorial adjuvant system where rasp- was completely adsorbed to alum (single inoculum immunization group) significantly reduced the number of cd + (activated) monocytes and ccr + (migratory) monocytes to the draining ln compared to the administration of the combinatorial adjuvant system where rasp- was not adsorbed to alum ( figure b,c) . interestingly, the number of cd + monocytes in the ln was similar whether rasp- + alum + rbd were administered as a single inoculum or as a co-administered vaccine in two separate sites. however, both of these vaccine formulations as well as the rasp- adjuvanted-mers-rbd vaccine resulted in significantly higher number of recruited cd + monocytes than the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine, suggesting that the presence of alum did not significantly alter the number of cd + monocytes recruited by the combinatorial rasp- and alum adjuvanted-mers-rbd vaccines ( figure s b ). moreover, there was a -fold increase in the number of the activated monocytes and migratory monocytes recruited to the draining ln in mice that received the rasp- -adjuvanted rbd vaccine when compared to the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine ( figure b ,c). the number of migratory monocytes doubled in the draining ln of mice immunized with the combinatorial adjuvant system where rbd + rasp- + alum was administered in a single inoculum as compared to the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine alone. the number of migratory monocytes further increased in mice that received the combinatorial adjuvant system where rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine were co-administered separately ( figure c ). there were no significant differences observed in the number of activated and migratory dcs across all the immunization groups. collectively, these data suggest that the rasp- in the combinatorial adjuvant system may play a significant role in the enhanced recruitment of monocyte subsets. this is supported with the data where the administration of the rasp- -adjuvanted rbd vaccine also significantly increased the number of activated (cd + ) and migratory (ccr + ) monocytes in the draining ln compared to alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine ( figure b,c) . also, rasp- and alum may work in synergy to improve the number of migratory monocytes in the draining ln compared to what alum could do alone. one of the important events in the generation of an adaptive cellular response is the effective migration of innate cells to the lymph nodes to encounter naïve t cells, a process in which ccr , a chemokine receptor, is known to play a dominant role [ ] . in addition, the absence of ccr has been shown to affect the magnitude of protective responses against viral infections in mouse models [ , ] . therefore, we suggest that rasp- , when not adsorbed to alum in a vaccine formulation, may improve the effective recruitment of innate cells that lead to the induction of effector adaptive cellular responses. tfh cells can determine humoral immunity that is also derived from gc b cells, and therefore both of these cell types have become an important aspect for rational designs of more effective vaccines, in particular those depending on functional antibodies for their efficacy [ , ] . to better understand what contributed to the improved elicitation of functional anti-mers-cov neutralizing antibodies, the frequencies of tfh (cd + cxcr + pd- + ) cells and gc b (b + cd + gl- + ) cells in the draining ln of immunized mice were analyzed. a two-fold increase in both tfh and gc b frequencies were induced when rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine were co-administered in separate sites as compared to the combinatorial adjuvant system where rbd + rasp- + alum were administered in a single inoculum (figures b and c ). while no significant difference was observed in the fold increase of the frequency of gc b cells in the ln of mice that were immunized with rasp- and the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine co-administered separately as compared to the alum-adjuvanted rbd vaccine, a six-fold increase was observed when this was compared to rasp- -adjuvanted rbd vaccine alone ( figure c ). these data suggest that the complete adsorption of rasp- to alum diminished not only the ability to induce migratory monocyte, but also the development of cells that are important for mounting an effective humoral response. importantly, we found a significant and positive correlation between the neutralizing antibody titers in sera of mice vaccinated with rasp- and the alum adjuvanted rbd vaccine separately and the fold increase in the frequency of tfh and gc b cells recruited in the draining ln ( figures c and d) . interestingly, the fold increase in the frequency of tfh cells was also significantly and positively associated with the titers of neutralizing antibodies in mice that were immunized with the combinatorial adjuvant system administered in a single inoculum (rbd + rasp- + alum; figure b ), suggesting that the rasp- and alum may work in synergy. our study demonstrates that a unique combination of rasp- (a helminth-derived protein) protein adjuvant with alum and the mers-rbd-fd using the model vaccine antigen enhanced the protective immune responses to mers-cov, despite the fact that adjuvants have to be co-administered separately (where rasp- was not adsorbed to alum). also, for the first time, we were able to determine that the tfh and gc b cells in the lns in mice immunized with combinatorial adjuvanted-mers-rbd vaccine were significantly and positively associated with the essential functional protective immune responses to mers-cov neutralizing antibodies. further studies will be necessary, however, to elucidate the precise underlining mechanisms of this unique adjuvant combination of rasp- and alum. in our study, it appeared that the adsorption of rasp- to alum reduced the immunopotentiating activities of either rasp- or alum. as the potency of rasp- is highest when it is in an aqueous formulation, a better understanding of the targets of multiple immune pathways that are induced may also help us utilize the rasp- protein adjuvant in combination with other prr agonists that can be used in aqueous formulations as adjuvants in novel combinatorial formulations. such combinatorial adjuvants may be more advantageous with subunit vaccine models that generally are known to induce suboptimal protective immune responses alone and/or induce vaccine enhanced disease (ved) when used with the alum adjuvant [ ] . the following are available online at http://www.mdpi.com/ - x/ / / /s , figure s : induction of mers-cov-rbd specific igg subtypes in sera of immunized mice, figure s : representative flow cytometry plot determining the gating strategy of the immune cells recruited to the draining lymph nodes (lns) of immunized mice, figure s : number of monocyte and dc subsets recruited into the lymph nodes (lns) of immunized mice, figure s : frequency of cd + t cells in the lymph nodes (lns) of immunized mice. funding: this research was funded by nih grants u ai and r ai . recent advances of vaccine adjuvants for infectious diseases the latest advancements in zika virus vaccine development augmentation of vaccine-induced humoral and cellular immunity by a physical radiofrequency adjuvant from to and beyond. vaccines (basel) aluminium adjuvants-in retrospect and prospect optimizing the utilization of aluminum adjuvants in vaccines: you might just get what you want old and new adjuvants - , a th -biased protein adjuvant derived from the helminth onchocerca volvulus, can directly bind and activate antigen-presenting cells the adjuvanticity of an o. volvulus-derived rov-asp- protein in mice using sequential vaccinations and in non-human primates asp- , a recombinant secreted protein of the helminth onchocercavolvulus, is a potent adjuvant for inducing antibodies to ovalbumin, hiv- polypeptide and sars-cov peptide antigens enhanced humoral response to influenza vaccine in aged mice with a novel adjuvant, rov-asp- . vaccine the parasite-derived rov-asp- is an effective antigen-sparing cd (+) t cell-dependent adjuvant for the trivalent inactivated influenza vaccine, and functions in the absence of myd pathway 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cut-off? advances in aluminum hydroxide-based adjuvant research and its mechanism from discovery to licensure, the adjuvant system story triggering intracellular receptors for vaccine adjuvantation mucosal delivery of a combination adjuvant comprising emulsified fine particles and ld-indolicidin enhances serological immunity to inactivated influenza virus mpl and cpg combination adjuvants promote homologous and heterosubtypic cross protection of inactivated split influenza virus vaccine alum/toll-like receptor adjuvant enhances the expansion of memory b cell compartment within the draining lymph node evaluation of hyaluronic acid-based combination adjuvant containing monophosphoryl lipid a and aluminum salt for hepatitis b vaccine the potential danger of suboptimal antibody responses in covid- cross-reactivity, and function of antibodies elicited by zika virus infection engineering a stable cho cell line for the expression of a mers-coronavirus vaccine antigen rot, a. ccr and its ligands: balancing immunity and tolerance impact of ccr on priming and distribution of antiviral effector and memory ctl antiviral immune responses in the absence of organized lymphoid t cell zones in plt/plt mice the adjuvant gla-se promotes human tfh cell expansion and emergence of public tcrbeta clonotypes can follicular helper t cells be targeted to improve vaccine efficacy? a unique combination adjuvant modulates immune responses preventing vaccine-enhanced pulmonary histopathology after a single dose vaccination with fusion protein and challenge with respiratory syncytial virus this article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the creative commons attribution (cc by) license we gratefully acknowledge kathy tang, head of the lars facility at nybc for providing animal and veterinary care. the authors also thank mihaela barbu-stevanovic, head of the flowcytometry core facility at nybc. the authors also acknowledge maria elena bottazzi and bin zhan from baylor college of medicine, texas children's hospital center for vaccine development, houston, texas for the production of the recombinant ov-asp- protein. the authors declare no conflict of interest. the funders had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript, or in the decision to publish the results. key: cord- - p rky c authors: joseph, iype title: middle east respiratory syndrome corona virus (mers cov): the next steps date: - - journal: j public health policy doi: . /jphp. . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: p rky c developing countries are at risk of importing middle east respiratory syndrome corona virus (mers cov) from the middle east. hospitals in the middle east currently reporting the disease are staffed by immigrants. in the current hot spots for mers cov a sizeable portion of the population is from other countries, but many of these countries have yet to detect any importation of mers cov. to assess the disease transmission in these countries, supplemental surveillance strategies are urgently needed beyond the currently recommended measures. a few strategies to address the situation are: (i) improving preparedness with enhanced surveillance in particular regions; (ii) targeting certain sentinel groups for surveillance in hot spots; and (iii) limited use of serosurveillance. recovered, immune patients can be employed to give patient care during outbreaks. saudi arabia reported the first case of middle east respiratory syndrome corona virus (mers-cov) in september, . also caused by a corona virus, it is not unlike sars. world over, a total of laboratory-confirmed cases of infection, including at least related deaths have been reported to the world health organization (who) as of february . in addition to outbreaks in the arabian peninsula, sporadic cases have been imported to europe, africa, asia, and north america in returning travellers. no sustained transmission has been reported outside the arabian peninsula. evidence point to a reservoir for the virus among both bats and camels, but the issue is not yet settled. who coordinates international surveillance. deaths, sick persons who recover, and asymptomatic carriers continue to be found. cases arise from unknown sources in the community and from within hospitals in the middle east region that have cared for laboratory-proven cases. surveillance systems in parts of the world outside the arabian peninsula remain deliberately inactive. how will the situation evolve? will the disease be extinguished at its source? will the current state of geographically limited transmission persist indefinitely? will it spread far and wide, immediately or after a delay? exportation is being closely watched, but might the virus find another niche environment where it can successfully establish sustained transmission? clinically, mers cov presents with symptoms of lower respiratory tract disease (fever, cough, dyspnoea, and chest pain), sore throat, myalgia, malaise, and gastro-intestinal symptoms, such as diarrhoea, vomiting and abdominal pain. complications described in fatal cases are hyperkalaemia with associated ventricular tachycardia, disseminated intravascular coagulation leading to cardiac arrest, pericarditis and multi-organ failure. a large proportion of the severely ill patients require mechanical ventilation. fatalities are more in those with co-morbid conditions and an age over years. preparedness to face the mers cov threat in tropical developing countries is limited. experience of managing pandemic h n (gathered from the prior threat of sars) might help prepare countries. [ ] [ ] [ ] despite persisting knowledge gaps about transmission dynamics rational preparedness can begin. preparedness can begin in priority countries and in geographical locations with increased potential for importation. mers outbreaks linked to hospitals and to health care centre visits have been documented many times in the middle east. hospitals in the middle-east employ immigrant health staff, especially from india and the philippines. , in addition, much of the population includes labour immigrants from pakistan, sri lanka, egypt, bangladesh, and indonesia. a look at where immigrants come from and their travel back to their native lands in the past months would demarcate the geographical areas with potential for importation. a useful technique has already used hajj pilgrim data (from the population of muslims who come from all over the world to mecca each year). the data on hospital employees can be extracted from the immigration departments of the affected middle-east countries. who might collate this important kind of data. health-care workers are a high risk group to acquire mers cov. ten studies that addressed this issue have found that, among those infected, . per cent ( / ) were health-care workers. the role of the asymptomatic health-care workers in the incubation period and of minimally sick health-care workers who continue to offer clinical services thus propagating the disease transmission have also been documented. in addition, the hajj pilgrims have spread the disease. among the travellers, currently symptomatic individuals who satisfy the who case definition are being targeted for virological surveillance. travelling health-care workers, irrespective of whether they are symptomatic can be selected for virological testing. what is happening with mers cov transmission in countries with high likelihood of importation? this has not yet been adequately assessed. using the current strategy of virological testing of patients fulfilling the who case definition, india, pakistan, egypt, bangladesh, philippines, sri lanka, and indonesia (countries having sizable numbers of health workers employed in the middle-east) have not yet detected more than one case each. is this because of the absence of importation or to surveillance systems in these countries? perhaps an alternate strategy is needed to detect arrival of the virus into these countries. as virological testing is not readily available in less developed countries they might use serological methods. even with the limits of serological tests, results from multiple tests may yield important information. indigenously acquired sero-positivity against mers cov would currently be a good indicator of importation. overcrowded hospitals have been shown to provoke nosocomial outbreaks of airborne diseases, like sars. particular characteristics enhance transmission, possibly through aerosol and contact: distance between beds of ⩽ m; staff continuing work while symptomatic; and host patient requiring oxygen therapy. such hospital environments are quite common in developing countries. mers cov also shares many symptoms with other respiratory diseases, consequently misdiagnosis is likely. thus the clinical staff of hospitals likely to receive returnees seeking treatment for their illnesses can act as 'sentinels' for mers cov surveillance. serious respiratory illness in the clinical staff of hospitals, especially those with icus, might be targeted for virological testing. serological testing of other staff may detect those who had asymptomatic illness. these tests would identify importation and help assess the gravity of the situation. these supplemental, limited, and targeted serological investigations would require some new financial inputs. hospital-based serum collection from selected staff is generally inexpensive and countries can manage this by themselves. storage and transportation can be tricky, but both are amenable to centralized management. health departments of developing countries can step forward to carry out this under international coordination from who. the serological tests for mers (currently available) do require specialized skill and expertise. to start, it would be ideal if these tests were done under direct supervision by the labs that initially developed the tests. these labs would have to be empowered to test a large number of samples from many countries. later, the original labs might limit themselves to quality control. new funds would be required and the countries where the original labs are situated should, perhaps, come forward to support their labs to help people in the developing countries who face mers. how long will this surveillance be needed? perhaps not for long. the relevance of this surveillance strategy would end when either the outbreak extinguishes itself at the original hot spots or when clear evidence of indigenous transmission in many other sites becomes evident. the effort to optimize these in-country surveillance protocols can be managed by epidemiologists and biostatisticians of each developing country. hospital staff who are found to be immune either from asymptomatic infections or having recovered from symptomatic infection are likely to become the greatest resource when the next patient with suspected mers cov arrives. when all care givers of a patient acutely ill with mers cov are immune, further transmission within the hospital is unlikely. this way to block transmission seems a reasonable option as no vaccine is available. (in fact, this strategy can be used to manage propagated outbreaks of diseases that leave those who recover immune, like chickenpox or ebola virus disease.) outbreak management should include enhanced recruitment of recovered persons after their convalescent period for the care of new patients. the duration of immunity should be monitored as the outbreak progresses. when care givers are immune, they may provide better clinical care, as they are not afraid of contact with the patient. this approach would be a good addition to the currently recommended hospital infection control measures. mers is a challenge. let us face it. isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia world health organization (who) close relative of human middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in bat middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) serology in major livestock species in an affected region in jordan missing information in animal surveillance of mers-cov lancet infect dis improving the evidence base for decision making during a pandemic: the example of influenza a/h n pathogenesis of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus years on, the world still learns from sars from sars in to h n in : lessons learned from taiwan in preparation for the next pandemic from sars to h n : the mechanism of responding to emerging communicable diseases has made great progress in china nursing shortage in india with special reference to international migration of nurses international organization for migration (iom) philippines united nations expert group meeting on international migration and development in the arab region un/pop/ egm potential for the international spread of middle east respiratory syndrome in association with mass gatherings in saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections in health care workers middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: implications for health care facilities laboratory testing for middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus interim recommendations (revised why did outbreaks of severe acute respiratory syndrome occur in some hospital wards but not in others? infection prevention and control during health care for probable or conformed cases of novel coronavirus (ncov) infection iype joseph, mb.bs, mph is a research scientist i (medical) in the pathogen biology group at the rajiv gandhi centre for biotechnology, kerala, india. key: cord- - b hvorz authors: watson, john t.; hall, aron j.; erdman, dean d.; swerdlow, david l; gerber, susan i. title: unraveling the mysteries of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus date: - - journal: emerg infect dis doi: . /eid . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: b hvorz nan cov) is a novel cov known to cause severe acute respiratory illness in humans; ≈ % of confirmed cases have been fatal. human-to-human transmission and multiple outbreaks of respiratory illness have been attributed to mers-cov, and severe respiratory illness caused by this virus continues to be identified. mers-cov was first reported in september , and subsequent investigations documented illness onsets as early as april ( ) . as of february , , the world health organization has reported laboratory-confirmed cases of mers-cov infection, including deaths, indicating an ongoing risk for transmission to humans in the arabian peninsula ( ). the median age of reported case-patients is years (range - years); most cases are in males ( ). most index casepatients have at least reported chronic comorbid condition ( ) and have resided in, or recently traveled to, jordan, qatar, united arab emirates, oman, kuwait, or saudi arabia ( ). in france, germany, italy, united kingdom, and tunisia confirmed cases of mers-cov have been identified in travelers returning from these countries ( ) . although a zoonotic reservoir of mers-cov has been speculated, very little is known about the specific exposures that result in primary human cases. mers-cov infection causes severe acute hypoxemic respiratory failure, extrapulmonary organ dysfunction, and high rates of death; however, the spectrum of illness and clinical course are not fully defined ( ) . evidence suggests that mers-cov is capable of limited human-to-human transmission, which results in outbreaks in family and health care settings ( , ) . the reported cases include multiple distinct spatiotemporal clusters and identified infections in health care workers ( ) . modeling performed to assess the extent of human infection and the transmission potential of mers-cov (as of august ) estimated that most symptomatic case-patients had not been detected but that chains of transmission were not self-sustaining when infection control was implemented ( ) . despite evidence of human-to-human transmission, the number of contacts infected by persons with confirmed infections appears to be limited; sustained transmission in the community has not been documented ( ) . the hajj, the annual religious pilgrimage to saudi arabia, involved . million pilgrims from countries in but resulted in no reports of confirmed cases in the weeks after the pilgrimage ( ). little is known about the pathogenic potential and transmission dynamics of mers-cov. although multiple health care-associated clusters have been identified ( ), further investigation is needed of the specific risk factors for transmission within health care facilities. basic information about the temporal and causal patterns of viral shedding and their relationships to clinical outcomes is critical to further understand the virus and to shape prevention and control measures needed to limit transmission. standard, contact, and airborne precautions appear to be effective in limiting transmission and are recommended by the centers for disease control and prevention to manage known or suspected mers-cov infection in hospitalized patients as a primary means of preventing and controlling transmission ( ) . potential animal reservoirs and mechanism(s) of transmission of mers-cov to humans remain unclear. of the minority of case-patients for whom information is available about exposure to animals, few have reported owning or visiting a farm with camels, goats, sheep, chickens, ducks, or other animals ( ). a zoonotic origin for mers-cov was initially suggested by its high genetic similarity to bat covs ( ) and the identification of closely related viruses in bats ( ). recent reports have described additional data from camels. these include real-time reverse transcription pcr detection and limited sequencing of mers-cov from camels from a farm in qatar linked author to infections in humans in october ( ) and, more recently, in camels in saudi arabia ( ) , and antibodies against mers-cov in camel serum from the arabian peninsula, including serum from the united arab emirates drawn in ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . however, more epidemiologic data linking cases to infected animals are needed to determine whether a particular animal species is a host for the virus, a source of human infection, or both. this month's issue of emerging infectious diseases presents results of a study that provides evidence of mers-cov in dromedary camels in egypt ( ) . only other reports of mers-cov detection in animals have been published: in a bat and in camels ( , , ) . however, these reports were based on limited genetic information. in contrast, on the basis of their sequence analysis of nearly the entire viral genome showing > % nt sequence identity with human mers-cov, chu et al. provide the most compelling evidence thus far of mers-cov infection in dromedary camels ( ) . although the authors also found neutralizing antibodies to mers-cov (or a mers-like cov) in most of the camels, they did not find serologic evidence of infection in the abattoir workers who had contact with the infected animals. this finding leaves key questions about zoonotic transmission unanswered. most notably, it remains unclear whether zoonotic transmission of mers-cov occurs between camels and humans and, if so, what the directionality and risk factors are for such transmission. these lingering gaps in knowledge about mers-cov emphasize the need for more epidemiologic study to determine risk factors for human infection, more population-level data on the prevalence of mers-cov in camels, risk factors for infection and shedding in camels, and continued vigilance for other possible sources of infection. also, the camels tested were in egypt and were locally reared or imported from sudan or ethiopia, countries in which no cases have been identified in humans. thus, the geographic area for surveillance should be widened beyond the arabian peninsula and include eastern africa, which is a source for importation of dromedary camels. this study emphasizes the need to further define exposure information for all mers-cov cases regarding camels and other animals, as well as exposure to ill humans who might have undetected mers-cov infections. understanding the role of dromedary camels and possibly other animals in transmission of mers-cov to humans remains a priority for future investigation to enable development of targeted control measures and prevent future cases and deaths from this emerging pathogen. dr watson is a medical officer with the division of viral diseases, centers for disease control and prevention, in atlanta, georgia, usa. his research interests include the epidemiology and control of viral respiratory diseases. latest outbreak news from promed-mail: novel coronavirus-middle east middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov)-update middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) summary and literature update-as of state of knowledge and data gaps of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in humans family cluster of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections hospital outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: quantification of the extent of the epidemic, surveillance biases, and transmissibility interim infection prevention and control recommendations for hospitalized patients with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) full-genome deep sequencing and phylogenetic analysis of novel human betacoronavirus close relative of human middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in bat middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in dromedary camels: an outbreak investigation middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in dromedary camels in saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) coronavirus seroprevalence in domestic livestock in saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) serology in major livestock species in an affected region in jordan seroepidemiology for mers coronavirus using microneutralisation and pseudoparticle virus neutralisation assays reveal a high prevalence of antibody in dromedary camels in egypt middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus neutralising serum antibodies in dromedary camels: a comparative serological study antibodies against mers coronavirus in dromedary camels mers coronaviruses in dromedary camels, egypt. emerg infect dis middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in bats, saudi arabia key: cord- -j ot lt authors: ahmed-hassan, hanaa; sisson, brianna; shukla, rajni kant; wijewantha, yasasvi; funderburg, nicholas t.; li, zihai; hayes, don; demberg, thorsten; liyanage, namal p. m. title: innate immune responses to highly pathogenic coronaviruses and other significant respiratory viral infections date: - - journal: front immunol doi: . /fimmu. . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: j ot lt the new pandemic virus sars-cov- emerged in china and spread around the world in < months, infecting millions of people, and causing countries to shut down public life and businesses. nearly all nations were unprepared for this pandemic with healthcare systems stretched to their limits due to the lack of an effective vaccine and treatment. infection with sars-cov- can lead to coronavirus disease (covid- ). covid- is respiratory disease that can result in a cytokine storm with stark differences in morbidity and mortality between younger and older patient populations. details regarding mechanisms of viral entry via the respiratory system and immune system correlates of protection or pathogenesis have not been fully elucidated. here, we provide an overview of the innate immune responses in the lung to the coronaviruses mers-cov, sars-cov, and sars-cov- . this review provides insight into key innate immune mechanisms that will aid in the development of therapeutics and preventive vaccines for sars-cov- infection. severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov- ) reportedly emerged at a live animal market in the chinese city of wuhan is currently causing a pandemic and negatively affecting global health ( ) ( ) ( ) . there are more than million confirmed sars-cov- infections with an mortality rate that widely varies by country and region ( ) . even in industrialized countries, sars-cov- led healthcare systems approach the brink of collapse by overwhelming their capacity and straining resources. governments and local leaders ordered the shutdown of cities, regions, countries leading to massive disruptions in the local and global economy. unlike previous coronavirus (cov) infections, the rapid global spread, high transmission rate, longer incubation time, and disease severity of sars-cov- requires a better understanding of the epidemiology and immunopathogenesis of this viral outbreak in order to learn from this experience and to manage future pandemics. sars-cov- is a highly pathogenic cov ( ) (case-fatality rate of . - . %) ( , ) that is related to severe acute respiratory syndrome cov (sars-cov) (case-fatality rate of - %) and the middle east respiratory syndrome cov (mers-cov) (case-fatality rate of . %), see also table ( , ) . sars-cov, sars-cov- and mers-cov target the lower respiratory system, causing respiratory illnesses, including severe pneumonia, acute lung injury (ali) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards) ( , ) . sars-cov- infection results in higher hospitalization rates in the elderly (> ) and persons with pre-existing conditions including hypertension, diabetes and obesity compared to rates among younger populations without pre-existing conditions ( table ) ( , ) . in addition to an age disparity, males with covid- appear to have higher risk for worse outcomes and death ( , ) . epidemiological research of the sars and mers infections also showed that males had a higher mortality rate than females ( ) ( ) ( ) . while sars-cov- is a novel coronavirus, several important insights have already been made about its basic mode of transmission. virus particles are inhaled in respiratory droplets expelled from the airways of infected individuals. angiotensinconverting enzyme (ace ), expressed on the ciliated bronchial cells, endothelial cells, and type i and ii alveolar cells, is the host receptor for cell entry into the respiratory tract by both sars-cov- and sars-cov ( table ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . the spike protein (s) of cov is responsible for the entry of the virus into the target cell (figure ) ( , ) . ace is a type i transmembrane metallocarboxypeptidase that plays a vital role in the renin-angiotensin system (ras) ( , ) , which in turn is critical in maintaining blood pressure homeostasis as well as fluid and salt balance in mammals. ace is found in vascular endothelial cells, in the renal tubular epithelium, and in leydig cells of the testes ( ) . studies have shown that ace is expressed in gastrointestinal (gi) tissues, making it a potential site for harboring sars-cov ( ) . this may be one of the reasons for gi pathology reported in some patients with covid- and viral shedding in stool. in contrast, mers-cov uses dipeptidyl-peptidase (dpp ) as an entry receptor, which is expressed on endothelial cells and some epithelial tissues ( table ) ( , ) . accumulating data suggest that the innate anti-viral response and adaptive immunity may contribute to a cytokine storm leading to systemic hyper inflammation and exacerbation of the disease in patients with (a) comorbidities (b) older than years of age (c) of the male sex. the exact role of the innate immune system in disease pathogenesis and prevention between the sexes and the impact of age is not fully elucidated. in addition, the potential dysregulation of the innate immune response by sars-cov and sars-cov- is not completely understood which warrants further research. the cells of the airway epithelium are the first line of defense, providing a mechanical barrier (mucociliary escalator) that expels particles and pathogens via cilia, mucus, and induced coughing ( , ) . this barrier includes cells of the pulmonary epithelium and tissue-resident macrophages and dendritic cells (dcs). the macrophages and dcs express pattern recognition receptors (prrs) that can detect molecules from pathogens (pathogen-associated molecular patterns-pamps) or molecules released from damaged cells (damage or danger-associated molecular patterns-damps) ( ) ( ) ( ) . in the lung, there are two populations of macrophages, alveolar and interstitial macrophages ( ) . in addition to these macrophages, dcs play a vital role in facilitating the host defenses against respiratory diseases ( ) ( ) ( ) . dcs can be divided into plasmacytoid (pdc) and myeloid types (mdc) ( ) ( ) ( ) . macrophages and the two dc subtypes trigger antiviral responses by generating a substantial amount of type i interferon and these cells play important roles in immune surveillance in the airways and the distal lung ( , ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . during steady state, the dc density in lung associated tissue declines from the trachea to the alveoli ( ) while the representation of cells in macrophage compartment seems more complex ( ) . if a virus infects airway epithelial cells, the viral rna would be sensed via intrinsic innate receptors, including rig- , mda , nlrp inflammasome, and the rna sensing tlrs and . in the case of influenza a infection, triggering the prrs causes a strong induction of type interferon (ifn) in epithelial cells ( , ) . in other viral infections, such as respiratory syncytial virus (rsv), alveolar macrophages are the predominant source of type ifns ( ). furthermore, respiratory epithelial cells and lung macrophages are capable of secreting a broad range of chemokines like il- , macrophage inflammatory protein- (mip- ), rantes and cytokines including tnf-α, il- , il- β that influence the types of immune cells being recruited to the area in response to acute viral infections ( , ) . macrophages, depending on their polarization status of either m or m , and in a similar way as airway epithelial cells, can further elicit a th or th response ( , , ) . in the case of influenza virus infection, the magnitude of epithelial cell response can be proportional to the amount of virus which result in paracrine induction of ifn λ ( ) . not only can airway epithelial cells produce a large array of cytokines/chemokines in response to an acute viral infection, but, depending on the magnitude of prr engagement and the combination of pamps and damps triggered, these epithelial cells can modulate the type of chemokines/cytokines produced and influence the influx of innate and adaptive immune cells ( , ) . the response to different viral infections is generally similar, however, the response can be tailored in timing, magnitude and the induced gene signatures in response to each virus ( ) . unlike rsv and mers-cov, which both productively infect alveolar multiple cell types in the lower respiratory tract were found to be infected, including type i alveolar epithelium, macrophages, and putative cd + oct- + stem/progenitor cells in human lungs ( ) ( ) ( ) ciliated bronchial epithelial cells and type ii pneumocytes ( , ) un-ciliated bronchial epithelial cells and type ii pneumocytes ( ) ( ) ( ) infect mostly human type i and type ii pneumocytes and alveolar macrophages ( ) respiratory, nasal, corneal and intestinal epithelial cells ( ) club cells, ciliated cells, type i and type ii alveolar cells ( ) ciliated epithelial cells of the upper and lower respiratory tract ( ) the ciliated cells of the human airway epithelium are the main target, it also infects basal cells ( ) and immune cells, such as macrophages, b cells cd + and cd + t cells ( ) upper and lower airways epithelial cell ( no specific antiviral drugs ( ) antiviral drugs may be a treatment option ( ) no antiviral agents symptomatic treatment supportive care ( ) there are no approved antiviral medications ( ) ace macrophages ( , ) , seasonal influenza and sars-cov usually lead to non-productive infections in these cells ( ) . in addition, sars-cov infection of primary monocytes yielded little virus, likely due to the suppressive effects of ifn-α ( ) . thus, the initial cell type(s) involved in propagating a viral infection intensifies the complexity of the immune response. another key factor that determines the magnitude of the immune response is the induction and rate of cell death. although related, mers-cov induces widespread cell death when compared to sars-cov in human bronchial epithelial cell cultures ( ) . however, the sars-cov open reading frame a (orf a) protein can induced necrotic cell death in a variety of cell lines ( ) . the same orf a protein can activate the nlrp inflammasome, leading to activation of nf-κb and elevated secretion of active il- β in cell culture ( ) . cytokine ( ), with slightly different cytokine/chemokine profiles. this delay in cytokine induction was confirmed in another study using the same epithelial cell lines ( ) as well as in human alveolar type ii cells ( ) . in both cell lines and primary alveolar type ii cells, sars-cov induced ifn-β, ifn-λ, cxcl , cxcl , il- , ip- , and tnf-α ( , ) . mers-cov did not induce ifn-β but induced higher level of il- transcript in cell culture. however, no difference in il- production was observed between sars-cov and mers-cov at h post-infection ( ) . this was confirmed in-vivo using a non-human primate model comparing the immune responses to sars-cov infection between young adult cynomolgus macaques ( - yrs) and older macaques ( - yrs) ( ) . interestingly, the high induction of il- was observed on a transcript level in the older animals, while the younger once showed higher levels of ifn-β transcript ( ) . in all animals, the expression of ifn-β was inversely correlated with the pathology score, supporting the role of ifn-β in controlling disease severity ( ) and introducing a potential area of research to define age disparity observed in patients infected with sars-cov- . both older age and male sex are important factors associated with high mortality of sars-cov and sars-cov- infection ( , ) . many viruses have evolved to disrupt and subvert the immune responses. a common virus that is well-known to affect the lower airway and counteract the immune response is rsv ( , ) . the rsv genome encodes non-structural proteins ns and ns that can block type ifn production and signaling in cell cultures ( ) . similar to rsv, the measle virus v protein blocks ifn-α and β signaling by inhibiting stat and stat signaling in cell lines ( ) , whereas mers-cov m protein also suppresses type ifn by inactivating irf ( ) , leading to the low expression of ifn-β. in contrast to reports in epithelial cell lines or primary alveolar type ii cell culture and observations in non-human primates, sars-cov nucleocapsid (n) protein and membrane (m) protein, as well as nsp , can suppress ifn response via various mechanisms in cell lines ( ) ( ) ( ) . to bridge the dichotomy of inhibition of ifn signaling in cell lines, and the ifn expression in vivo, cells recruited by the infection need to be considered as a potential source. as previously discussed, infected epithelial cells via paracrine signaling to neighboring cells and resident macrophages, secrete chemokines and cytokines to attract other immune cells. in general, monocytes/macrophages are recruited by ccl (mip- a), ccl (mcp- ), and neutrophils are recruited by il- (cxcl ), cxcl , and cxcl chemokines, all of which can be secreted by airway epithelial cells ( , , ) . both monocytes and neutrophils are also recruited by complement fragment (anaphylatoxin) c a (figure ) . both influenza and sars virus can induce acute lung injury (ali) which is accompanied by high levels of c a, leading to the influx and activation of innate immune cells ( ) (figure ) . serum samples and lung tissue of sars patients showed high-level expression of cxcl (ip- ), which is also found to be induced by sars-cov in the epithelial cell line calu- ( ) . significant neutrophil, macrophage and cd t-cell infiltration can be found in the lung of sars patients by immunohistochemistry ( , , ) . in addition to post-mortem lung histology analysis in patients with sars-cov, experiments using rhesus macaques infected with sars-cov found monocyte and macrophage recruitment. the accumulation of pathogenic inflammatory monocytemacrophages (imms) was also observed in a sars-cov mouse model. the accumulation of imms resulted in heightened lung inflammatory cytokine/chemokine levels, extensive vascular leakage, and impaired virus-specific t cell responses ( ) . a strong infiltration of cd and mac positive monocytes/macrophages were found in the human and animals lung samples ( , ) . macrophages further stimulate fibroblasts to deposit extracellular matrix leading to pulmonary fibrosis ( ) , which was also observed in patients who recovered from sars ( , ) . autopsy samples acquired from patients with sars-cov- patients contained viral nucleocapsid protein (np) positive cd + macrophages in the capillaries of the spleen and in lymph nodes, indicating that sars-cov- might migrate into the spleen and lymph nodes through macrophages. this study also found that cd + macrophages appear to mediate sars-cov- into these tissue sites, contributing to virus dissemination ( ) . similar to sars-cov- , sars viral particles and genomic sequences were detected in monocytes, macrophages as well as within different organs of sars patients ( ) . sars-cov was shown to infect both immature and mature human monocyte-derived dcs by electron microscopy and immunofluorescence. the detection of negative strands of sars-cov rna in dcs suggests viral replication, but no increase in viral rna was observed ( ) . as mentioned above, there was no perceivable increase to sars-cov replication in primary monocytes ( ) . another study looked at sars-cov and mers-cov replication in human macrophages, human monocyte-derived macrophages, and dendritic cells (mddcs) and found that both viruses replicated poorly. mers-cov induced ifn-λ , cxcl , and mxa mrnas in both macrophages and mddcs, however, sars-cov was unable to induce such responses ( ) . interestingly, depletion of inflammatory monocyte-macrophages in the mouse model partially protected from lethal sars infection ( ) . these data suggest that monocytes, macrophages and dendritic cells have essential roles in cov infection. the severity of disease and the response to these viruses seems to be dependent on the induced cytokine/chemokine profiles and the amplification of the immune response by the recruited cells. growing evidence of dysregulation of an innate anti-viral response originates from studies using clinical samples ( ) and murine models ( , , ) . in addition to dysregulated cellular responses, the complement system may play an important role in sars-cov- infection (figure ) . evidence comes from sars infected patients who had lower levels of mannan binding lectin (mbl) in serum compared to healthy controls ( ) . the sars patients with a higher frequency of mbl gene polymorphisms were associated with lower serum levels or deficiency of mbl ( ) . it is still unknown if this is also true for covid- patients, which requires further investigation. in cell culture experiments sars-cov was able to bind and activate the complement cascade and block viral infection ( ) . preliminary findings in a limited number covid- patients found significant deposits of the membrane attack complex (mac), c d and mbl-associated serine protease (masp) in the microvasculature indicating sustained, systemic activation ( ) . the sars-cov- spike protein was co-localized with c d and mac ( ) . in a non-peer reviewed publication by gao et al., mers-cov, sars-cov and sars-cov- n protein are able to bind to masp- leading to enhanced complement activation ( ) (figure ) . in a later phase of the infection, the complement system might be also triggered via antibodies bound to the virus (classic activation pathway, figure ). this excessive complement activation might play a role in multi organ damage in severe covid- cases ( ) . in a mers-cov mouse model the blockade of the c a-c ar axis alleviated not only lung damage but also spleen damage ( ) . mice treated with a monoclonal antibody to c a showed reduced lung infiltration of cd + cells and significantly lower cytokine levels of il- β, tnf-α, inf-γ and il- ( ) . complement blockade might be an important way to curb part of the immune dysregulation associated with covid- . overall, we need to look closer at the role of the complement system, the recruited innate immune cells and their combined role in pathogenesis, viral clearance and the eventual resolution of the infection. the most abundant leukocytes, neutrophils, play a critical role in clearing viral infections. neutrophils, attracted by chemokines/cytokines released by tissue-resident macrophages and dcs, swarm to the site of infection. they recognize and release bioactive compounds, including cytokines, chemokines and ros, as well as nos in the very early phase of the infection ( , ) . neutrophils modulate other innate and adaptive immune responses via cytokine/chemokine release and cell death and, therefore, can ameliorate or exacerbate disease progression. neutrophils infiltrate tissues infected by cov, including sars-cov, rat coronavirus (rcov), and mouse hepatitis virus (mhv). a high neutrophil count in the blood of sars patients at the time of hospital admission is associated with a poor prognosis ( , ) . gao et al. suggested that patients with sars-cov- pneumonia can be stratified by neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio (nlr) and age ( ) . patients older than years of age and having an nlr ≥ . had more severe illness, so rapid access to the intensive care unit is required ( , ) . experiments in mice showed that sars-cov disease severity in older mice correlated with increased pulmonary inflammation and influx of neutrophils ( , ) . infection of rats with rcov could lead to neutrophil infiltrating into the respiratory tract early after inoculation, followed by the recruitment of macrophages and lymphocytes ( ) . infection of mice with a neurotropic murine cov (mhv-jhm) showed infiltration of neutrophils into the brain as early as the first day after inoculation, which then promoted the recruitment of other types of inflammatory cells into the brain, likely through the loss of the blood-brain barrier integrity ( ) . gene expression analysis in experimentally infected rhesus macaques with mers-cov revealed the recruitment of neutrophils into infected lung tissue ( , ) . angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ace-is) could serve as a potential risk for fatal covid- through the upregulation of ace ( ) and may provide a direct linkage to neutrophils and disease progression. investigators found that ace modulates il- -mediated neutrophil influx by impacting stat activity ( ) . animal models used to study the pathogenesis of sars-cov- have revealed important roles of neutrophils in infection and confirmed findings observed in patients. a new aspect in sars-cov- infection is the potential role of neutrophil extracellular traps (nets). the process of net formation is a specific type of cell death that can be triggered under inflammatory conditions ( , ) , such as gm-csf+c a, il- , ifn-α+c a or other tlr response mediators; all conditions present in severe sars-cov- infection ( , ) . the net formation has been observed in covid- patients and may contribute to thrombotic complications in covid- patients ( , ) . microvascular injury and thrombosis have been reported in covid- patients, increasing the likelihood that neutrophil net formation might play a role ( , , ) . net formation was reported to be involved in clot formation and thrombosis and can further increase inflammation ( , ) . therefore, neutrophils can attract a second wave of immune cells to the site of infection by cytokine/chemokine secretion as well as via netosis ( , ) , which included monocytes and natural killer cells. on the other hand aggregated nets were reported to limit inflammation by degrading cytokines and chemokines and disrupting neutrophil recruitment and activation ( ) . despite the presence of neutrophils in sars-cov- -infected tissues, their role in the clearance and/or immunopathology of the viral infection remains unclear. future studies on the responses of neutrophils to sars-cov- -infection or infected cells in vitro may elucidate the role of neutrophils in the pathogenesis of respiratory cov infections. natural killer (nk) cells are a heterogenic immune cell subset that acts promptly to combat viral infections. they produce significant amounts of ifn-γ, kill virus-infected cells, provide direct support to other innate immune cells, and aid in the adaptive immune response to counter viruses. nk cells express activating receptors that detect viral antigens, enabling the destruction of infected cells ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . lectin-like receptor cd and killer immunoglobulin-like receptors, such as cd b, regulate the function of nk cells. a study of patients with sars explored the relationship of the number of nk cells and the expression level of their immunoglobulin-like receptor cd b in the peripheral blood to the severity of sars ( ) . the overall count of nk cells and cd + nk cells and the percentage of cd + nk cells in patients with sars were significantly lower than counts in healthy subjects ( ) . a separate study that analyzed lymphocytes and lymphocyte subsets in a cohort of patients with sars observed reduced nk cell counts in patients ( %) ( ) . clinical reports reveal that children appear to have a milder form of sars-cov- , with peripheral blood lymphocyte levels remaining in the normal range, suggesting less immune dysfunction following the disease ( ) . this could be attributed to healthy children expressing lymphocytes, especially nk cells, in a greater quantity compared to healthy adults ( ) . interestingly, previous studies found rapid and significant restoration of lymphocyte subsets including, nk cells, in peripheral blood in patients recovering from the initial stages of sars infection ( ) . although the primary mechanism for the decrease in nk cells and other subsets during disease onset remains unknown, their contribution to sars-cov- needs further study especially from a treatment perspective. innate lymphoid cells (ilcs) are a family of innate immune cells that include ilc , ilc and ilc . although ilc facilitates lung repair after injury, the role of ilcs during respiratory viral infection is not clearly defined ( ) . evidence for the potential involvement of ilc cells in the lung during viral infection was reported in a murine model ( ) . this study found a rapid accumulation of ilc cells in the lung after an influenza virus infection, however their initial contribution to exacerbation of the disease was limited ( ) . a recent study identified an interaction between ace -expressing sars-cov- target cells and ilcs in the colon ( ) . thus, elucidating the role of ilc subsets will be important in understanding the pathogenesis of sars, sars-cov- and mers infections. there is distinct evidence indicating an important role of ifns in sars and other cov infections ( , ) . the sera of patients with sars revealed the presence of high levels of il- , il- , infγ, ccl , cxcl , and il- and products of interferon stimulated genes ( , ) . high expression levels of isgs such as cd , ifnar , and ifngr and ifn-stimulated chemokines cxcl and ccl were observed in another cohort of sars patients and were correlated with the severity of pathogenesis ( ) . significant upregulation of cxcl gene expression was observed in the severe phase of patients who died from sars. this data is corroborated by studies in patients with mers that found upregulation of cxcl in the serum of patients who developed pneumonia ( ) . cxcl and infα were also correlated with severity of disease ( ) . the importance of ifn signaling in response to cov infection has been well-demonstrated in several knockout mouse models. type i, ii, and iii ifn signaling deficient mice have increased susceptibility to mouse-adapted sars-cov strains ( , ) . studies using mice lacking the ifnar and ifnlr or stat identified higher sars-cov replication in the lungs and delayed virus clearance ( , ) . another study with mers-cov in mice expressing the human dpp receptor showed a role for the ifnar in viral clearance and lung inflammation ( ) . these mouse models suggest an important role of ifn response for cov clearance. this quick expanding medical literature is very suggestive of an important role of ifn responses for cov control and clearance. many viruses have evolved to disrupt and subvert the immune response. rsv counteracts the immune response ( , ) ; as discussed earlier, the rsv genome encodes non-structural proteins (ns and ns ) that are able to block type ifn production and signaling in cell cultures ( ) . similar to rsv, the measle virus v protein blocks ifn-α and β signaling by inhibiting stat and stat signaling in cell culture lines ( ) . covs have developed several ways to escape from innate immune pressure. mers-cov m protein suppresses type ifn by blocking the irf activation ( ) , explaining the low expression of ifn-β. in various cell lines, sars-cov nucleocapsid (n) protein, membrane (m) protein, as well as nsp , were reported to suppress ifn response ( , , ) . the nucleocapsid protein (n) of sars-cov interferes with the function of irf . although it does not form a complex with rig-i or mda , rna binding activity at the initial recognition stage of viral rna potentially contributes to immune evasion ( , ) . aside from the hcov, structural proteins, accessory, and non-structural proteins (nsp) are involved in innate immunity modulation. in both sars-cov and mers-cov, host mrna endonucleolytic cleavage is promoted by nsp protein, which modifies capped non-viral rnas ( , ) . nsp in sars-cov prevents host mrna translation by interacting with the s subunit of the ribosome; in turn, transcription and translation of viral rna is given preference over the host mrna ( ) . another study found that additional sars-cov nsp residues interfered with ifn-dependent signaling ( ) . ifn production is affected by nsp proteins in sars-cov and mers-cov. these proteins have both papain-like protease (plpro) and a plp domain, and the plpro domains in both sars-cov and mers-cov downregulate mrna levels of ccl , infβ, cxcl , and other pro-inflammatory cytokines ( ) . the suppression of ifn responses by sars-cov plpro is due to the inhibition of phosphorylation of ifn-regulatory factor (irf ) and its subsequent translocation to the nucleus where it enhances ifn gene transcription ( ) . mers-cov plpro also suppresses rig-i and mda and antagonizes ifn induction ( , ) . in hcov- e and sars-cov suppression of ifn responses, the key molecule is a adp-ribose- -monophosphatase macrodomain encoded within nsp ( ) . accessory proteins are not key in viral replication; however, in human cov, this group of proteins are involved in diverse cellular signaling, including cell proliferation, apoptosis, and ifn signaling ( ) . by downregulating phosphorylation and nuclear translocation of irf , open reading frame orf b and - interfere with ifnβ synthesis and prevent ifnβ-induced activation of ifnstimulated response element (isre) in the promoter of isg in sars-cov ( ) . in cells transfected with orf a, - b, and - of mers-cov, ifnβ promoter-driven luciferase activity is significantly reduced, and it may follow a similar pattern of suppression of irf nuclear translocation ( ) . therefore, the suppression of signaling events in infected immune and airway epithelial cells, as well as the magnitude of suppression due to elevated expression levels of these accessory proteins, needs to be further elucidated to understand delayed or hyperimmune responses and cytokine storm that occurs in cov infection. in addition to revealing our unpreparedness of handling a worldwide pandemic by a viral infection, covid- exposed our lack of understanding of the pathogenesis of diseases as well as the host immunity. the interaction of the host innate immune system and other factors including age, sex, and pre-existing conditions need further investigation regarding disease severity and morbidity of sars/mers and covid- . disease severity and its related progression are further associated with dysregulation of multiple components of both innate and adaptive immune responses leading to a cytokine storm and severe pathology. for the development of a therapeutic intervention, it is vital to elucidate the interplay among the different layers of the innate immune response and their relation to the clinical factors associated with increased morbidity and mortality in cov infection. investments in basic science research are needed to help elucidate the roles of different immune cells, and their contribution to disease severity; it will pave the way to prevent or abrogate cov outbreaks and potentially new viruses. nl, td, dh, zl, and nf performed the literature search, analyzed the literature, and wrote the manuscript. ha-h, bs, yw, and rs performed the literature search and wrote the manuscript. all authors contributed to the article and approved the submitted version. a novel coronavirus outbreak of global health concern a novel coronavirus from patients with pneumonia in china korean society of epidemiology -nco vtft. an interim review of the epidemiological characteristics of novel coronavirus cross-country comparison of case fatality rates of covid- /sars-cov- . osong public health res perspect understanding of covid- based on current evidence current status of epidemiology, diagnosis, therapeutics, and vaccines for novel coronavirus disease . 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antiviral signaling mers-cov papain-like protease has deisgylating and deubiquitinating activities regulation of irf- -dependent innate immunity by the papain-like protease domain of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus proteolytic processing, deubiquitinase and interferon antagonist activities of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus papain-like protease the adp-ribose- ''-monophosphatase domains of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus and human coronavirus e mediate resistance to antiviral interferon responses accessory proteins of sars-cov and other coronaviruses the remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.copyright © ahmed-hassan, sisson, shukla, wijewantha, funderburg, li, hayes, demberg and liyanage. this is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the creative commons attribution license (cc by). the use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. no use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms. key: cord- -i d lxko authors: gurung, arun bahadur; ali, mohammad ajmal; lee, joongku; farah, mohammad abul; al-anazi, khalid mashay title: unravelling lead antiviral phytochemicals for the inhibition of sars-cov- m(pro) enzyme through in silico approach date: - - journal: life sci doi: . /j.lfs. . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: i d lxko a new sars coronavirus (sars-cov- ) belonging to the genus betacoronavirus has caused a pandemic known as covid- . among coronaviruses, the main protease (m(pro)) is an essential drug target which, along with papain-like proteases catalyzes the processing of polyproteins translated from viral rna and recognizes specific cleavage sites. there are no human proteases with similar cleavage specificity and therefore, inhibitors are highly likely to be nontoxic. therefore, targeting the sars-cov- m(pro) enzyme with small molecules can block viral replication. the present study is aimed at the identification of promising lead molecules for sars-cov- m(pro) enzyme through virtual screening of antiviral compounds from plants. the binding affinity of selected small drug-like molecules to sars-cov- m(pro), sars-cov m(pro) and mers-cov m(pro) were studied using molecular docking. bonducellpin d was identified as the best lead molecule which shows higher binding affinity (− . kcal/mol) as compared to the control (− . kcal/mol). the molecular binding was stabilized through four hydrogen bonds with glu and thr as well as hydrophobic interactions via eight residues. the sars-cov- m(pro) shows identities of . % and . % to that of sars-cov m(pro) and mers-cov m(pro) respectively at the sequence level. at the structural level, the root mean square deviation (rmsd) between sars-cov- m(pro) and sars-cov m(pro) was found to be . Å and . Å between sars-cov- m(pro) and mers-cov m(pro). bonducellpin d exhibited broad-spectrum inhibition potential against sars-cov m(pro) and mers-cov m(pro) and therefore is a promising drug candidate, which needs further validations through in vitro and in vivo studies. j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f coronaviruses (covs) are positive-sense rna enveloped viruses which derive their name from the crown-like spikes on their surface and they belong to coronaviridae family. they are classified into four main subgroups-alpha, beta, gamma, and delta depending on their genomic structure [ ] . alpha-and beta coronaviruses cause respiratory infections in humans and gastroenteritis in other mammals [ , ] . likewise, the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) caused a disastrous pandemic in leading to % mortality [ ] . all coronaviruses infecting humans usually known to have intermediate hosts such as bats or rodents [ ] . previous outbreaks of sars-cov and mers-cov involved civet cats and dromedary camels for their direct transmission to humans [ ] . a new coronavirus caused an outbreak of the pulmonary disease in wuhan (the capital of hubei province in china) in december and has since spread across different parts of the world [ , ] . since its rna genome shows about % identity to that of the sars coronavirus (sars-cov), the new virus has been termed as sars-cov- [ ] . however, both these viruses belong to the same clade of the genus betacoronavirus [ , ] . the sars-cov- caused a disease known as covid- . at the initial outbreak, cases were linked to the huanan seafood and animal market in wuhan but active human-to-human transmission caused exponential growth in the number of reported cases. the world health organization (who) confirmed the outbreak a pandemic on march , . there have been more than , cumulative cases worldwide accounting for approximately . % case-fatality rate as of march , [ ] . due to the close similarity to sars-cov, the biochemical interactions and the pathogenesis of sars-cov- are highly likely to be similar [ ] . the virus entry into the host cell is mainly mediated through the binding of the sars spike (s) protein to the angiotensinconverting enzyme (ace- ) receptor on the cell surface [ ] . among coronaviruses, the main protease (m pro , also called cl pro ) has emerged as the best-described drug target [ ] . the j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f polyproteins that are translated from the viral rna are processed by this enzyme together with the papain-like protease(s) [ ] . the m pro recognizes and acts remarkably on eleven cleavage sites typically leu-gln↓(ser,ala,gly) on the large polyprotein ab (replicase ab) of approximately kda. blocking the activity of this enzyme would help in inhibiting viral replication. there are no reported human proteases with a similar cleavage specificity and therefore, inhibitors against this enzyme are less probable to be toxic [ ] . the three dimensional x-ray crystal structure of this enzyme in complex with α-ketoamide inhibitor b (o k) was recently solved by zhang et al. ( ) (pdb id: y f) which offers an opportunity for structure-based drug design against the enzyme target. understanding the relevance of the steady rise in the number of infected and death cases in recent time from covid- and lack of effective therapeutic interventions such as drugs and vaccines, computer-aided drug design is an important strategy to be sought after. this rational based drug design will reduce the cost and time incurred in the drug discovery process. structure-based drug design primarily relies on molecular docking to identify lead molecules against the target proteins from chemical libraries [ , ] . compared to the synthetic inhibitors plant based-drugs have less toxicity and much safer to use. the natural products such as traditional medicines and plant-derived compounds (phytochemicals) are the rich sources of promising antiviral drugs [ ] . around % of the approved antiviral drugs between and were derived from natural products [ ] . the plant extracts have been extensively used and screened for drug molecules to evaluate theirs in vitro antiviral activities. few examples of medicinal plants with proven antiviral activities include phyllanthus amarus schum. and thonn which blocks human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) replication both in vitro and in vivo [ ] ; azadirachta indica juss. (neem) shows in vitro and in vivo inhibition properties against dengue virus type- (denv- ) [ ] ; geranium sanguineum l. significantly inhibits the replication of herpes simplex virus type- and (hsv- and hsv- ) in vitro [ ] ; acacia nilotica l. possesses activity against hepatitis c virus (hcv) in vitro etc [ ] . in the present study, we have screened small drug-like molecules from a dataset of phytochemicals possessing antiviral activities using drug-like filters and toxicity studies. the the information about a set of thirty-eight phytochemicals from medicinal plants with antiviral activities was retrieved through literature search [ ] . the summary of the selected phytochemicals (class, plant source and antiviral activity) is provided in suppl. table the phytochemicals were screened based on physicochemical properties obeying lipinski's rule of five (rof) filters [ ] and further tested for in silico toxicity studies such as mutagenicity, tumorigenicity, reproductive effects and irritancy. the physicochemical properties of the phytochemicals were determined using datawarrior program version . . (sander et al., ) . table . the sequence percentage identity of the sars-cov- m pro to sars-cov m pro and mers-cov m pro was determined using a standard protein basic local alignment search (blastp) tool (https://blast.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/blast.cgi?page=proteins). multiple sequence alignment of the three sequences were performed using clustal w algorithm [ ] . pairwise structural clustering of sars-cov- m pro , sars-cov m pro and mers-cov m pro was analyzed using ucsf chimera tool [ ] . to check the suitability of molecular docking parameters and algorithm to reproduce the native binding poses, a redocking experiment was performed using the co-crystal compound. where ∆g is the binding energy in kcal/mol, r is the universal gas constant ( . calk − mol − ) and t is the temperature ( . k) a stable complex is formed between a protein and ligand which exhibits more negative free energy of binding and low k i indicates high potency of an inhibitor [ , ] . the hydrogen bonds and hydrophobic interactions between the compounds and the target enzymes were studied using a total of bioactive phytochemicals possessing antiviral activities were selected for the study. these compounds were chosen based on the previous reports of their potent antiviral effects against various pathogenic viruses such as adenovirus, influenza virus, respiratory syncytial virus, human cytomegalovirus, herpes simplex virus, poliovirus, varicella-zoster virus etc. (suppl. table ). the compound set consists of different classes of phytochemicals including active flavonoids (n= ), active organic acids (n= ), active alkaloids (n= ), active essential oils (n= ), active stilbenes (n= ) and other phytoconstituents (n= ). the three-dimensional structures the compounds were modelled and optimized. a list of these phytochemicals is enumerated in table . these optimized structures were used further for virtual screening and molecular docking studies. from a total of phytochemicals, compounds (four active flavonoids, two active alkaloids, two active essential oils and two other phytoconstituents) were found to be orally bioactive with j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f respect to rof criterion (molecular weight (mw) ≤ , clogp (partition coefficient between noctanol and water) ≤ , number of hydrogen bond donors (hbd) ≤ and number of hydrogen bond acceptors (hba) ≤ [ ] ) without any significant toxicity issues such as being nonmutagenic, non-tumourigenic, non-irritant and no adverse effects on reproductive health (table ). these drug-like compounds were further taken for molecular docking studies. the drugattrition rate in preclinical and clinical trials is quite high due to the poor pharmacokinetic studies and therefore initial screening of these drug-like molecules can increase the chances of passing through the clinics. his , his , met , pro , asp , gln , thr and gln ) ( figure d ). interestingly, the residues his and cys which form catalytic dyad residues are also found interacting with the inhibitor. thus all the three lead molecules have better binding affinity to sars-cov- m pro compared to the standard inhibitor. (n= ) ( figure d ). it also shows good binding to mers-cov m pro which involves seven hydrogen bonds with cys , ser , cys , gln and glu and hydrophobic interactions via residues met , thr , leu , his , phe , leu , gly , his , met , leu , ala , gln , val , his and gln (n= ) ( figure d ). the binding energies and inhibition constants of the phytochemicals with the sars-cov- m pro enzyme were compared with that of a set of twelve fda approved antiviral drugs-a) viral sars-cov- and coronavirus disease : what we know so far, pathogens origin and evolution of pathogenic coronaviruses fatal swine acute diarrhoea syndrome caused by an hku -related coronavirus of bat origin bat coronaviruses in china others, a pneumonia outbreak associated with a new coronavirus of probable bat origin others, a new coronavirus associated with human respiratory disease in china severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus--the species and its viruses, a statement of the coronavirus study group crystal structure of sars-cov- main protease provides a basis for design of improved α-ketoamide inhibitors a crucial role of angiotensin converting enzyme (ace ) in sars coronavirus--induced lung injury coronavirus main proteinase ( clpro) structure: basis for design of anti-sars drugs from sars to mers: crystallographic studies on coronaviral proteases enable antiviral drug design molecular docking: a powerful approach for structure-based drug discovery molecular docking in modern drug discovery: principles and recent applications antiviral properties of phytochemicals natural products as sources of new drugs over the last years concerted inhibitory activities of phyllanthus amarus on hiv replication in vitro and ex vivo inhibitory potential of neem (azadirachta indica juss) leaves on dengue virus type- replication antiherpes virus activity of extracts from the medicinal plant geranium sanguineum l antiviral activity of acacia nilotica against hepatitis c virus in liver infected cells merck molecular force field. i. basis, form, scope, parameterization, and performance of mmff exploring the physicochemical profile and the binding patterns of selected novel anticancer himalayan plant derived active compounds with macromolecular targets pubchem substance and compound databases lead-and drug-like compounds: the rule-of-five revolution datawarrior: an open-source program for chemistry aware data visualization and analysis molecular docking of the anticancer bioactive compound proceraside with macromolecules involved in the cell cycle and dna replication clustal w: improving the sensitivity of progressive multiple sequence alignment through sequence weighting, position-specific gap penalties and weight matrix choice ucsf chimera--a visualization system for exploratory research and analysis autodock and autodocktools : automated docking with selective receptor flexibility insights into protein-ligand interactions: mechanisms, models, and methods molecular docking studies of lonchocarpus cyanescens triterpenoids as inhibitors for malaria ligplot+: multiple ligand-protein interaction diagrams for drug discovery structures of two coronavirus main proteases: implications for substrate binding and antiviral drug design in silico study of fucoxanthin as a tumor cytotoxic agent molecular structures and antiviral activities of naturally occurring and modified cassane furanoditerpenoids and friedelane triterpenoids from caesalpinia minax antibacterial, antifungal, and antiviral activities of some flavonoids list of abbreviations ace- :angiotensin converting enzyme blast: basic local alignment search clogp: partition coefficient between n-octanol and water hba: hydrogen bond acceptor hbd: hydrogen bond donor mers-cov: middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus mpro: main protease mw: molecular weight pdb: protein data bank rmsd: root mean square deviation rof: rule of five sars-cov: severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus ligplot analysis for top three lead compounds along with the control against sars Å) Å) key: cord- -jc k fki authors: gardner, emma g.; kelton, david; poljak, zvonimir; van kerkhove, maria; von dobschuetz, sophie; greer, amy l. title: a case-crossover analysis of the impact of weather on primary cases of middle east respiratory syndrome date: - - journal: bmc infect dis doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: jc k fki background: middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) is endemic in dromedary camels in the arabian peninsula, and zoonotic transmission to people is a sporadic event. in the absence of epidemiological data on the reservoir species, patterns of zoonotic transmission have largely been approximated from primary human cases. this study aimed to identify meteorological factors that may increase the risk of primary mers infections in humans. methods: a case-crossover design was used to identify associations between primary mers cases and preceding weather conditions within the -week incubation period in saudi arabia using univariable conditional logistic regression. cases with symptom onset between january – december were obtained from a publicly available line list of human mers cases maintained by the world health organization. the complete case dataset (n = ) was reduced to approximate the cases most likely to represent spillover transmission from camels (n = ). data from meteorological stations closest to the largest city in each province were used to calculate the daily mean, minimum, and maximum temperature ((ο)c), relative humidity (%), wind speed (m/s), and visibility (m). weather variables were categorized according to strata; temperature and humidity into tertiles, and visibility and wind speed into halves. results: lowest temperature (odds ratio = . ; % confidence interval = . – . ) and humidity (or = . ; % ci = . – . ) were associated with increased cases – days later. high visibility was associated with an increased number of cases days later (or = . ; % ci = . – . ), while wind speed also showed statistically significant associations with cases – days later. conclusions: results suggest that primary mers human cases in saudi arabia are more likely to occur when conditions are relatively cold and dry. this is similar to seasonal patterns that have been described for other respiratory diseases in temperate climates. it was hypothesized that low visibility would be positively associated with primary cases of mers, however the opposite relationship was seen. this may reflect behavioural changes in different weather conditions. this analysis provides key initial evidence of an environmental component contributing to the development of primary mers-cov infections. middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers--cov) is an emerging zoonotic agent that was first isolated in from a patient hospitalized in saudi arabia [ ] , and has since infected over people with a % case fatality ratio [ ] . after an incubation period of - days [ ] , the virus causes a disease (middle east respiratory syndrome, or mers) characterized by fever, cough, and shortness of breath, which commonly leads to pneumonia and respiratory failure [ ] . the virus circulates silently in dromedary camels, the only known reservoir species and zoonotic source of spillover to humans [ ] . however, not all primary human cases have documented exposure to dromedaries or their products, such as milk and meat. although human-to-human community-acquired infections have not been documented, there is evidence that asymptomatic infections of mers-cov exist and could be a source of community transmission [ ] . zoonotic spillover from dromedary camels to humans has been documented in the arabian peninsula [ ] . subsequent secondary cases can occur after unprotected contact with family members and within healthcare facilities once the primary case seeks medical assistance [ ] . while the sizes of mers-cov outbreaks have decreased thanks to improved infection control in healthcare settings in affected countries, cases continue to be reported regularly, especially in saudi arabia, where surveillance is strong [ ] . in order to further reduce cases and prevent human outbreaks, a better understanding of zoonotic transmission of mers-cov is needed. a deeper understanding of the epidemiology of primary human cases can inform evidence-based interventions at the level of the community at the animal-human interface. zoonotic modes of mers-cov transmission have not yet been definitively determined. mers-cov in dromedary camels causes a mild upper respiratory infection with no documented viremia [ ] , and therefore droplet or aerosol transmission by close camel contact is most likely. however, transmission through contaminated milk, meat, and urine is possible, although the contribution of camel products cannot currently be estimated due to a lack of scientific evidence. the effects of weather and environmental conditions on respiratory diseases with similar modes of transmission (direct contact or droplet), such as influenza and respiratory syncytial virus, have been documented. temperature and humidity are associated with transmissibility of influenza virus [ ] , and the seasonality of both influenza and respiratory syncytial virus is linked to these two factors [ ] . air quality is also associated with respiratory infections. air pollution has been linked to pneumonia and acute lower respiratory infections [ , ] , while dust storms are associated with infectious respiratory disease by acting both as a carrier of pathogens and increasing airway susceptibility to infection [ ] . the risk of acquiring primary mers may be influenced by changes in weather conditions in two ways. first, weather conditions may affect the viability and persistence of the virus in the environment and therefore its transmissibility [ , ] . secondly, weather influences behaviour, and it is plausible that the likelihood of people contacting camels depends on environmental conditions. seasonal or meteorological patterns of primary mers-cov infections have yet to be explored. this study examined whether meteorological conditions were associated with the development of known primary mers-cov infections using a case-crossover study design. case-crossover studies are designed so that exposures during a period of interest before a case are compared to exposures during control periods before or after the case. in this regard, case-crossover studies answer the question "why now?" as opposed to "why these subjects?" [ ] . the design is well suited for rare diseases with short incubation periods such as mers-cov. the effect period, that is, the period of time after the proposed "trigger", typically has a degree of uncertainty [ ] , leading to exposure windows with intervals of biological relevance to the outcome of interest. for infectious diseases, this would equate to the incubation period [ ] . furthermore, with appropriate selection of referent windows, the case-crossover design controls for confounding effects of temporal fluctuations such as climatic and livestock-associated seasons (e.g. the dromedary breeding cycle) [ ] . by comparing weather conditions immediately before mers cases to weather conditions at other times, this study aimed to identify environmental factors that are associated with primary human mers in saudi arabia. the world health organization (who) maintains a list of all human laboratory confirmed cases of mers-cov. publicly available case data from january -december were obtained. case data prior to were excluded due to a lack of standardized data collection prior to [ ] . a mers case was defined throughout the study period as "a person with laboratory confirmation of mers-cov infection irrespective of clinical signs and symptoms" [ ] . of the confirmed cases with onset dates between january -december , cases were removed where exposure to camels and camel products were known not to have occurred. geographically, cases were restricted to those reported from saudi arabia, where the province of exposure was provided (n = ). cases that were likely primary cases were retained by excluding healthcare workers and cases with documented contact with known mers cases (n = ). cases were further removed where symptom onset date was after hospitalization date (n = ). of the remaining cases (n = ), ( . %) had missing symptom onset dates. to retain these ten cases, the median time between symptom onset date and lab confirmation date was calculated ( days) and subtracted from the lab confirmation date to obtain an estimate of the symptom onset date. visual inspection of the timeline of retained cases identified a spike from riyadh province around august , which corresponds to a documented mers-cov outbreak in the city of riyadh from july-september . data from a published report of the outbreak contained weekly counts of primary and secondary cases [ ] . these weekly counts were compared with the case list for this analysis and thirty-two secondary cases associated with the riyadh outbreak were removed. the final number of retained cases fitting the primary case definition was ( fig. ). for the purposes of the descriptive results, age groups were chosen for ease of reading while still providing a visualization of the distribution, and according to age categories provided by the statistical yearbook of the general authority for statistics of the kingdom of saudi arabia, which was used for standardization. meteorological stations closest to the largest city in each province were identified by a numeric identifier and location using google earth [ ] (fig. ) . meteorological data were obtained from the noaa global hourly index [ ] . the daily mean, minimum, and maximum temperature, wind speed, and visibility were calculated. relative humidity was calculated using temperature and dew point data [ ] . a case-crossover design was used to explore the associations between primary mers cases and preceding meteorological conditions [ , ] . each case's exposure status on individual days before disease onset (the exposure window) was compared to the exposure status on different days during a control period. under the assumption that weather effects on virus transmission were immediate, the exposure window, that is, the time lag between weather events and disease onset, was set to be equal to the mers incubation period of - days [ ] . univariable conditional logistic regression was used to assess statistical associations between cases and weather variables on each day within the case and control exposure windows. associations with p < . were considered statistically significant. a time-stratified design was used, with a -day strata length with random bi-directional controls matched by day of the week. using a -day time window provides at least three control days for each case exposure day while minimizing bias introduced from seasonal changes [ ] . temperature and humidity variables were categorized into tertiles calculated within each time stratum. wind speed and horizontal ground visibility were categorized into two groups within each stratum with the median as cutoff. therefore, there is no single threshold for each weather variable, but rather "low", "medium" and "high" are determined according to the measurements in each stratum. statistical analyses were conducted using stata . (stata corporation, college station, tx). four hundred and forty-six cases of mers-cov in saudi arabia with symptom onset dates between january -december were included in the analysis. table presents the case counts as well as crude and age-and sex-standardized rates by province, sex, and age group. all provinces in saudi arabia reported cases during this -year period. riyadh province had the highest count of reported cases with cases ( %), although qasseem had the highest cumulative incidence ( . cases per , people), followed by riyadh ( . cases per , people). the median age of cases was years (range, - ), and % of cases were male. age and sex proportions are similar to figures reported for primary cases in previously published literature [ ] . figure presents the case count by month from to for the entire country. cases were reported in every month of the year, although no clear seasonality is apparent. temperature and humidity conditions were associated with case occurrence - days later. the odds of a mers case days after low minimum temperatures was . ( % confidence interval [ci], . - . ) higher than after control days, while low mean daily temperature was similarly associated with cases at (or, . ; % ci, . - . ) and day lags (or, . ; % ci, . - . ) (fig. ) . conversely, high minimum, maximum, and mean temperatures were protective at similar lag days. for example, the odds ratios of mers cases for the high mean daily temperature was . ( % ci, . - . ) with a -day lag, and . ( % ci, . - . ) with a -day lag. humidity followed a similar pattern to temperature. when maximum daily humidity was low days earlier, the odds ratio for a mers cases was . ( % ci, . - . ). high humidity was associated with fewer cases across all three daily measurements (fig. ) . for example, the odds ratios of cases for high maximum daily humidity was . ( % ci, . - . ) and . ( % ci, . - . ) at -and -day lags, respectively. high visibility was positively associated with occurrence of a mers case days later, whereas low visibility demonstrated protective effects for risk of mers (fig. ) . the odds of a mers case days after both minimum and mean daily visibility were high was . and . times higher than after control days ( % ci, . - . and . - . ). conversely, when minimum and mean wind speed results were conflicting, with low minimum daily wind speed and high maximum wind speed both positively associated with cases at similar time lags (fig. ) . the odds of a mers case was . times higher days after low minimum wind speed ( % ci, . - . ), while the odds ratio of cases for when minimum wind speed was relatively high was . ( % ci, . - . ). conversely, the odds of a case when maximum wind speed was relatively high was . ( % ci, . - . ) (not shown in figure) . mers is a global public health threat that causes severe respiratory disease with a high case fatality ratio, identified by who as a priority pathogen for research and development in public health emergency contexts [ ] . it is primarily characterized by healthcare-associated outbreaks triggered by index cases who acquire infection from dromedary camels and possibly from unidentified asymptomatic human carriers. improving our understanding of the epidemiology and risks of primary cases of mers is vital for designing effective interventions that aim to reduce these index cases and prevent subsequent outbreaks in humans. the list of cases maintained by the who was restricted to a subset of primary cases based on explicit inclusion and exclusion criteria and was used to analyze the effect of weather on case occurrence using a case-crossover design. all four weather variables demonstrated statistically significant correlations within the incubation period for mers in humans. the statistically significant time lags for each variable do not match up perfectly, which is to be expected and could be due to a number of reasons including natural variability in incubation periods, variable impact of weather on transmission, the interaction of unmeasured cofactors on weather variables as well the direct effect of unmeasured factors on transmission, and stochasticity in general. acute weather events as well as general seasonal patterns may affect disease transmission rates by altering pathogen viability and persistence in the environment as well as by influencing human behaviour and contact patterns. this study found that mers-cov, although a zoonotic disease, follows similar environmental transmission patterns to other non-zoonotic respiratory diseases with analogous modes of transmission such as influenza and respiratory syncytial virus. tamerius et al. [ ] have shown that global trends of influenza broadly follow either a "cold-dry" or "humid-rainy" pattern, corresponding to temperate and tropical climates. additionally, temperate climates tend to have a single annual peak and tropical climates have semi-annual peaks. they further demonstrate that for countries with an annual influenza peak such as saudi arabia, temperature and humidity can be predictive of those peaks, even at latitudes close to the equator. respiratory syncytial virus also follows similar environmental conditions, with peak timing in the arabian peninsula from december to february, following the distribution of cases in the temperate northern hemisphere [ ] . the influence of weather is further supported by experimental evidence, which has demonstrated that lower temperatures and lower relative humidity each favour influenza transmission [ ] . furthermore, coronaviruses have been shown to exhibit strong seasonal variation in natural hosts, and the theory that these fluctuations may increase risk of zoonotic transmission at certain times of the year has been discussed [ ] . the results here demonstrate that colder, drier conditions may increase the risk of zoonotic transmission of mers from dromedaries to humans. sandstorms, dust storms, and air pollution in saudi arabia and elsewhere have been associated with increased morbidity and mortality, including from respiratory disease [ , ] . a case-crossover study in the united states demonstrated the short-term effects of air pollution on acute lower respiratory infections [ ] , while another study demonstrated increased numbers of pneumonia admissions following acute dust storm events in taiwan [ ] . dust storms can act as a pathogen carrier and also induce inflammatory reactions, potentially increasing both exposure and susceptibility to disease agents [ ] . horizontal ground visibility and wind speed were used as proxies for the occurrence of sandstorms and acute air pollution events. visibility can be reduced to m for an average of . h during a sandstorm [ ] . summarizing the weather data used in this study, the mean daily visibility by province ranged from m to over , m, although the median value was over m in all but one province. the distribution of visibility indicates that fig. daily mean and minimum temperature and risk of primary mers by province in saudi arabia. odds ratio (solid line) and % confidence limits (dashed lines) are plotted on the y-axis, while time lags preceding case occurrence are plotted on the x-axis. the odds of primary mers is increased with low temperature at and day lags (a &b), while the odds of primary mers are decreased with high temperatures at and day lags (c & d). asterisks indicate statistically significant odds ratios on corresponding days anything less than full clarity was categorized as low visibility, and that according to the measurements in [ ] , could indicate the presence of a sandstorm. it was hypothesized that primary mers infections are more likely to increase following sandstorms or other severe events of air pollution that affect visibility. however, results indicate that the risk of primary mers infection increased following high visibility days, and decreased following low visibility days. this may be due to behaviour, if people are more likely to stay inside during acute weather events, and less likely to engage in activities such as interacting with camels. it was further hypothesized that higher wind speeds would be associated with more cases of mers. while a positive association was found between cases and high maximum wind speeds days prior, there were also similar results to those of visibility. low minimum wind speed was positively correlated with cases, and conversely, when minimum wind speed was relatively high there were statistically fewer cases of mers. results suggest that further investigation of wind speed as a factor for primary mers is warranted. there are several limitations and potential sources of bias in this study. the major cities in saudi arabia are severely polluted and exceed who guidelines, as measured by particulate matter (pm) [ , ] . sand and dust storms as well as other sources of air pollution such as industrial activities, fuel combustion, and traffic emissions contribute to elevated levels of pm in the country [ ] , all of which contribute to reduced visibility [ ] [ ] [ ] . this study did not differentiate between sandstorms and other acute events that reduce visibility, and discerning between different forms of air pollution may provide insights about the risk of mers-cov transmission under different environmental conditions. fifty-two cases ( . %) in the subset of primary cases had no known exposure history (no information on camel exposure, contact with a known case, nor healthcare worker status). the subset of primary cases investigated likely also include secondary cases, and is a source of selection bias. furthermore, given that mers is an emerging disease, case reporting and data collection standardization may have improved over the -year period included here. geographical case data were available only at the provincial level, while exposure data from the weather station closest to the largest metropolitan city in each province were used. while camel raising in the middle east is moving from extensive to intensive production systems and concentrating around cities [ ] , human spillover cases would be scattered throughout the provinces to an unknown degree. therefore, if environmental conditions differ significantly within a province, this could be a source of misclassification bias. the risk of primary human cases of mers was associated with a decrease in temperature and humidity, and an increase in ground visibility. the temperature and humidity findings are consistent with associations between the environment and other respiratory diseases. further study of weather and seasonal risk factors may strengthen the evidence for an environmental component of mers-cov transmission. a better understanding of virus viability in different environmental conditions is also a key research need. evidence of environmental risk factors for mers could be utilized by public or one fig. daily visibility and wind speed variables and risk of primary mers by province in saudi arabia. odds ratio (solid line) and % confidence limits (dashed lines) are plotted on the y-axis, while time lags preceding case occurrence are plotted on the x-axis. the odds of primary mers is increased with high visibility and decreased with low visibility after days (a & c), while the odds of primary mers are increased with low wind speed and decreased when wind speed is high at -day lags (b & d). when maximum wind speed was high, the odds of a mers case were increased with a -day lag (not shown). asterisks indicate statistically significant odds ratios on corresponding days health practitioners for targeted interventions during higher-risk periods. the risk of mers acquired from zoonotic transmission, or from asymptomatic carriers in the community, appears to be sensitive to weather conditions, providing key initial evidence of an environmental component for the development of primary mers-cov infections. isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia world health organization. who | middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov). who world health organization. investigation of cases of human infection with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) interim guidance middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) fact sheet mers-cov technical working group. mers-cov: progress in global response to epidemic threat, remaining challenges and way forward: report from the fao-oie-who global technical meeting on mers-cov presence of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus antibodies in saudi arabia: a nationwide, cross-sectional, serological study evidence for camel-to-human transmission of mers coronavirus middle east respiratory syndrome world health organization. mers situation update replication and shedding of mers-cov in upper respiratory tract of inoculated dromedary camels influenza virus transmission is dependent on relative humidity and temperature latitudinal variations in seasonal activity of influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (rsv): a global comparative review international approach to environmental and lung health a perspective from the fogarty international center short-term elevation of fine particulate matter air pollution and acute lower respiratory infection lung health in era of climate change and dust storms seasonality of infectious diseases and severe acute respiratory syndrome-what we don't know can hurt us should we use a case-crossover design? a comparison of case-crossover and case-control designs in a study of risk factors for hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome bias in the case-crossover design:implications for studies of air pollution middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) disease outbreak news world health organization. who | middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: case definition for reporting to notes from the field: nosocomial outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome in a large tertiary care hospital national centers for environmental information weathermetrics: functions to convert between weather metrics the case-crossover design: a method for studying transient effects on the risk of acute events referent selection in case-crossover analyses of acute health effects of air pollution reported direct and indirect contact with dromedary camels among laboratory-confirmed mers-cov cases world health organization. who | list of blueprint priority pathogens environmental predictors of seasonal influenza epidemics across temperate and tropical climates the pulmonary consequences of sandstorms in saudi arabia: a comprehensive review and update the effect of sandstorms and air pollution on causespecific hospital admissions in taipei asian dust storm events are associated with an acute increase in pneumonia hospitalization predicting the development of weather phenomena that influence aviation at abu dhabi international airport. pretoria: university of pretoria outdoor particulate matter ( pm ) and associated cardiovascular diseases in the middle east world health organization. who air quality guidelines for particulate matter, ozone, nitrogen dioxide and sulfur dioxide: global update : summary of risk assessment the influence of meteorological conditions and atmospheric circulation types on pm and visibility in tel aviv estimation of particulate matter from visibility in bangkok fine particulate matter characteristics and its impact on visibility impairment at two urban sites in korea: seoul and incheon human-dromedary camel interactions and the risk of acquiring zoonotic middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection the authors would like to thank all of the many individuals who investigated and collected information from mers patients in saudi arabia. availability of data and materials all laboratory confirmed human cases of mers included this publication can be found on the who disease outbreak news website, at the following website: http://www.who.int/csr/don/archive/disease/mers-cov/en/ authors' contributions eg designed the study, analyzed and interpreted the data and wrote the manuscript. ag and dk provided significant guidance in all aspects of the research. ag, dk, svd, mvk and zp substantially contributed to the conception of the study and interpretation of the results, critically reviewed the manuscript and provided final approval for publication.ethics approval and consent to participate not applicable: all data used were publicly available. not applicable. publicly available, non-individually identifying data were used in this publication. the authors declare that they have no competing interests. springer nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. key: cord- -joiajgs authors: shah, vibhuti kumar; firmal, priyanka; alam, aftab; ganguly, dipyaman; chattopadhyay, samit title: overview of immune response during sars-cov- infection: lessons from the past date: - - journal: front immunol doi: . /fimmu. . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: joiajgs after the flu pandemic, the world is again facing a similar situation. however, the advancement in medical science has made it possible to identify that the novel infectious agent is from the coronavirus family. rapid genome sequencing by various groups helped in identifying the structure and function of the virus, its immunogenicity in diverse populations, and potential preventive measures. coronavirus attacks the respiratory system, causing pneumonia and lymphopenia in infected individuals. viral components like spike and nucleocapsid proteins trigger an immune response in the host to eliminate the virus. these viral antigens can be either recognized by the b cells or presented by mhc complexes to the t cells, resulting in antibody production, increased cytokine secretion, and cytolytic activity in the acute phase of infection. genetic polymorphism in mhc enables it to present some of the t cell epitopes very well over the other mhc alleles. the association of mhc alleles and its downregulated expression has been correlated with disease severity against influenza and coronaviruses. studies have reported that infected individuals can, after recovery, induce strong protective responses by generating a memory t-cell pool against sars-cov and mers-cov. these memory t cells were not persistent in the long term and, upon reactivation, caused local damage due to cross-reactivity. so far, the reports suggest that sars-cov- , which is highly contagious, shows related symptoms in three different stages and develops an exhaustive t-cell pool at higher loads of viral infection. as there are no specific treatments available for this novel coronavirus, numerous small molecular drugs that are being used for the treatment of diseases like sars, mers, hiv, ebola, malaria, and tuberculosis are being given to covid- patients, and clinical trials for many such drugs have already begun. a classical immunotherapy of convalescent plasma transfusion from recovered patients has also been initiated for the neutralization of viremia in terminally ill covid- patients. due to the limitations of plasma transfusion, researchers are now focusing on developing neutralizing antibodies against virus particles along with immuno-modulation of cytokines like il- , type i interferons (ifns), and tnf-α that could help in combating the infection. this review highlights the similarities of the coronaviruses that caused sars and mers to the novel sars-cov- in relation to their pathogenicity and immunogenicity and also focuses on various treatment strategies that could be employed for curing covid- . the whole world is currently confronting a crisis situation that first appeared in late december as merely a few cases of pneumonia in wuhan, china. the patients were exhibiting common symptoms like fever, dry cough, sore throat, breathlessness, and fatigue. sample swabs from the oral cavity and anal region were collected along with the blood and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (balf) from all seven of the patients, irrespective of their age and gender, which were then sent to the wuhan institute of virology for further examination. as the outbreak initiated at the seafood market with the onset of winter, similar to that of the previous severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) infection, the scientists first screened the samples using pan-cov qpcr primers. surprisingly, five samples were reported positive for coronavirus. thorough investigation employing next-generation sequencing and phylogenetic analysis led to the identification of the causative agent of this respiratory disease, a novel coronavirus ( -ncov) ( ) . as more cases started to appear around the world, on february , , the world health organization assigned a name, corona virus disease or covid- , to the disease and declared it a pandemic on march , . the virus was renamed from -ncov to sars-cov- by the international committee on taxonomy of viruses on the basis of its genetic similarity to a previously known coronavirus, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov) ( ) . transmission of sars-cov- occurs when a healthy individual inhales or comes into contact with respiratory droplets from an infected person. the average incubation period before patients exhibit disease symptoms ranges from to days ( ) . before the spread of covid- , sars emerged as an epidemic in , followed by middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) in , both caused by a novel coronavirus of zoonotic origin and assigned to the genus betacoronavirus ( ) . the worldwide outbreak of sars-cov- has put life on hold, having a major impact on the world's economy, and has claimed ∼ , lives globally as of june , ( , ) . unlike previous episodes of coronavirus spread, where it took months to identify the cause of infection and perform genome sequencing ( ) , advancement in science and technology made it possible to identify the causative organism swiftly. within a few weeks of the outbreak, different laboratories across the world had sequenced the whole viral genome and had also provided structural and functional insights into the essential proteins required by the virus for its survival. these immediate scientific inputs helped with developing diagnostic kits and defining treatment strategies for effective prognosis and prevention ( ) ( ) ( ) . in this review, we are emphasizing the immunological aspect of sars-cov- pathogenesis by taking into consideration the previous experimental and clinical knowledge obtained from the coronaviruses that were responsible for causing sars and mers. this approach will assist in utilizing immunotherapies, repurposing the previously approved antiviral drugs, and developing therapeutic vaccines specific to novel coronavirus more effectively. initial genome sequencing and phylogenetic analysis of novel coronavirus sars-cov- has shown that it is genetically similar to previously known coronavirus sars-cov and hence is placed under the family coronaviridae. coronavirus contains positivesense single-stranded rna (+ve ssrna) as its genetic material, which can be about kb in length and is mostly protected by an outer fatty layer of an envelope that also helps the virus to evade host immune response and assists its entry inside the host cell ( , ) . the subfamily coronavirinae is further subdivided into four genera, namely alpha-, beta-, gamma-, and delta-coronavirus (α-cov, β-cov, γ-cov, and δ-cov). viruses having the potential to infect humans are placed under the genus α-cov and β-cov (sars-cov & mers-cov), whereas viruses of γ-cov and δ-cov genera are mostly known to infect avians and pigs ( ) . the novel coronavirus, sars-cov- falls under the genus β-cov, as it shares % sequence identity with sars-cov-like coronaviruses (derived from bat) but is only % identical to sars-cov and % identical to mers-cov ( ) . thus, it can be deduced by its genome identity that the immediate host of this virus could be a bat, which then transmitted it to some unknown intermediate host that acted as a source for the transmission of the virus to humans. like those of sars-cov and mers-cov, the sars-cov- genome comprises of open reading frames (orfs) in number. at the ′ end of the viral genome, overlapping orfs a and b are present that encode the rna polymerase and other nonstructural proteins of the virus and occupy approximately twothirds of the genome. genes encoding structural proteins such as spike (s), membrane (m), envelope (e), and nucleocapsid (n), are present in the remaining one-third of its genome spanning from the ′ to the ′ terminal, along with several genes encoding non-structural proteins (nsps) and accessory proteins scattered in between, as shown in figure . despite being in the same serogroup, there is a slight difference in the nucleotide number, sequence, gene order, and expression method among previously known coronaviruses and the novel sars-cov- ( , , ) . recent reports highlight that a few amino acid substitutions have occurred in the novel coronavirus genes encoding the s protein, nsp , nsp , and receptor-binding domain (rbd). these mutations in the nsp & nsp are also believed to impart the enhanced infection abilities of the novel coronavirus ( , ) . rna viruses are prone to acquiring genetic mutations that eventually help them to escape the host immune system and develop drug resistance. researchers have also found minor mutations in sars-cov- genotype in different covid- patients ( ) . one such hotspot of mutation in the sars-cov- genome is the rna-dependent rna polymerase gene. on analyzing sequences across the globe, eight repetitive novel point mutations were observed. viral genetic sequences accessed from europe exhibited five mutation hotspots, whereas the remaining three point mutations were solely present in the sequences from north america. these unique mutations suggest that the viral strains are continuously evolving across the globe figure | schematic representation of the coronavirus structure and genomic comparison of coronaviruses. (a) representation of coronavirus showing different components of the particle, which is - nm in diameter. the single-stranded rna (ssrna) genome, covered with the envelope and membrane proteins, gains access into the host cell and hijacks the replication machinery. (b) the ssrna of sars-cov- is about kb and has similarities with the genomes of sars-cov and mers-cov. translation of this ssrna results in the formation of two polyproteins, namely pp a and pp ab, that are further sliced to generate numerous non-structural proteins (nsps). the remaining orfs encode for various structural and accessory proteins that help in assembly of the viral particle and evading immune response. and that the strains from europe, north america, and asia might have co-existed the whole time ( ) . another similar report analyzed , global viral genomic sequences and found unique mutation sites on sars-cov- genome that encodes nsps and s protein, suggesting that the virus is trying to adapt to its new host ( ) . as numerous drugs are currently being designed to target the proteins that are essential for the survival of the virus, rapid genetic mutation occurring in these proteins might not prove to be a potential candidate for drug design. therefore, the invariable region of the virus could be a better target to avoid drug failures. interestingly, sars-cov- , similar to sars-cov, exploits the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ace ) receptor to gain access inside human cells, whereas mers-cov binds specifically to dipeptidyl peptidase (dpp ) receptor ( , ) . binding of the virus particle to the specific receptor on the host cell plays a key role in governing its pathogenicity. functional evaluation was carried out to reveal the potential receptors for different betacoronaviruses (β-cov) including sars-cov- , and it was found out that the entry of the virus particle was enhanced in human cells expressing ace receptor instead of dpp or aminopeptidase n (apn) in the case of the novel coronavirus ( ) . recent structural insights provided by cryo-em studies of s protein in prefusion conformation highlighted that the binding efficiency of ace and s protein of sars-cov- is - times greater than for the previously known sars-cov ( , ) . the latest reports suggest that the trimeric s protein of sars-cov- is sliced by transmembrane protease serine (tmprss ), similar to sars-cov ( , ) . hence, profound knowledge of the potential receptors to which the virus particle can bind and its associated proteases will help us in designing specific antiviral drugs and neutralizing antibodies and will lead us to foresee whether particular coronaviruses of zoonotic origin could be able to adapt and infect humans. all coronaviruses initiate entry inside the target cell by engaging the host receptor with the s glycoprotein present on their surface so as to gain entry inside the target cell. the region of s protein containing the rbd is present on the s subunit. in a few coronaviruses, rbd is present at the n-terminus region of s , whereas in sars-cov, it is situated at the c-terminus region ( , ) . the fusogenic activity of virus-cell membrane is governed by two tandem domains, heptad repeats (hr , ) that are present on the s region of s protein ( , ) . initially, it was believed that sars-cov enters the target cell merely by virtue of cell membrane integration of virus particle and host cell membrane ( ) . later, it was discovered that an essential proteolytic cleavage event takes place in the s protein at the s position of sars-cov that results in membrane fusion and facilitates virus entry inside the cell ( ) . once the coronavirus is inside the host cell via membrane fusion, it releases its +ve ssrna genome into the cytoplasmic compartment, where the translation of orf- a and orf- b begins resulting in the formation of two large polyproteins (pp a and pp ab). three functional proteases then cleave the polyproteins into non-structural proteins (nsp - ), which eventually create the viral rna polymerase and other accessory proteins for virus assembly ( ) ( ) ( ) . an uninterrupted replication-transcription event results in the formation of various nested sets of subgenomic (sg) mrnas that eventually translate into numerous structural and accessory proteins ( ) . the e glycoproteins after synthesis are incorporated into the rough endoplasmic reticulum or golgi membrane. the +ve ssrna combines with capsid protein to form the nucleocapsid, followed by budding of assembled virus particles in the er-golgi intermediate compartment (ergic) ( ) . lastly, the virus particle-loaded vesicles are fused with the cell membrane for effective shedding of the virus ( ). these new virions are now accessible to infect the neighboring healthy cells and are also released into the surrounding environment via respiratory droplets that are highly contagious and hence potentially spread the disease to healthy individuals. the path followed by sars-cov- to reach the lungs is via the naso-oral cavity. once the virus is inhaled, it enters the epithelial cells of the nasal cavity by engagement of ace receptor with the viral rbd and initiates its replication ( , , ) . this initial asymptomatic phase lasts for about - days, during which the virus multiplies in the upper respiratory tract, where no major hindrance is caused by the innate immune cells. within - days of initial encounter, the common symptoms of covid- start to appear, which are similar to those of sars and mers, i.e., fever, dry cough, pharyngitis, shortness of breath, joint pain, and tiredness. numerous problems arise during this phase of the disease, including nosocomial and fomite transmission of infection, which enhances the chances of community spread ( ) . soon, the virus begins to move toward the lower respiratory tract via airways, and this triggers a strong innate immune response. patients at this stage start exhibiting enhanced pro-inflammatory response that leads to viral sepsis accompanied by other complications, including pulmonary edema, acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards), different organ failures, and death in the worst scenarios ( ) . the infected individuals rarely show the intestinal symptoms like diarrhea that were evident in other coronavirus infections. patients are recommended to be quarantined to prevent community spread of this pandemic virus ( ) . the severity of covid- has been found to be greater in aged individuals and in people with a health history, such as those immune-compromised by hiv infection or by chemotherapy for cancer. diabetic and asthma patients, along with individuals with hypertension, obesity, or heart, kidney, or liver disorders, are also at higher risk if they acquire the disease ( ) . autopsy reports of individuals who died due to sars show multi-organ dysfunction, with the highest viral titers in the lungs and immune cells in circulation, thus damaging the pulmonary and immune system ( , ) . as opposed to adults, only a very small population of children has been infected with sars-cov- . in one study, the symptoms displayed by children above years were found to be milder as compared to those of younger children, who showed severe symptoms but with rare deaths and better prognosis ( ) . the study speculated two major possibilities related to covid- severity in children among different age groups. one of these rests on the finding that ace activity is higher in children aged - years; after this age, it starts to decline until adolescence. this could be one of the reasons why lung fibrosis is observed mainly in younger children. secondly, differential cd + and cd + t cell populations have been seen in children as compared to adults ( , ) . a large number of clinical and epidemiological criteria were defined to assess probable pediatric cases of covid- ( ) . a preliminary report from a cross-sectional study of children admitted to us and canadian pediatric intensive care units (picus) during march -april , , revealed that the children were admitted in the usa whereas no covid- cases were reported in canadian picus. the study revealed that there are fewer covid- cases in children as compared to adults and that there is a median picu time of days ( ). a recent preprint from paris reports that children (age . - . ) were admitted experiencing symptoms similar to kawasaki disease (kd) along with gastrointestinal issues and elevated inflammatory markers. further investigation suggested that they were also sars-cov- -positive, speculating that this could be the reason for kd shock syndrome ( ) . similar cases have been observed in new york, where four otherwise healthy sars-cov- -positive children started displaying symptoms similar to kd and toxic shock syndrome, thereby needing intensive care ( ) . therefore, medical practitioners should be prepared to tackle such sudden post-infection complications to avoid the associated risks. once the virus gains access inside the target cell, the host immune system recognizes the whole virus or its surface epitopes, eliciting the innate or adaptive immune response (figure ). pathogen recognition receptors (prrs) present on immune cells, mainly toll-like receptors , , and , are the first to identify the virus, which leads to enhanced interferon (ifn) production. the function of host innate immune cells is impaired during sars-cov and mers-cov infection by their non-structural proteins, which affects the overall cytokine production ( ) ( ) ( ) . humoral response against sars-cov- has been found to be similar to that against other coronavirus infections, involving the characteristic igg and igm production. at the onset of sars-cov infection, b cells elicit an early response against the n protein, while antibodies against s protein could be detected after - days from the appearance of initial symptoms ( , ) . although n protein is smaller than s protein, it is highly immunogenic, and the absence of glycosylation sites on it results in n-specific neutralizing antibody production at an early stage of acute infection ( ) . sars-cov-specific iga, igg, and igm antibodies were detected after the onset of symptoms at different time points in infected patients. a persistent level of igg was detected for a longer period, whereas igm levels started to decline after months ( , ) . in an observational case study of sars-cov- patients, anti-s-rbd igg was detected in all of the subjects, whereas anti-n igg and anti-s-rbd igm were detected in patients and anti-n igm in patients ( ) . an elisa-based time kinetics study to detect the covid- specific humoral immune response showed that the patients produced igm and igg antibodies that did not cross-react with other human coronaviruses except sars-cov. igm and iga antibodies were detected days after the onset of initial symptoms, whereas igg was detected after days ( ) . another kinetic study of viral shedding and antibody detection was published in a preprint and reported the presence of higher igg and igm antibody titers in severe patients. they also observed that weak responders for igg antibody had higher viral clearance than strong responders. this observation suggests that robust antibody response leads to disease severity while feeble response is associated with the elimination of virus ( ) . a case study on pediatric patients reports that out of children showed a protective humoral response, with neutralizing igg and igm antibodies targeting the n and s-rbd proteins of sars-cov- ( ) . these studies propose that igm-based elisa can be used for early diagnosis of patients along with qpcr techniques to improve the sensitivity and specificity of the technique. in addition to neutralizing antibodies, which are defensive and useful, there are numerous non-neutralizing antibodies in the system that aid the infection of immune cells and apcs. previously existing sars-cov antibodies may promote the viral infection in fcr-expressing cells ( ) . this ace -independent pathway of viral entry does not result in viral replication; rather, viral shedding by macrophages enhances inflammation and tissue injury by myeloid cell activation. this mechanism of viral entry through non-neutralizing antibody that results in aberrant activation of immune cells is called ade (antibody-dependent enhancement) ( , ) . ade has been observed in a number of viral infections, including sars and mers. in the case of sars, anti-s antibodies were observed to be involved in ade to gain entry into fcr-expressing cells ( ) , while in mers, a neutralizing mab (mersmab ) targeting rbd aided in mers pseudo-virus entry via the dpp pathway ( ) . although there is no clear evidence regarding ade in sars-cov- infection, it is still necessary to consider all of the odds in the pursuit of developing vaccines and treatment regimens involving antibodies ( ) . during viral infection, t cells also recognize the viral antigens presented by mhc class i [mhc; human leukocyte antigen (hla) in humans], which in turn promotes the cytokine release and cytotoxic activity of cd + t cells ( ) . but in some other cases, mhc class ii is also found to present sars-cov peptides to cd + t cells. due to the genetic polymorphism of hla, some haplotypes, like hla-b * , hla-b * , hla-drb * ( ) , and hla-cw * ( ) , are found to be more susceptible to coronavirus infection, whereas the hla-drb * , hla-a * , and hla-cw * haplotypes are protected from sars-cov infection ( ) . similarly, hla-drb * and hla-dqb * were found to be vulnerable to mers-cov infection ( ) . additionally, mhc expression is also found to be reduced during the infection due to epigenetic modifications of downstream molecules ( , ) . so far, hla association is not very wellidentified for sars-cov- infection, and this could be crucial for the prevention and treatment of covid- . however, in a recent report, blood plasma from covid- patients was able to block the expression of hla-dr on cd + monocytes, which was restored effectively on inhibiting il- , suggesting that decreased hla-dr expression in sars-cov- patients is due to the buildup of hyper-inflammatory conditions ( ) . decrease in mhc expression is also evident in cancer cells, which is a mechanism by which they evade the immune response by epigenetically modifying calnexin promoter. but infection with influenza virus in these cancer cells results in enhanced mhc-i presentation due to the increased expression of chromatin remodeling proteins, which stabilizes p expression and hence augments the immune surveillance of cancer cells ( ) . therefore, molecules that can upregulate chromatin regulators and increase the mhc-i expression could potentially be used for covid- . most of the t-cell epitopes presented by mhc complex are derived from structural proteins such as the s and n proteins of the coronavirus in both humans and animal models, while the nsps have regulatory effects on the signaling cascade ( , ) . t cells can be stimulated by epitopes, most of which are observed to be located on orf and the s protein in sars patients ( ) . in a large cohort study during sars-cov infection, s protein was the only immuno-dominant epitope for cd + t-cell activation ( ) , whereas, in mers, cd + response was against the s and n proteins along with some of the m/e epitopes ( ) . these t-cell epitopes have been tested in animal models by assessing the lung pathology and t-cell response upon infection in balb/c and c bl/ mice ( , ). the sequence of sars-cov- being more similar to sars-cov than to mers-cov, with no mutation in epitopes, provides a prospective subunit vaccine for stimulating a strong t-cell response in covid patients ( ) . in a recent study, samples from convalescing covid- patients were analyzed to check the development of adaptive immune response during infection. the results highlighted that helper t cells were eliciting a robust immune response against s, m, and n protein. the effect of adaptive immune response on humoral immunity was also compared, where a strong cd + t-cell response against sars-cov- eventually resulted in an increase in anti-s-rbdspecific igg and iga antibody titer. along with cd + t cells, immunogenic epitopes on s, m, and n proteins were also able to activate cd + t cells. however, such t-cell response was not specific to recovered patients only but was also present in - % of the individuals who were not exposed to sars-cov- . further analysis showed that they had pre-existing cross-reactive cd + t cells, which might have been generated in response to some previous coronavirus infection. hence, these t-cells could impart protective immunity in such individuals against sars-cov- to some extent ( ) . these epitopes could be a promising factor in developing immunotherapy by small molecules that can increase the presentation of viral epitopes. a rapid and coordinated immune response during viral infection leads to enhanced secretion of various cytokines, which acts as a defense mechanism against the virus. numerous reports suggest that individuals affected with sars-cov or mers-cov have dysregulated cytokine production from both innate and adaptive immune cells. in the case of sars, infected hematopoietic cell, monocyte-macrophages, and other immune cells trigger enhanced secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines like tnf-α, il- , and ifn-α/-γ, with reduced anti-inflammatory cytokines ( ) ( ) ( ) . similarly, mers-cov infection leads to delayed but increased production of ifn-α and pro-inflammatory cytokines like il- , il- , and il- β ( ) ( ) ( ) . such elevated levels of cytokines were associated with multi-organ dysfunctional syndrome (mods) and ards due to the accumulation of numerous immune cells like macrophages, neutrophils, and dendritic cells in the lungs causing alveolar damage and edema ( , , ) . similarly, in covid- patients, secretion of cytokines and chemokines, which attract the immune cells to the lungs, was increased, hence causing ards, which is fatal to critically ill individuals ( , ) . signature cytokines in severely ill covid- patients were consistent with those in sars and mers, i.e., enhanced expression of il- , tnf-α, macrophage inflammatory protein -α (mip- α), mcp , gm-csf, il- , and ip- along with elevated chemokines (ip- , ccl /mcp , cxcl , cxcl ) were also detected in sars-cov- infection ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . in children, the increased inflammatory markers include il- , il- , and c-reactive protein along with procalcitonin in serum ( ) . in a case study, a -year-old child with cytokine storm was treated with anakinra (il- receptor antagonist) in order to stabilize the respiratory illness and other clinical symptoms ( ) . transcriptomic analysis of pbmc and balf showed that a number of immune regulators were upregulated, particularly cxcl , with respect to balf. this study also reported that several apoptotic genes and p signaling molecules were upregulated, suggesting a possible reason for lymphopenia in these patients ( ) . therapeutic measures to control such cytokines involve neutralizing antibodies or small molecular drugs that can stop the signaling cascade for cytokine production. the most potent antiviral machinery acquired by immune cells is the secretion of interferons that act as secondary messengers stimulating the neighboring cells. most innate immune cells are efficient in producing ifns that are involved in obstructing cell proliferation, apoptosis, and immunomodulation ( , ) . as an escape mechanism, sars-cov or mers-cov uses several ways to overcome the host immune response, one of which is by severe leukopenia and lymphopenia ( ) ( ) ( ) . after gaining entry to the cell, these viruses encode different proteins that interact with downstream signaling molecules of tlrs and the jak-stat pathway. mers-cov encoded matrix protein, accessory proteins from orf a, b, and , which directly inhibits the ifn promoter and nuclear localization of irf ( ) . plpro, encoded by sars-cov and mers-cov, prevents the dissociation of nf-κb from iκbα, whereas nonstructural proteins of sars-cov, i.e., plpro and orf b, inhibit irf phosphorylation and hence its translocation to the nucleus ( , , ). these viral accessory proteins also inhibit the jak-stat pathway, resulting in inhibition of genes by isre promoters ( ) ( ) ( ) (figure ) . a new investigation revealed that sars-cov- infection leads to an overall decrease in the transcription of antiviral genes because of the lower production of type i and iii interferons with sufficient isg expression, along with elevated chemokine secretion. results obtained from in-vivo and ex-vivo covid- experiments were in tune with the in-vitro findings. therefore, a decrease in the innate antiviral response, along with hyper-inflammation, could be one of the causes of covid- severity ( ) . in addition to reduction in t cells, sars-cov- infection also enhances the exhaustion of effector t cells, decreasing the immune response against the virus ( , ) . exhaustion and loss in function of effector t cells is the result of increased expression of inhibitory receptors like pd- , tim- , and tigit on its surface as a result of cytokines like il- , il- , and tnf-α or by decreasing the regulatory t-cell population ( , ) . following viral/antigen clearance, most of the effector t cell undergoes apoptosis in the contraction phase. subsequently, a pool of memory t cells are generated that are programmed to fight against re-infection. cd + memory t cells, upon restimulation, trigger b cells and other immune cells by cytokine production, while cytotoxic memory t cells help in destroying the infected cells during subsequent infection ( , ). case studies in recovered sars patients showed that both cd + and cd + memory t cells were efficient in eliciting immune response from months to years without the presence of any antigens ( ) . in a case study of recovered sars-cov patients, the patients showed very low frequencies of memory b cells, while memory t cells elicited a response against the s protein in % of recovered individuals ( ) . considering the memory t-cell subset, n-specific helper t cells had more of central memory markers (cd ra − , ccr + , cd l − ) while the cd + t cell population had the effector memory (cd ra + , ccr − , cd l − ) phenotype in a steady-state manner ( ) . the study suggests that an effective vaccine or t cell epitopes could be used to target a particular population for rapid viral clearance. in recent reports, covid- subjects have shown reduced regulatory t cell populations and memory t cells, which may aggravate the inflammatory response leading to cytokine storm and hence enhance the tissue damage and organ failure ( ) . in a mouse model, the use of cd + memory t cells as a vaccine by the intranasal, but not the subcutaneous, route imparted a protective response against the human coronavirus. the infused cd + memory t cell, upon re-stimulation, produces ifn-γ and recruits cd + t cells for rapid clearance in response to sars-s peptide ( ) . recently, a human ace- -expressing mouse model has been developed by crispr/cas technology that recapitulates the human symptoms upon infection with sars-cov- through the intra-nasal route. this tool will be beneficial for evaluating the efficacy of vaccines for covid- and also to study its transmission and pathogenesis ( ) . just like sars and mers, there are no specific clinically approved drugs available for covid- as of june , ( ) . currently, the treatment regime focuses mainly on providing intensive care in order to alleviate the symptoms and discomfort associated with covid- . conservative fluid therapy accompanied by broad-spectrum antibiotics are also given to the patients as a protective measure to avoid opportunistic bacterial infections. however, ventilator support for respiration is provided to the patient under extreme conditions ( ) . numerous fda-approved antiviral drugs, vaccines, and immunotherapies that are already being used to treat other diseases have also been considered as a possible approach for treating covid- ( table ) . but this approach may reduce the availability of these drugs and vaccines for the intended diseases and for the patients with the greatest need. the molecular, structural, and functional relationships of lopinavir viral protease involved in immature, noninfectious hiv virus particle, and inhibits plpro or clpro in sars-cov- . favilavir viral rna polymerase purine analog blocking viral rna synthesis. remdesivir ( ) ribavirin guanosine nucleoside binds to nucleoside binding pocket of the enzyme. ( , , ) galidesivir adenosine analog, effective against ebola, zika, and other rna viruses. chloroquine/hydroxychloroquine heme polymerase and ace increases endosomal ph and terminal glycosylation of ace , inhibiting sars-cov- entry. ( , ) nitazoxanide glutathione-s-transferase alters ph and inhibits viral maturation. reported against tb, helminthic, and protozoan infection. umifenovir/arbidol n/a interacts with aromatic residues of viral glycoproteins. is being trialed for prophylactic action against covid- . sars-cov- with sars-cov might define the use of existing anti-viral drugs against covid- ( , ) , considering the total time it takes to perform clinical trials and get fda approval for the use of novel drugs and vaccines. the increasing knowledge of the genetic, immunological, and molecular mechanisms behind its enhanced pathogenicity might help in developing specific treatment approaches for covid- in the future. considering the studies on the molecular mechanism of coronavirus infection ( ) , several antiviral drugs could be repurposed for the treatment of covid- . remdesivir is a nucleotide analog that acts as an antiviral agent for a wide variety of viruses and has been tested widely against previous epidemics of coronavirus infections in both in-vitro and in-vivo models ( , ( ) ( ) ( ) . this adenosine analog gets incorporated into the newly synthesized viral rna, which inhibits the addition of further nucleotides by viral rnadependent rna polymerase and hence terminates the ongoing transcription. administration of intravenous remdesivir was found to be effective in treating the first known patient of covid- in the usa ( ) . a randomized double-blinded clinical trial on , adult hospitalized covid- patients was sponsored by the national institute of allergy and infectious diseases, usa, to further test the potency of intravenously administered remdesivir. the preliminary outcomes of the trial reported that remdesivir treatment decreased the median recovery time in the treatment group ( days) as compared to the placebo group ( days). the mortality rate was also less in the treatment group ( . %) in contrast to the placebo group ( . %) ( ) . numerous clinical studies, similar to this, are required so as to validate the proposed drugs for covid- . favipiravir, ribavirin, and galidesivir are also potential nucleoside analogs that might be useful against novel coronavirus infection ( ) . the combinatorial therapy approach of using remdesivir along with chloroquine, a well-known anti-malarial drug, has also been tested in vitro so as to study its effectiveness against sars-cov- ( , ) . it has been reported that chloroquine immuno-modulates the host microenvironment and also interferes with the replication of the virus and its interaction with the receptor ( , ) . in a randomized clinical trial (nct ) involving asymptomatic individuals across the us and canada who had come into close contact with potential covid- patients, the individuals were given either hydroxychloroquine or placebo as a prophylactic measure. the results revealed that hydroxychloroquine treatment had the same effect as did the placebo group. the usage of hydroxychloroquine resulted in minor side effects ( . %) as compared to the placebo treatment ( . %). however, no cardiovascular disorder or treatment-related major complications were observed ( ) . based on the putative function of hydroxychloroquine on the endosomal acidification, whereby it is presumed to hinder viral uncapping, it can be observed that it has a great potential for prophylaxis, not to prevent infection but to reduce effective viral load in patients and thus lead to milder disease. numerous clinical trials to further explore the usage of hydroxychloroquine in different combinations are in the pipeline and will finally provide a better understanding of the efficacy of this drug for covid- . a few anti-hiv drugs, such as lopinavir/ritonavir in combination with interferon beta (ifn-β), have been tested in vivo for treating coronavirus infections (sars-cov, mers-cov) and have also been used in the case of covid- ( , , ) . various complementary therapies could also be employed as a preventive measure against viral infections. many essential proteases, such as chymotrypsin ( c-like protease) and plpro, which are required by coronavirus for completing the replication process, can also be targeted using drugs. cinanserin, flavonoids, and some small molecules are known to inhibit clpro, whereas diarylheptanoids are used to inhibit plpro ( ) ( ) ( ) . in a recent study, potential anti-hcov drugs were identified through a systems biology-based approach, such as melatonin, mercaptopurine, sirolimus, dactiomycin, and toremifene, which are to be tested further for their potency ( ) . in the absence of any dependable vaccine or drugs with tested efficacy and when the pandemic onslaught is ongoing, a worthy therapeutic approach is passive immunization using purified antibodies. the source of such antibodies could be the sera of convalescing individuals, mabs, or genetically modified antibodies from an animal host, which can efficiently neutralize the virus. this is an age-old practice, with pioneering work having been done by the nobel laureate, emil behring, who applied this approach for diphtheria, and has been used whenever there are sudden outbreaks of viral diseases like sars, mers, h n , h n , ebola, and many others ( , , ) . as opposed to active vaccination, plasma therapy is the only means to provide immediate immunity for viral clearance, as in the case of sars-cov- . as in other epidemic diseases, convalescent sera are currently being employed for covid- in a number of countries ( , ) . although a randomized controlled trial is yet to be reported, limited studies in patients have been documented with no remission of severe respiratory afflictions on receiving neutralizing antibodies from convalesced donors with antibody titers of : , along with drugs and oxygen support ( ) . a report from hong kong suggested that this therapy had poor outcome in sars patients, with a number of limitations in their study ( ) . as with transfusion of any blood products, precautionary screening of infectious agent is warranted in plasma transfusion. recently, the fda in the usa has approved trials of convalescent plasma therapy in covid- under specific guidelines; plasma donation is advised weeks after a patient becomes virus-negative on pcr. the major challenge in this therapy is obtaining donors with similar blood antigens with a high antibody titer of sars-cov- ( ) . another potential adverse effect of this approach is ade of infection, which is common in so many other viruses. but, to date, the incidence of ade has not been reported in the case of sars-cov- . another major point of contention is the selection of patients for this therapeutic approach. in most clinical trials, patients with severe diseases are being recruited, while the presumed mechanism of action of convalescent plasma, based on its content of virus-neutralizing antibodies, rather points to plausible favorable outcomes in earlier phases of the disease because in the later, more severe phases, the hyperimmune response, rather than the viral load, becomes the more critical pathology. finally, there are no available data on the heterogeneity of response to convalescent plasma transfusion, which may further illustrate the importance of careful evidencebased patient selection, as heterogeneity of response may result from both virus and host-intrinsic factors which are, to date, not revealed. researchers around the world are working hard to develop a potential vaccine candidate so as to stop the deadly pandemic caused by sars-cov- . however, vaccine development is not an easy task, as a number of successful clinical trials are required before approval for patients. different approaches are being utilized for designing a specific vaccine targeting either the structural proteins or viral replication process, which eventually results in the inhibition of viral growth and its further transmission. the common strategies involve the use of live attenuated vaccine (lav), inactivated virus, subunit vaccines, monoclonal antibody vaccine, virus vectors, protein vaccines, and dna/rna-based vaccines ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . there are numerous subunit vaccines targeting all or a part of s protein that have already been tested for sars and mers in animal models ( ) and could be potential candidates for testing against sars-cov- . a recent pilot study with a purified inactivated sars-cov- virus vaccine displayed very promising outcomes in different animal models. the neutralizing antibodies generated after vaccination were able to effectively target different strains of sars-cov- without developing any ade of infection ( ) . various randomized controlled trials (nct , nct ) are also underway to evaluate the effectiveness of the bcg vaccine against sars-cov- for healthcare professionals. an adenovirus vector-based vaccine candidate, chadox (presently azd ), developed by oxford university (licensed to astrazeneca) for use against sars-cov- has been reported to activate both the humoral and cell-mediated immune response when tested in rhesus monkey ( ) . the phase i clinical trial to confirm its potency is also in progress (nct ). another group has followed a similar approach by using a recombinant adenovirus type (ad -ncov) vectorbased vaccine for covid- . the full report from the phase i clinical trial (nct ) of ad -ncov shows that it is very effective in generating both humoral and rapid t-cell response post immunization. the group is now ready for the next clinical trial phase to further strengthen the effectiveness of the ad -ncov vaccine ( ) . it should be noted that there are potential risks associated with the usage of live attenuated viruses, for example, complications resulting in lung damage by infiltrating eosinophils, as seen in in vivo models ( , ) . however, eosinophil immunopathology due to sars-cov vaccine could be reduced by using tlr agonist as an adjuvant ( ) . viral neutralizing antibodies specifically targeting various regions of s, i.e., s -rbd, s -ntd, or the s region, and blocking the interaction of virus with the receptor are well-known for sars and mers ( ) . these neutralizing antibodies could prove to be the best and potential candidate for cross-neutralization of sars-cov- . despite being structurally related, some of the sars-cov neutralizing monoclonal antibodies failed to interact with the s-protein of sars-cov- , which could be attributable to the substantial differences in their rbd ( ) . a recent study reported the presence of high titres of neutralizing anti-s-rbd igg antibodies, but no antibodies were detected against the n protein in recovered covid- patients, suggesting that anti-s igg persists longer than does anti-n igg. along with the humoral immune response, they also observed an s protein-specific t cell-population producing ifn-γ, which further contributes to conferring protective immunity against sars-cov- infection ( ). recently, a monoclonal antibody ( d ) has been identified from sars-spike hybridomas that targets the conserved s-rbd region (residue - ) and therefore can very effectively neutralize sars-cov- along with sars-cov ( ). on similar lines, a group has isolated a single-domain antibody from a phage display library targeting the s-rbd region of sars-cov- . the fully humanized singledomain antibody was able to neutralize the virus by interacting with a cryptic epitope in s protein ( ) . these mab and singledomain antibodies could be used to treat as well as to design quick diagnostic kits for covid- . the new technology of the microneedle array (mna) has been employed for delivering sars-cov- s subunit vaccine, which could be really helpful in the treatment of the emerging covid- outbreak ( ) . the transfer of s subunit by mna elicited a strong virus specific-antibody response in sars-cov- ( ) . a novel encapsulated mrna vaccine candidate developed by modernatx, inc. that encodes full length s protein of sars-cov- , is also under clinical trial (nct ). there is an urgent need to develop more such specific vaccines that could neutralize the novel coronavirus effectively ( ) . the host innate immune system encounters upcoming infections, and this results in elevated production of various cytokines and type i interferons (ifns). in the case of prolonged infection, hyperactivation of the immune system may also result in the development of a pro-inflammatory microenvironment, leading to adverse outcomes and even death. the induction of numerous lymphokines, such as il- , il- β, tnf-α, and ccl , that are pro-inflammatory in nature has also been observed in the case of covid- ( ) ( ) ( ) . a previous study in a mers animal model showed that treatment with recombinant type- ifn (rifn) decreased the viral rna level in lungs with a decrease in ifn-stimulating gene expression. early treatment with rifn resulted in a dampening of cytokine and chemokine release that lowered the migration of neutrophils and other cells in lung ( ) . an allogenic mesenchymal stem cell-based (remestemcel-l) therapy developed by mesoblast, which has been previously used for inflammatory conditions and graft vs. host disease in children and adults, is now being assessed for covid- ( ) ( ) ( ) . in this therapy, bone marrow-derived mscs from the donor are grown in vitro and are then transfused to the recipient patients. upon infusion, these cells exhibit antiinflammatory activity by reducing pro-inflammatory cytokine production via the recruitment of anti-inflammatory cells in the affected tissue ( ) . currently, a randomized placebo-controlled trial (nct ) with patients is ongoing for treating ards caused by covid- . treatment with rifn, inhibitors of the pro-inflammatory pathway, cytokine inhibitors such as tocilizumab, lenzilumab, and many others are still to be used in combination with other drugs for treating covid- . so far, there is not much evidence from clinical trials of such inhibitors with which to predict the outcome of these anticytokine therapies. considering the current situation of more than million people being infected, with ∼ , deaths as of june , , there is an urgent need to control the sars-cov- pandemic. the fatality rate of sars-cov- in lower than those of other coronaviruses that caused catastrophes in the past, but the higher infectivity rate makes it worse. raising awareness of this contagious virus is one of the many ways by which its spread can be prevented. the governing authorities concerned in every country have approved guidelines and taken necessary action to quarantine infected people and break the chain of community spread. antibodies, vaccines, and drugs developed for previously emerged coronaviruses could potentially be used for treating sars-cov- . the combination of various neutralizing antibodies against s protein could enhance the effectiveness of viral clearance. among various antivirals and other small molecules that are fda approved, chloroquine/hydroxychloroquine has shown better positive outcome in covid- patients. in clinical trials, some of the combinational antiviral drugs like lopinavir + ritonavir and blockers like angiotensin receptor blocker that were thought to be effective, have failed in curing the disease ( , ) . cytokine storm being one of the symptoms of infected individuals, anticytokine therapy for tnf and il- should be attempted to determine the efficacy of these antibodies in the treatment of sars-cov- infection. clinical trial chictr with tocilizumab, a monoclonal humanized antibody against il- receptor, has shown some efficacy, but this still needs to be tested in a larger cohort. with the increasing number of deaths, there is an immense need to accelerate the development of rapid and sensitive diagnostic kits and to commence clinical trials of the readily available and safe drugs to reduce the rising infections and covid- -related deaths so as to bring life back on track. vs and pf contributed equally in writing the review. conception of idea was done by sc, vs, and pf. manuscript writing and editing was done by all the authors. we are thankful to csir-indian institute of chemical biology, jadavpur, kolkata and national centre for cell science (nccs), pune for providing infrastructure facilities. we would also like to acknowledge department of biotechnology-systems medicine cluster (dbt-symec) grant and j c bose fellowship-serb (science and engineering research board) to sc, for the financial support. a pneumonia outbreak associated with a new coronavirus of probable bat origin genomic characterisation and epidemiology of novel coronavirus: implications for virus origins and receptor binding air, surface environmental, and personal protective equipment contamination by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov- ) from a symptomatic patient sars and mers : recent insights into emerging coronaviruses estimates of the severity of coronavirus disease : a model-based analysis united nation, department of 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therapy for crohn's disease transplantation of ace -mesenchymal stem cells improves the outcome of patients with covid- pneumonia mesoblast to evaluate anti-inflammatory cell therapy remestemcel-l for treatment of covid- lung disease are patients with hypertension and diabetes mellitus at increased risk for covid- infection? key: cord- -vevsgkp authors: alharbi, naif khalaf; padron-regalado, eriko; thompson, craig p.; kupke, alexandra; wells, daniel; sloan, megan a.; grehan, keith; temperton, nigel; lambe, teresa; warimwe, george; becker, stephan; hill, adrian v.s.; gilbert, sarah c. title: chadox and mva based vaccine candidates against mers-cov elicit neutralising antibodies and cellular immune responses in mice date: - - journal: vaccine doi: . /j.vaccine. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: vevsgkp abstract the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) has infected more than humans, since . the syndrome ranges from asymptomatic and mild cases to severe pneumonia and death. the virus is believed to be circulating in dromedary camels without notable symptoms since the s. therefore, dromedary camels are considered the only animal source of infection. neither antiviral drugs nor vaccines are approved for veterinary or medical use despite active research on this area. here, we developed four vaccine candidates against mers-cov based on chadox and mva viral vectors, two candidates per vector. all vaccines contained the full-length spike gene of mers-cov; chadox mers vaccines were produced with or without the leader sequence of the human tissue plasminogen activator gene (tpa) where mva mers vaccines were produced with tpa, but either the mh or f promoter driving expression of the spike gene. all vaccine candidates were evaluated in a mouse model in prime only or prime-boost regimens. chadox mers with tpa induced higher neutralising antibodies than chadox mers without tpa. a single dose of chadox mers with tpa elicited cellular immune responses as well as neutralising antibodies that were boosted to a significantly higher level by mva mers. the humoral immunogenicity of a single dose of chadox mers with tpa was equivalent to two doses of mva mers (also with tpa). mva mers with mh or f promoter induced similar antibody levels; however, f promoter enhanced the cellular immunogenicity of mva mers to significantly higher magnitudes. in conclusion, our study showed that mers-cov vaccine candidates could be optimized by utilising different viral vectors, various genetic designs of the vectors, or different regimens to increase immunogenicity. chadox and mva vectored vaccines have been safely evaluated in camels and humans and these mers vaccine candidates should now be tested in camels and in clinical trials. middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) is caused by a novel betacoronavirus (mers-cov) that was isolated in late in saudi arabia [ ] . the syndrome (mers) is described as a viral infection that causes fever, cough, and/or shortness of breath and to a lesser extent gastrointestinal symptoms such as diarrhea [ ] . severe disease from mers-cov infection can cause respiratory failure and organ failure, and cases can be fatal, especially in patients with co-morbidities such as diabetes and cardiac complications. however, the infection can be asymptomatic or mild in many cases [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . mers-cov has spread to countries and infected more than humans with a mortality rate of % [ ] . dromedary camels, especially juveniles, contract the infection and shed the virus, without notable symptoms of disease; this is now known to have been occurring since the early s [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the mechanism of camel to human transmission is still not clear, but several primary cases have been associated with camel contact, which is considered an important risk factor [ ] [ ] [ ] . therefore, camels http [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . other livestock animals such as sheep, goats, cows, chicken, and horses have proved seronegative in many studies [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . further, these animals did not productively contract mers-cov when they were inoculated experimentally [ , ] . therefore, to date, dromedary camels are the only confirmed animal reservoir. there is currently no approved vaccine against mers-cov for camels or humans despite active vaccine research and development. a number of vaccine candidates have been developed using various platforms and regimens and have been tested in several animal models [ ] . viral vectors are potent platform technologies that have been utilised to develop vaccines against malaria, tuberculosis, influenza, hiv, hcv, ebola, and many viral pathogens. these vectors include adenoviruses, poxviruses, yellow fever viruses, and alphaviruses [ , ] , and they are preferred for their ability to induce cellular immune responses in addition to humoral immunity. here, we report development of mers-cov vaccine candidates that are based on two different viral vectors: chimpanzee adenovirus, oxford university # (chadox ) [ ] and modified vaccinia virus ankara (mva) [ , ] . each viral vector was developed by generating two alternative versions, resulting in four vaccine candidates that all encode the same complete mers-cov spike gene (s). the two chadox based vaccines were produced with or without the signal peptide of the human tissue plasminogen activator gene (tpa) at the n terminus. previous studies have shown that encoding tpa upstream of recombinant antigens enhanced immunogencity, although results differed depending on the antigens employed. the tpa encoded upstream of influenza a virus nucleoprotein, in a dna vector, enhanced both cellular and humoral immune responses in mice [ , ] , whereas the same leader sequence resulted in increased humoral sequences but decreased cellular responses to hiv gag [ ] . the two mva based vaccines were produced with either the mh or f poxviral promoter driving antigen expression, both including the tpa sequence at the n terminus of mers-cov spike protein. previously, we reported the ability of the strong early f promoter to enhance cellular immunogenicity of vaccine antigen candidates for malaria and influenza, as compared to utilising p . or mh early/late promoters which resulted in a lower level of gene expression immediately after virus infection of target cells, but higher levels at a later stage [ ] . here, we continue to assess the f promoter in enhancing cellular immunogenicity, and to investigate its ability to impact on humoral immune responses. the four vaccine candidates were evaluated in a number of different regimens in mouse models that showed a single dose of chadox mers inducing higher cellular and humoral immunogenicity than a single dose of mva mers, or equivalent to two doses of mva mers. chadox based vaccines have been tested in different animal models, including camels [ ] , and in human clinical trials and proved safe and immunogenic [ ] . therefore, based on our data, chadox mers can be readily developed for use as a mers vaccine in humans. furthermore, utilising chadox mers for camel vaccination can serve the one-health approach whereby blocking mers-cov transmission in camels is expected to prevent human infections. the spike (s) gene of mers-cov camel isolate (genbank accession number: kj . ) was synthesised by geneart gene synthesis (thermo fisher scientific). the s transgene was then cloned into four shuttle plasmid vectors following in-fusion cloning (clontech). two plasmids contained the s transgene within the e homologous region of chadox , driven by the human cytomegalovirus major immediate early promoter (ie cmv) that includes intron a. one of the chadox shuttle plasmids was designed to include the tpa signal sequence upstream of the transgene sequence while the second plasmid did not contain the tpa. the chadox shuttle plasmids contained the s transgene within gateway Ò recombination cassettes. to construct mva mers, one of the shuttle plasmids for mva was designed to have the upstream and downstream (flanks) of the f l orf as homologous sequence arms. inserting the s transgene within these arms enabled the utilisation of the endogenous f promoter, which is part of the right homologous arm, while deleting the native f l orf. this resulted in the shuttle vector for generation of f -mva mers (f shuttle vector). the mh promoter sequence was subcloned upstream of the s transgene; and this mh -s transgene was then subcloned into the f shuttle vector. this resulted in the shuttle vector for generation of mh -mva mers (f /mh shuttle vector). mh -mva mers contained the mh promoter at the f l locus, however, the endogenous f promoter is intact and located upstream of the mh promoter. the endogenous f promoter could not be replaced with the mh since it is part of the essential upstream orf. the chadox shuttle plasmid, described above, was used to validate the expression of mers-cov spike protein in vitro. an african green monkey kidney cell line (vero cells) was seeded into -well plate to % confluence. then the plasmid dna was transfected into vero cells using lipofectamine Ò (thermo fisher scientific) following manufacturer's instruction. twenty-four hours after transfection, cells were fixed, permeabilised, and immunostained using a rabbit polyclonal anti-mers-cov spike antibody, following standard protocols. dapi stain was used to label nuclei. the chadox mers vaccines were prepared by gateway Ò recombination between the chadox destination dna bac vector (described in [ ] ) and entry plasmids containing the coding sequence for mers-cov spike gene (chadox shuttle vectors explained above), according to standard protocols. chadox mers genomes were then derived in hek a cell lines (invitrogen, cat. r - ), the resultant viruses were purified by cscl gradient ultracentrifugation as previously described [ ] . the titres were determined on hek a cells using anti-hexon immunostaining assay based on the quicktiter tm adenovirus titer immunoassay kit (cell biolabs inc). for mva mers vaccines chicken embryo fibroblast cells (cefs) were infected with mva parental virus that encodes dsred marker instead of the native f l orf and transfected with mva shuttle plasmids containing mers-cov spike gene (explained above) to allow recombination with the mva genome and deletion of dsred marker whilst keeping the f promoter sequence. recombinant mva expressing mers-cov s protein was purified by plaque-picking and fluorescent selection using the sorting function of cyclone robotic module of a moflo flow cytometer (dako cytomation, denmark) as previously described [ ] . f -mva mers and mh -mva mers were confirmed to lack the native f l orf (and the dsred marker), and contain mers-cov s by pcr (identity and purity pcr screening). the sequence of the s transgene amplified from these vaccines was confirmed. the recombinant viruses (vaccines) were amplified in cm monolayers of cefs cells, partially purified over sucrose cushions and titrated in cefs cells according to standard practice, and purity and identity were again verified by pcr. female balb/c mice (harlan, uk) aged - weeks were immunised intramuscularly (i.m.) in the upper leg (total volume ml) with a total of iu of chadox mers with or without tpa or with a total of pfu of either f -mva mers or mh -mva mers. for induction of short-term anaesthesia, animals were anaesthetised using vaporised isofloh. in prime only regimens, mice were vaccinated with chadox with blood samples taken at days post immunisation (d.p.i) or d.p.i. for serum isolation; and spleens were collected at d.p.i. in heterologous prime-boost regimens, mice were vaccinated with chadox mers and boosted with mva mers at d.p.i; mice were bled at d.p.i. splenocytes were harvested for analysis by ifn-c elispot or intracellular cytokine staining (ics) and flow cytometry as previously described [ , ] , using re-stimulation with mg/ml s mers-cov s-specific peptide (vydtikyysiiphsi); for vaccine cellular immunogenicity [ ] ); or mg/ml e and f (g) mva vectorspecific peptides [ ] (for anti-mva immune responses). in the absence of peptide re-stimulation, the frequency of ifn-c + cells, which was typically . % by flow cytometry or less than sfc by elispot, was subtracted from tested re-stimulated samples. lg/ml with capturing antigen (s recombinant protein from mybiosource, ca, usa) were used to coat elisa plates, and standard endpoint elisa protocol was followed, as previously described [ ] . sera were prepared in a -fold serial dilution in pbs/t and then ll were plated in duplicate wells. serum from a naïve balb/c mouse was included as a negative control. goat anti-mouse total igg conjugated to alkaline phosphatase (sigma) and pnpp tablet ( mg p-nitrophenylphosphate, sigma) substrate were used in the assay. mers pseudotyped viral particles (merspp) were produced and titrated using huh . cell line as described previously [ ] . for the merspp neutralisation assay, serum samples were serially diluted in -well white plates (nunc). a standard concentration of the merspp were added to the wells and plates were incubated for h at °c. after incubation, huh . cells ( , cells per well) were added to the plate in duplicates. following h incubation, cells were lysed and luciferase activity was measured. ic neutralisation titres were calculated for each mouse serum sample using graphpad prism. induction of virus-neutralising antibodies was confirmed according to previously published protocols [ , ] . briefly, mouse serum samples were tested for their capacity to neutralise mers-cov (emc isolate) infections in vitro with % tissue culture infective doses (tcid ) in huh- cells. sera of non-immunised mice served as negative control. graphpad prism (graphpad software) was used for statistical analysis and to plot data. all animal procedures were performed in accordance with the terms of the uk animals (scientific procedures) act (aspa) for the project licenses / or / and were approved by the university of oxford animal care and ethical review committee. all mice were housed for at least days for settlement prior to any procedure in the university animal facility, oxford, uk under specific pathogen free (spf) conditions. the spike gene from a camel isolate (camel/qatar_ _ mers-cov isolate, genbank accession number kj . ) was cloned into four shuttle vectors that facilitate homologous recombination with the genome of chadox or mva. four recombinant viral vectors, two chadox and two mva, were derived as described in the materials and methods. chadox based vaccine candidates were generated with or without the signal peptide of the human tissue plasminogen activator gene (tpa). the spike transgene expression in chadox mers vaccine candidates is under the control of the human cytomegalovirus major immediate early promoter (cmv ie) that includes intron a. in mva mers vaccine candidates, the tpa was also inserted upstream of the spike transgene, which was under the control of either the ectopic mh promoter or the endogenous f promoter (fig. a) . all of our mers-cov vaccine candidates contain the same codonoptimized spike transgene. the expression of the newly synthesized transgene was first tested by transfection of an african green monkey kidney cell line (vero cells) with the adenovirus shuttle vector, and immunofluorescence staining of the transfected cells ( fig. b and c) . this was performed to confirm the expression of the codon optimized spike transgene in mammalian cells. the level of transgene expression from the four vaccine candidates was not evaluated in vitro. we have previously reported that differences in mva promoter activity detectable in vitro does not correlate with in vivo immunogenicity [ ] , and that only in vivo expression correlates with the in vivo immunogenicity. to evaluate humoral immune responses to chadox mers with or without tpa, balb/c mice were vaccinated with  iu of chadox intramuscularly. serum samples from and d.p.i. were collected and evaluated by elisa. both vaccine candidates induced a high level of s -specific antibodies (mean endpoint titre (log ) = . with tpa, . without tpa), unlike the control vaccine, chadox encoding enhanced green fluorescent protein (chadox -egfp, mean endpoint titre (log ) = ). these antibody levels were similar between the two candidates (with or without tpa) at day . however, at d.p.i. chadox mers with tpa induced significantly higher s -specific antibodies than chadox mers without tpa (mean endpoint titre (log ) = . with tpa, . without tpa, fig. a ). serum samples from day were selected for merspp neutralisation assay. serum antibodies induced by chadox mers with tpa showed significantly higher neutralisation activity than without tpa (mean titre ic (log ) = . with tpa, . without tpa; fig. b ). in order to confirm that the psuedotyped virus neutralisation assay was producing biologically relevant results, serum samples from mice immunised with chadox mers with tpa were also tested in a neutralisation assay utilising wildtype mers virus. this assay confirmed the neutralisation activity of mouse antibodies (nab) with a median of vnt (virus neutralization test antibody titre; fig. c ). we therefore continued to evaluate chadox mers with tpa in addition to generating mva mers vaccine candidates with tpa. having established the utility of tpa in chadox mers vaccines (referred to as chadox mers in the rest of this report) at increasing humoral responses, spleens were collected at d.p.i. from immunised balb/c mice. splenocytes were processed to evaluate cellular immune responses to chadox mers in elispot and intracellular cytokine staining (ics). peptide s , described by others [ ] , was used to re-stimulate the cells in both assays and elispot data showed a high level of ifn-c secreting splenocytes (median = sfu/ splenocytes; fig. a ). ics data confirmed the ifn-c secreting cd + splenocytes also secreted tnf-a and il- (fig. b ). to evaluate humoral immune responses to heterologous primeboost vaccination, balb/c mice were immunised with chadox were collected and evaluated by elisa and merspp neutralisation assay. at d.p.i. chadox mers induced similar levels of s -specific antibodies and nab as observed previously ( fig. a and b) . at d.p.i. s -specific antibodies were boosted to a higher level (mean endpoint titre (log ) = by chadox mers boosted to . by mh -mva mers or . by f -mva mers); fig. a ) with nab also enhanced to a statistically significant level (mean titre ic (log ) = . by chadox mers boosted to . by mh -mva mers or . by f -mva mers; fig. b ). there was no difference in antibody levels induced using either the f or mh promoter in the mva. at d.p.i. splenocytes were also processed to evaluate cellular immune responses to chadox mers mva mers prime-boost vaccination in elispot and ics as shown in fig. . the t cell responses to mers s were boosted by the mva vaccinations; in the ics experiments, f -mva and mh -mva boosted the percentage of ifn-c + splenic cd + t cells to . and . % respectively (fig. d) whereas the percentage was . % after chadox mers prime in fig. b . the percentage of tnf-a + splenic cd + t cells were also increased by mva boost (comparing fig. b and d) . utilising the f promoter resulted in a trend towards greater cell-mediated immunogenicity ( fig. c and d) . splenocytes were also re-stimulated with mva backbone-specific e and f(g) peptides and evaluated in ics. both mva based vaccines induced similar responses to e or to f(g) pep- tides, weeks after mva vaccination (fig. e and f) . this similarity confirmed the efficiency of vaccine titration, vaccination, and sample processing because responses to each of those peptides are not expected to be different unless there is variation in the doses administered or sample preparation. overall, mva mers vaccines were able to boost the humoral and cellular immune responses to cha-dox mers prime vaccination. there was no difference between the f and mh promoter in the resulting antibody titres after cha-dox prime/mva boost, but there was a trend towards increased cellular immunogenicity when the f promoter was used. to evaluate humoral immune responses to a homologous mva mers prime-boost vaccination, two groups of balb/c mice were immunised with f -mva mers or mh -mva mers and boosted with the same vaccine after three weeks. serum samples from d. antibodies (mean endpoint titre (log ) = . and . respectively; fig. a ). at d.p.i s -specific antibody levels had increased to . and . respectively (fig. a) . the titres of nab (mers pp assay) were also similar for both vaccines (mean titre ic (log ) = . (f -mva mers) and . respectively; fig. b ). utilising different promoters in mva vectors did not result in differences in the induced antibody levels. however, at d.p.i. ifn-c secreting splenocytes induced by f -mva mers were statistically significantly higher than those of mh -mva mers ((median = and sfu/ splenocytes, respectively, fig. c ). both mva vaccines induced similar vector-specific immune responses as expected ( fig. d and e) . vaccines against mers-cov have been developed and tested in a number of animal models (including non-human primates [ ] [ ] [ ] and camels [ ] ) as well as in human clinical trials [ ] . all vaccine candidates focused on the spike antigen because it contains the receptor-binding domain used for cell entry by the virus, against which neutralising antibodies may be induced, and it is conserved. therefore, the improvement of mers-cov vaccines focuses on platform and vaccination regimens rather than antigen selection and optimisation. here, we focused on using the same antigen (transgene) to develop a vaccine against mers-cov, and to assess different vectors, different versions of each vector, and different vaccination regimens. we generated a number of mers-cov vaccine candidates based on the same codon optimized spike transgene and ensured its expression in vitro before we evaluated the humoral and cellular immunogenicity in a pre-clinical balb/c mouse model. chadox based vaccine candidates were produced with or without tpa. the tpa signal peptide was predicted to enhance the humoral immunogenicity of encoded vaccine antigens, based on previous reports [ ] . our data supported this hypothesis and showed a significant increase in the s -specific antibody levels at d.p.i. the level of neutralising antibodies was also increased when tpa was utilised. however, chadox mers without tpa was still a potent vaccine candidate, inducing a high level of both s -specific binding antibodies and mers-cov neutralising antibodies. neutralisation activity of mouse serum antibodies was assayed by using mers-cov pseudotyped viral particles (merspp), an approach used by a number of researchers for other human pathogens such as hiv, influenza, and hcv to overcome the necessity of handling bsl- viruses [ ] . additionally, we confirmed the ability of serum samples from vaccinated mice to neutralise live mers virus. we therefore selected chadox mers with tpa (simply referred to chadox mers) for further evaluation. chadox mers also induced cellular responses for mers s, with polyfunctional cd + t cells detected in the spleen of immunised mice. this supports the potency of the chadox viral vector in inducing t cellular immunity, observed previously in animal models [ , , ] as well as in humans [ ] . following chadox prime/mva boost, mva significantly boosted the neutralising antibody titres to higher levels. no difference in humoral immunity was found when either the f or mh promoter was used. regarding the promoter effect on mva cellular immunogenicity, we have previously reported that utilising the f promoter enhanced malaria and influenza antigens in mva [ ] . here, we again report that f -mva mers induced higher t cell responses than mh -mva mers in a homologous prime-boost mva mers vaccination. all of our vaccine candidates induced humoral (with nab) and cellular immune (with polyfunctional cd + t cell) responses against mers-cov spike antigen. modest effects on immunogenicity of different versions of the vaccines were noted, with the use of the tpa leader sequence in chadox , and the use of the f promoter in mva producing small increases in immunogenicity compared to no leader sequence, or the mh promoter. the protective level of either antibodies or cellular immunity required to counter mers-cov infection in humans or in animal models is not yet defined, despite some efforts [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the ideal vaccine would provide rapid onset of immunity and complete protective efficacy after a single dose, with a long duration of immunity. complete protective efficacy of one dose of chadox expressing the external glycoprotein of rift valley fever virus has been demonstrated in multiple species and it is already known that chadox rvf is highly immunogenic in camels [ ] . to date, the only vaccine against mers to be tested in camels is an mva vectored vaccine [ ] which was protective in hdpp transgenic mice immunised with a homologous prime/boost regimen [ ] but in camels required two doses given both intranasally and intramuscularly to provide partial protection and reduction of virus shedding [ ] . here we find that a single dose of chadox mers is as immunogenic as two doses of mva mers, suggesting that this regimen should be tested for protective efficacy in camels. however if this is not completely protective, administration of mva mers as a heterologous boost should be considered next. in our hands one dose of mva resulted in an endpoint titre of logs, two doses of mva produced . logs, one dose of chadox produced logs, and chadox /mva prime boost produced . logs. if a single dose of chadox mers is not protective and a two dose regimen is required, chadox /mva would be more likely to provide complete protection than mva/mva. chadox mers should now be evaluated for immunogenicity and efficacy in larger animal species, including both camels and humans. scg is a co-founder of, consultant to and shareholder in vaccitech plc which is developing vectored influenza and mers vaccines. isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) estimating the severity and subclinical burden of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in the kingdom of saudi arabia asymptomatic mers-cov infection in humans possibly linked to infected dromedaries imported from oman to united arab emirates mers-cov outbreak in jeddah-a link to health care facilities state of knowledge and data gaps of 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with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection key: cord- -arjtjy authors: reuss, annicka; litterst, annette; drosten, christian; seilmaier, michael; böhmer, merle; graf, petra; gold, hermann; wendtner, clemens-martin; zanuzdana, arina; schaade, lars; haas, walter; buchholz, udo title: contact investigation for imported case of middle east respiratory syndrome, germany date: - - journal: emerg infect dis doi: . /eid . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: arjtjy on march , , a patient from united arab emirates who had severe respiratory infection was transferred to a hospital in germany, days after symptom onset. infection with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) was suspected on march and confirmed on march ; the patient, who had contact with an ill camel shortly before symptom onset, died on march . a contact investigation was initiated to identify possible person-to-person transmission and assess infection control measures. of identified contacts, were available for follow-up. ten contacts experienced mild symptoms, but test results for respiratory and serum samples were negative for mers-cov. serologic testing was done for ( %) of nonsymptomatic contacts; all results were negative. among contacts, the use of ffp /ffp face masks during aerosol exposure was more frequent after mers-cov infection was suspected than before. infection control measures may have prevented nosocomial transmission of the virus. % also had > underlying chronic condition ( ). the median age of case-patients was years (range months to years). all cases were directly or indirectly related to countries in the middle east or on the arabian peninsula. mers-cov shows a close genetic relationship with coronaviruses found in bats ( , ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) , but no zoonotic link has been confirmed. person-to-person transmission has been reported in the work environment, among family contacts, or to health care workers (hcws) ( ) ( ) ( ) . although situations involving consecutive human transmission events have been documented ( ) , none of the known clusters have led to sustained person-to-person transmission in the general population. in europe, single imported infections have been reported in the united kingdom, germany, france, and italy, and secondary cases have been reported in the united kingdom, france, and italy ( , , ) . because a large proportion of cases are fatal and the virus could acquire the ability to spread more efficiently (as was the case with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus), who has recommended thorough contact investigations for confirmed human cases to identify, quantify, and prevent person-to-person transmission ( ) . in germany, mers-cov infection was initially reported in a person from qatar ( ) . he was in his third week of illness and was already on mechanical ventilation when he was admitted to a hospital in essen in october . a retrospective contact investigation found no indication of person-to-person transmission to contacts in germany ( ) . on march , , the institute for virology of the university of bonn reported an imported case of mers-cov infection to the department of health and environment in munich (city health department). a -year-old man from abu dhabi, united arab emirates, had been admitted to a hospital in munich and had positive test results for mers-cov infection ( figure ). clinical details and virologic findings have been reported elsewhere ( ) . briefly, the patient had underlying multiple myeloma and had received several modes of treatment, including high-dose chemotherapy and autologous stemcell transplantation in . on march , , influenzalike illness with fever and cough developed in the patient. after his symptoms worsened, he was hospitalized in his country on march with a diagnosis of pneumonia; he was intubated on march and transferred by flight ambulance services to germany on march , eleven days after illness onset, for further intensive care treatment and mechanical ventilation. general infection control guidelines of the munich hospital required that patients from areas such as the middle east, where prevalence of multidrug-resistant pathogens is high, be isolated until colonization or infection with a multidrug-resistant pathogen is ruled out. this rule is particularly enforced when patients have been previously hospitalized in the country of origin. thus, at the time of hospital admission in germany, the patient was isolated from other patients. when mers-cov infection was suspected and included in the differential diagnosis on march , standard hygiene measures for hcws were changed to infection control measures as recommended for severe acute respiratory syndrome patients, including the use of ffp face masks for usual patient care ( ) . mers-cov infection was diagnosed in the patient on march ; he died on march of multiorgan failure and acute respiratory distress syndrome. after mers-cov infection was diagnosed, the city health department, in cooperation with the state health department, the institute for virology in bonn, and the robert koch institute, initiated an investigation to ) monitor all contacts of the patient to identify possible person-to-person transmission, ) assess infection control measures, and ) explore possible sources for the patient's infection to prevent further cases. for the investigation, the city health department assessed all contact persons (contacts) retrospectively and monitored them prospectively. all contacts received a questionnaire for retrospective documentation and prospective daily self-monitoring of symptoms, exposure to the patient, and infection control measures applied. for every day from march through april , information was collected about the contacts' distance from the patient (< meters vs. > meters); type of contact with the patient (aerosol-producing procedures, non-aerosol-producing procedures, care of patient, handling of urine catheter, handling of respiratory samples in the laboratory, handling of urine samples in the laboratory); type of protection used (surgical mask, ffp mask, ffp mask, ffp mask, gown, gloves, protective glasses); and symptoms experienced by the contacts (cough, fever, temperature, sore throat, diarrhea, shortness of breath). an aerosol-producing procedure was defined as respiratory suction, bronchoalveolar lavage, intubation, or bronchoscopy. on the basis of the self-reported information in the questionnaires and personal interviews with the contacts, we divided contacts into groups. close-distance contacts had face-to-face contact with the patient (< meters from the patient) or direct contact with secretions or body fluids of the patient, irrespective of protective measures worn. all other contacts were classified as less-close-distance contacts. according to who recommendations on the duration of follow-up at that time, close-distance contacts were asked to contact the city health department daily for days after the last exposure to the patient. those who failed to do so were contacted by the city health department, supported by the occupational health service of the hospital. less-close-distance contacts were asked to report to the city health department only in case of onset of symptoms. respiratory illnesses in contacts that occurred - days after exposure to the patient were assessed through the city health department by telephone contact with the contact; a respiratory tract sample was taken from any contact with respiratory illness. in addition, attempts were made to obtain paired serologic samples from all contacts, the first taken immediately after contact and the second > days after the last exposure. because the mers-cov patient was on mechanical ventilation and could not be interviewed, family contacts who had accompanied him to germany were interviewed about the onset of his symptoms and possible exposures in the days before disease onset. for the interview, a structured questionnaire was used, and information collected was documented on paper. pcr testing and serologic testing were done as described ( , ) . serum samples from contacts were tested for mers-cov antibodies if a serum sample was taken > days after last exposure. in addition, serum samples were tested for antibodies against influenza a, b, and c; rhinovirus a, b, and c; parainfluenzavirus , , , and ; respiratory syncytial virus a and b; human metapneumovirus; coronavirus e, nl , oc , and hku ; and adenovirus. all samples were analyzed at the institute for virology of the university of bonn. data from the city health department's contact monitoring, the contacts' questionnaires, and the laboratory findings were integrated in database. results were validated and analyzed by using stata version . (statacorp, college station, tx, usa). the city health department identified contacts. of these, ( %) were classified as close-distance contacts and ( %) as less-close-distance contacts (table) . four ( %) of the contacts were members of the patient's family, ( %) §probability that the distribution as indicated occurs by chance given the column and row totals. ¶nonsymptomatic contacts are asymptomatic persons and those who were symptomatic before exposure. of other professional groups. clinical follow-up was available for ( %) contacts. a respiratory symptom or fever developed in ( %) contacts. of these, swab specimens were collected from ( %) and blood samples from ( %). all swab specimens were negative for mers-cov; ( %) was positive for cov nl- , and ( %) were positive for rhinovirus. all serum samples were negative for mers-cov antibodies. all symptomatic contacts had > sample type (respiratory swab or serum) collected for laboratory testing; results of pcr and serologic testing were available from ( %), pcr only from ( %), and serologic testing only from ( %). in addition, serologic test results were available for ( %) of the nonsymptomatic contacts; all were negative for mers-cov antibodies. overall, persons for whom serologic testing results were available were more likely to be close-distance contacts than were persons without available serologic results (p = . ; table) . the family members who accompanied the patient were his wife, daughter, son, and son-in-law. their ages were - years, and none reported symptoms. the patient's children and son-in-law had their last contact with the patient on march and his wife on march . because no protection measures had been used until after march , the family members were considered at high risk for infection. all provided respiratory swab and serum samples on march ; all samples had negative results. serum samples taken > days after last exposure to the patient were not available. mers-cov infection was added to the differential diagnosis for the patient on march . the daily numbers of hcws who had any contact with him (regardless of protection measures) and of those who had aerosol exposure were lower after that date than before ( figure ): . hcw per illness day vs. . hcw per illness day (p = . ) and . hcw per illness day vs. hcw per illness day (p = . ). among hcws with aerosol exposure, ( %) of daily exposures occurred while ffp or ffp masks were being used before march ; after that date, ( %) of daily exposures occurred while ffp or ffp masks were being used (p< . ). the patient was a -year-old married man from abu dhabi, united arab emirates; he had a medical history of multiple myeloma. at the time of his mers-cov infection, he was receiving corticosteroid therapy. his profession was camel breeding; in the weeks before his onset of illness, of his camels was reported to have had a respiratory illness. in the questionnaire, we did not differentiate between dromedary (camelus dromedaries) and bactrian (c. bactrianus) camels. his neighborhood had palm trees, and bats were known to dwell in the area. the patient had no known contact with other mers-cov patients, had no personal contacts in qatar or jordan, and had no travel history in the days before illness onset. he consumed different types of fruit juices and cooked goat meat, beef, and sheep meat, but no raw meat. he ate dates from his region, but he reportedly did not consume date or palm syrup. other than the camels on his farm, he had no contact with animals; he did not practice falconry and did not visit camel racetracks or animal markets. we describe the case and contact investigation of a confirmed case of mers-cov infection that was imported to germany. we did not identify person-to-person transmission from the patient to any of the contacts. as with the previous imported case in this country, the patient was already on mechanical ventilation when he was transferred to germany. however, whereas the previous case was in the late third week of illness, this patient was in the second week of illness. sample from this patient taken from different body locations and at different times were positive for mers-cov by pcr, and the viral load detected was several logs higher than in samples from the patient with the previous imported case ( , ) . these results indicate that this patient may have been more infectious than the previous patient. nosocomial transmission from mers patients to hcws has been documented ( , , ) . in our study, the patient was isolated during the first days of his hospital stay (before mers was suspected), although the reason for this intervention was the hospital's policy to isolate every patient from the middle east, irrespective of the assumed diagnosis, because of perceived increased risk of carrying drug-resistant pathogens, rather than any special measures taken because of the patient's respiratory illness. after mers was suspected, hcws used ffp masks significantly more frequently than they had before, and fewer hcws had daily contact with the patient. our result suggest that, in the later stages of this disease, the combination of standard protection measures (use of surgical masks for potentially aerosol-generating procedures), cautious handling of the patient (because of his potential to harbor drugresistant bacteria), and possible decreased infectiousness compared with the first week of illness may have prevented transmission to hcws. these findings also underline the importance of following who recommendations on infection prevention and control when managing a patient who may be infected with a pathogen that could lead to nosocomial transmission ( ) . regarding possible sources of infection, an extensive interview was conducted with family members because the patient could not be interviewed. the patient's illness was likely a primary case, and possible exposures that might have caused the mers-cov infection were explored. of note were the presence of bats in the neighborhood of his residence, the patient's profession as camel breeder, and his contact with a camel that was reported to have had a respiratory illness before his own illness onset. bats are a likely reservoir for mers-related cov ( , ) , and serum samples from omani racing camels have shown to have neutralizing antibodies against mers-cov ( ). these findings suggest these animals' possible relevance (e.g., as intermediate hosts) for human acquisition of mers-cov. two complementary monitoring instruments for contact persons were used: active follow-up with daily telephone contact and a self-administered monitoring questionnaire. both methods have merits, and a combination of both is likely to ensure the most thorough contact follow-up. advantages of personal interviews on the telephone are immediacy and the possibility for the interviewer to receive intangible information, such as the self-assessment of symptoms, as well as the opportunity to answer questions from the contacts. this process enables a more specific way to judge a person's health status. on the other hand, a daily monitoring questionnaire provides detail in clinical information, exposure, and protection measures that might be used for more in-depth analyses (e.g., when a few contacts have become infected). such a questionnaire could be expanded to include a section for contact persons to fill in the names of persons with whom they had face-to-face contact during each day. this information might become crucial for second-generation contact tracing when contacts under observation become infected. rapid availability of this type of information is essential for efficient investigation of clusters or outbreaks similar to those that have been reported already ( ) . in conclusion, we conducted a contact investigation of an imported case of mers-cov infection in germany. laboratory testing of symptomatic and asymptomatic contacts of the index case-patient did not indicate transmission of the virus. furthermore, we documented the change from standard hygiene to infection control measures after mers-cov was suspected, an adaptation that may have prevented nosocomial transmission. exposure to camels as a possible etiologic mechanism for human mers-cov infection requires further evidence from other studies. dr reuss is an epidemiologist at the respiratory infections unit, robert koch institute, berlin, germany. her research interests include emerging infectious respiratory diseases, pandemic preparedness, and influenza vaccination. isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia world health organization. novel coronavirus infection in the united kingdom middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov)-update state of knowledge and data gaps of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in humans human betacoronavirus c emc/ -related viruses in bats, ghana and europe coronaviruses in bats from mexico full-genome deep sequencing and phylogenetic analysis of novel human betacoronavirus close relative of human middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in bat genomic characterization of a newly discovered coronavirus associated with acute respiratory distress syndrome in humans group c betacoronavirus in bat guano fertilizer middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov)-update health protection agency (hpa) uk novel coronavirus investigation team. evidence of person-to-person transmission within a family cluster of novel coronavirus infections hospital outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus clinical features and viral diagnosis of two cases of infection with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: a report of nosocomial transmission investigation of an imported case of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus interim surveillance recommendations for human infection with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus contact investigation of a case of human novel coronavirus infection treated in a german hospital clinical features and virological analysis of a case of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection empfehlungen des robert koch-institutes für die hygienemaßnahmen und infektionskontrolle bei patienten mit schwerem akutem respiratorischem syndrom (sars) assays for laboratory confirmation of novel human coronavirus (hcov-emc) infections updated rapid risk assessment: severe respiratory disease associated with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections in health care workers infection prevention and control of epidemic-and pandemic-prone acute respiratory diseases in health care. who interim guidelines key: cord- -ikt r o authors: loeffelholz, michael j.; tang, yi-wei title: laboratory diagnosis of emerging human coronavirus infections – the state of the art date: - - journal: emerg microbes infect doi: . / . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ikt r o the three unprecedented outbreaks of emerging human coronavirus (hcov) infections at the beginning of the twenty-first century have highlighted the necessity for readily available, accurate and fast diagnostic testing methods. the laboratory diagnostic methods for human coronavirus infections have evolved substantially, with the development of novel assays as well as the availability of updated tests for emerging ones. newer laboratory methods are fast, highly sensitive and specific, and are gradually replacing the conventional gold standards. this presentation reviews the current laboratory methods available for testing coronaviruses by focusing on the coronavirus disease (covid- ) outbreak going on in wuhan. viral pneumonias typically do not result in the production of purulent sputum. thus, a nasopharyngeal swab is usually the collection method used to obtain a specimen for testing. nasopharyngeal specimens may miss some infections; a deeper specimen may need to be obtained by bronchoscopy. alternatively, repeated testing can be used because over time, the likelihood of the sars-cov- being present in the nasopharynx increases. several integrated, random-access, point-of-care molecular devices are currently under development for fast and accurate diagnosis of sars-cov- infections. these assays are simple, fast and safe and can be used in the local hospitals and clinics bearing the burden of identifying and treating patients. cov, mers-cov and sars-cov- ). in temperate regions endemic hcovs usually display a winter seasonality, although hcov- e has been detected sporadically throughout the year [ ] . endemic hcovs are globally distributed and are maintained in the human population. the sars-cov pandemic came to an end in (https://www.who.int/csr/resources/ publications/cds_csr_aro_ _ .pdf?ua= . accessed february ), less than a year after the first reported case. in contrast, human cases caused by mers-cov continue to be reported at the time of writing, more than seven years after the first reported case. most laboratory-confirmed mers cases have occurred in the eastern mediterranean region, and the majority of those in saudi arabia. unlike the endemic hcovs, sars-cov and mers-cov are maintained in zoonotic reservoirs. the sars and mers outbreaks were driven in part by super-spreading events in which individuals directly infected a disproportionally large number of contacts [ ] . the sars-cov- -caused coronavirus disease (covid- ) epidemic originated in a wuhan, china market that sold exotic animals for consumption. based on genetic relatedness to other betacoronaviruses, sars-cov- likely has a zoonotic reservoir. however, the precise source of sars-cov- that initially infected humans remains to be confirmed. the sars-cov- appears to be substantially more contagious than sars-cov ( table ). the distribution of sars-cov- in different mammalian species is unknown. an interesting question is the susceptibility of farm animals and pets, and their role in the epidemiologic cycle as their angiotensin-converting enzyme (ace ) receptor shares similarity with human ace [ ] . infections caused by endemic hcovs have an incubation period of - days and are associated with mild upper respiratory symptoms (the "common cold"). endemic hcovs are among the most frequent cause of upper respiratory tract infections. lower respiratory tract infections (bronchiolitis, pneumonia) are rare. following an incubation period of usually - days, patients infected with sars-cov often present with symptoms of fever, headache, and myalgias. respiratory symptoms including cough and dyspnoea usually develop from several days to a week after illness onset. atypical pneumonia and respiratory deterioration occur in - % of cases. the incubation period and clinical course of mers are similar to that of sars, the exception being a higher proportion of cases progressing to respiratory deterioration and distress. the incubation period and clinical course of sars-cov- infection are probably similar to that of sars. li et al. first reported a mean incubation period of . days [ ] . fever and cough are frequently reported early in the course of illness [ , ] . infections are also characterized by dyspnoea, respiratory distress and positive chest x-ray [ ] . lower respiratory symptoms often develop about week from the onset of initial symptoms [ ] . globally over cases and over deaths due to sars-cov were reported, with a case-fatality ratio of approximately % (https://www.who.int/csr/sars/en/ whoconsensus.pdf. accessed february ). between september and november , there were laboratory-confirmed cases of mers, with deaths (https://www.who.int/emergencies/merscov/en/. accessed february ). the mers casefatality rate of . % is about triple that of sars, and persons in the - year age group are at highest risk for primary cases. in the short time from its emergence in december to march , the sars-cov- has been reported in countries. at the time of writing, the situation was evolving rapidly, with over , confirmed cases reported globally (over , in china) and deaths in china ( . % case-fatality rate) and over deaths outside of china. of countries and continents outside of china, south korea, iran, and europe (particularly italy) have experienced a high number of covid- cases (https://www.who.int/emergencies/diseases/novel-coro navirus- /situation-reports/. accessed march ). mortality rates vary widely, and depend on the age of patients, underlying risk factors, and the denominator definitionhospitalized cases, all symptomatic cases, only moderate to severe cases, etc. in a study of adult patients (mean age . y; % with chronic illnesses) with sars-cov- pneumonia admitted to the intensive care unit (icu), . % died within days [ ] . in contrast, a study of hospitalized patients (median age . years) across beijing showed [ , , , ] % of cases to be severe and % mild, with a fatality rate of . % [ ] . mortality is highest in older persons, with a median age of - years [ , ] . treatment for all severe hcov infections is supportive although a randomized, double-blinded, control clinical trial has been conducted on a gilead drug remdesivir [ ] based on one study focused on children, a total of children aged from month to years have been reported in china. all paediatric cases with laboratory-confirmed sars-cov- infection were mild cases with no deaths reported [ ] . during the first months of the current outbreak, covid- spread rapidly throughout china and caused varying degrees of illness with a death rate of . %. patients often presented without fever, and many did not have abnormal radiologic findings [ ] . the chinese centers for disease control and prevention team analysed more than , patient records, of which , were laboratory-confirmed cases, , suspected cases, , clinically diagnosed cases, and asymptomatic cases. of the confirmed cases, about % of the illnesses were severe, which included pneumonia and shortness of breath, and about % have the critical disease, marked by respiratory failure, septic shock, and multi-organ failure. the overall case-fatality rate was . %, and of deaths included in the study, the majority were in people age and older or those with underlying medical conditions http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/news-perspective/ / /more-outbreak-details-emerge-covid- -casestop- (accessed february ). it must be appreciated that no matter how accurate and fast laboratory testing methods are, the diagnosis of viral pneumonias such as caused by sars-cov- involves collecting the correct specimen from the patient at the right time. the endemic hcovs have been detected from a variety of upper and lower respiratory sources including throat, nasal nasopharyngeal (np), sputum, and bronchial fluid [ , , ] . wang et al have just reported that oropharyngeal (op) swabs (n = ) were used much more frequently than np swabs (n = ) in china during the covid- outbreak; however, the sars-cov- rna was detected only in % of op swabs, which was significantly lower than that in np swabs ( %) [ ] . the us centers for disease control and prevention (cdc) recommends collecting the upper respiratory np swab. collection of an op specimen is a lower priority, and, if collected, should be combined in the same tube as the np swab (https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/ -ncov/lab/guidelines-clinical-specimens.html. accessed march ). swab specimens should be placed in a universal or viral transport medium. nasopharyngeal aspirates are also suitable specimens for the detection of hcovs. for the most sensitive detection of sars-cov, mers-cov, and sars-cov- , the collection and testing of both upper and lower respiratory samples [sputum, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (bal)] is recommended [ ] . however, the collection of sputum and particularly bal via bronchoscopy increases biosafety risk to healthcare workers through the creation of aerosol droplets. proper use of personal protective equipment (ppe) by healthcare workers is important. bronchoscopy is a highly technical procedure requiring well-trained staff and may not be available in many parts of the world. upper respiratory specimens are easy to collect, thereby increasing access to testing for patients with mild symptoms, and in the resource limited settings. sars-cov and mers-cov rna are also detected from stool, urine and blood specimens, although generally less reliably than from respiratory specimens [ ] [ ] [ ] ]. an exception is sars-cov rna which is consistently detected in feces at about two weeks after symptom onset [ , ] . for the most sensitive detection of endemic hcovs, upper respiratory specimens should be collected within the first few days of symptom onset. the dynamics of rna shedding in mers and sars patients may reflect the specimen source, severity of illness, as well as underlying risk factors. among hospitalized patients who did not require ventilator support, mers-cov rna levels in the upper respiratory tract usually peaked in the first week after symptom onset. among eventual fatal cases requiring ventilation, rna levels in lower respiratory tract specimens peaked between weeks and [ ] . similar shedding patterns were seen for sars-cov: rna positive rates peaked in upper respiratory tract specimens at - days after symptom onset and then steadily declined after that, while rna positive rates in lower respiratory tract specimens remained higher throughout weeks after onset of illness [ ] . in one study, diabetes was associated with prolonged mers-cov rna shedding in the respiratory tract [ ] . viral pneumonias typically do not result in the production of purulent sputum. thus, a nasopharyngeal swab/wash is usually the collection method used to obtain a specimen for testing. nasopharyngeal specimens may miss early infection; a deeper specimen may need to be obtained by bronchoscopy. alternatively, repeated testing can be used because over time, the likelihood of the sars-cov- being present in the nasopharynx increases. self-collected saliva specimens were tested positive in of covid- patients, suggesting it is a promising non-invasive specimen for diagnosis, monitoring, and infection control in sars-cov- infections [ ] . at the time of writing there was little data on the performance of upper vs. lower respiratory tract specimens for the detection of sars-cov- [ ] . serum is another source for the detection of sars-cov- . however, only % of patients hospitalized with pneumonia had detectable rna in serum [ ] . specimens collected for laboratory testing of hcovs should be maintained at refrigerated temperature for up to h, or frozen at − °c or below (https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/ -ncov/lab/guidelines-clinical-specimens.html. accessed march ). rectal specimens have been reported positive in patients infected with sars-cov- [ ] . if the patient's travel or exposure history or symptoms suggest possible infection with a high-risk, novel agent, sars-cov, or mers-cov, then the initial handling of the specimen should be performed under biosafety level (bsl- ) conditions until the specimen or an aliquot is rendered noninfectious by lysis or another method. virus isolation should not be routinely performed in this situation (https://www.asm.org/ articles/policy/laboratory-response-network-lrn-sentinel-level-c. accessed february ). the u.s. cdc biosafety guidelines state that routine diagnostic testing of specimens from suspected or confirmed sars-cov- patients, can be handled in a bsl- laboratory using standard precautions (https://www.cdc. gov/coronavirus/ -ncov/lab/lab-biosafetyguidelines.html. accessed march ). isolation of hcovs in cell culture is not routinely performed for diagnostic purposes due to the lack of permissive cell lines, time to results, labour and expertise requirements, and the lack of commercial antisera for culture confirmation (table ) . sars-cov and mers-cov and sars-cov- will grow in primary monkey cells and cell lines such as vero and llc-mk , but cell culture should not be performed for suspect cases in routine diagnostic laboratories for biosafety reasons [ , , , ] . however, virus isolation in cell cultures is critical to obtain isolates for characterization and to support the development of vaccines and therapeutic agents. rapid antigen tests would theoretically provide the advantage of fast time to results and low-cost detection of hcovs but are likely to suffer from poor sensitivity based on the experience with this method for influenza (flu) viruses [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] (table ). in a pre-peer reviewed article, diao et al. reported that a fluorescence immunochromatographic assay is an accurate, rapid, early and simple method for detecting nucleocapsid protein of sars-cov- in np swab for diagnosis of covid- (https://www.medrxiv.org/content/ . / . . . v . accessed march ). the incorporation of colloidal gold-labeled immunoglobulin g (igg) as the detection reagent is an approach that may increase the sensitivity of rapid antigen tests for respiratory viruses [ ] . monoclonal antibodies specifically against sars-cov- have been under preparation. novel approaches to concentrate antigen, or to amplify the detection phase are needed if these methods are to have clinical utility. sona nanotech (halifax, canada) is developing a quick-response lateral-flow test to screen covid- patients targeting to produce results in - min (https://sonanano.com/sona-develops-rapidscreening-test-for-coronavirus/. accessed february ). timing of specimen collection, when viral titres are highest, may improve the diagnostic sensitivity of rapid antigen tests for hcovs [ ] . serological assays are not routinely used for diagnosis of hcov infections due to the lack of commercial reagents, let alone commercial reagents that have been vetted by clinical trials and the regulatory review process [ , ] (table ). serological assays, on the other hand, are important for understanding the epidemiology of emerging hcovs, including the burden and role of asymptomatic infections. it has been particularly important for antibody detection in the diagnosis of cases of novel and emerging hcovs, such as sars-cov and mers-cov [ , ] . in these situations, affected patients may not test positive for viral rna, particularly in the early phase of the disease, but retrospectively can be shown to have developed an immune response. when sars-cov- was identified, especially when rapid antigen testing and/or molecular assays are neither available nor stable, serology can be used as a supplementary diagnostic tool. a recent study demonstrated that both igm and igg antibodies were detected days after onset in all patients infected with sars-cov- infection. the authors recommended to use serology to facilitate the diagnosis of sars-cov- infections when an np swab specimen was collected inappropriately and the molecular assays were performed unsatisfactorily [ ] . in china, six serology devices have just received urgent approval from the national medical products administration (nmpa) by march (table ) . proper specimen handling and storage are important to maintain the integrity of specimens and the performance of serologic tests. random-amplification deep-sequencing approaches played a critical role in identifying mers-cov and sars-cov- [ , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . for the clinical diagnostic application, the genetic heterogeneity of hcovs precludes a single "pan-hcov" molecular assay [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] ( table ). some pan-cov assays use degenerate primers [ ] , some utilize multiple primer sets [ ] , and others employ a single set of nondegenerate primers [ ] . current molecular respiratory panels that detect the endemic hcovs (hcov-nl , hcov-hku , hcov-oc , and hcov- e) require multiple sets of pcr oligonucleotides [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] . sars-cov- cases tested negative for endemic hcovs included in molecular respiratory panels [ ] . in china, at the time of revising, eleven molecular devices from shanghai zj bio-tech, shanghai geneodx biotech, bgi biotech (wuhan), mgi tech, da an gene, sansure biotech, shanghai biogerm medical biotech capitalbio (chengdu), beijing applied biological technologies, maccura biotechnology, and wuhan easydiagnosis biomedicine have received urgent approval from nmpa and their characteristics are contrasted in table . variable performance has been reported on these devices [ , ] . in their registration certificates, it was clearly indicated that the certificate was for urgent and supplemental diagnosis of pneumonia caused by sars-cov- . additional multi-centre clinical trial data are needed for extension after one year. among them, one (mgi tech) uses its ngs technique to detect all pathogens in a given specimen including sars-cov- and the other one (innovita) uses its isothermal amplification followed by chip detection. the other nine devices incorporated real-time pcr technique with hydrolysis probes. after nucleic acids get extracted (separated reagents and systems), the extracts are transferred to a real-time pcr thermocycler (e.g. abi fast dx real-time pcr instrument) for nucleic acid amplification and detection. several rt-pcr protocols for detection of sars-cov- rna have been posted by the world health organization at https://www.who.int/emergencies/ diseases/novel-coronavirus- /technical-guidance/ laboratory-guidance. (accessed march ). three of these protocols are listed below. the us cdc developed developed a rt-pcr diagnostic panel for universal detection of sars-like betacoronaviruses and specific detection of sars-cov- [ ] . three separate rt-pcr reactions target the n gene. one primer/probe set detects all betacoronaviruses, while two sets are specific for sars-cov- . all assays must be positive to report presumptive positive for sars-cov- (https://www.fda.gov/ media/ /download. accessed march ). specimen types included upper and lower respiratory specimens (such as np or op swabs, sputum, lower respiratory tract aspirates, bal, and nasopharyngeal wash/aspirate or nasal aspirate). it the charité algorithm (berlin, germany) begins with two rt-pcr assays that detect e and rdrp genes of subgenus sarbecovirus (sars-cov, sars-cov- , and bat-associated betacoronaviruses). both assays must be positive to advance to the next step in the testing algorithm. the second step consists of a [ ] [ ] [ ] naat, monoplex, specific-hcov high sensitivity and specificity for special species, potential quantification - h diagnosis (detection, differentiation, and limited typing) and research [ , ] naat, multiplex high sensitivity and specificity, covering other pathogens, filmarray rp ez is clia-waived - h diagnosis (detection, differentiation, and limited typing) and research [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] naat, poct rapid and safe, good sensitivity and specificity, some are clia-waived diagnosis (detection and limited differentiation) and research [ , ] note: eia, enzyme immunoassay; ifa, immunofluorescent assay; naat, nucleic acid amplification test; clia, clinical laboratory improvement act. sars-cov- specific rt-pcr that targets rdrp [ , ] . exclusivity testing showed that alphacoronaviruses (cov-nl and − e) and betacoronaviruses hcov-oc , hcov-hku and mers-cov were not detected (https://www.who.int/docs/default-source/ coronaviruse/protocol-v - .pdf?sfvrsn=a ef c_ . accessed february ). the university of hong kong li ka shing faculty of medicine protocol uses two assays (n gene screening assay followed by orf b assay for confirmation) to detect subgenus sarbecovirus [ , ] . since sars-cov is not circulating in humans currently, cases that are positive should be considered as sars-cov- infected cases. exclusivity testing showed that e, oc and mers, e, hku , nl , oc yielded negative results (https://www.who.int/docs/defaultsource/coronaviruse/peiris-protocol- - - .pdf? sfvrsn=af aac _ . accessed february ). all three novel coronaviruses are highly contagious. fast, safe, simple to use diagnostic devices performed at or near the point of care (poc) (figure ) which have been shown to impact patient management and control of infectious disease epidemics [ ], are extremely desirable in poc when biosafety facility is limited (table ) . several manufactures have been spending efforts to generate devices for poc testing (poct) [ ] . the id now™ (previously alere i) influenza a & b assay (abbott, san diego, ca) was cleared by the us fda for direct use on np swabs as the first-ever clinical laboratory improvement amendments (clia)-waived nucleic acid-based test in january [ , ] . similarly, the xpert® xpress flu/rsv (cepheid, sunnyvale, ca) and cobas® liat® flu a/b & rsv (roche molecular systems, pleasanton, ca) assays are integrated nucleic acid extraction-independent devices that have recently received fda clearance and clia-waiver for simultaneous detection and identification of flua, flub, and rsv in nasopharyngeal swabs [ ] . the filmarray® respiratory ez panel (biofire, salt lake city, ut) so far so far is the only clia-waived syndromic panel that covers a set of respiratory viral and bacterial pathogens including classical coronavirus species [ ] . considering the increased levels of mortality and infectivity associated with three novel-coronavirus outbreaks, these random-access, safe and simple tests, which offer fast and accurate detection and identification, are likely to have an immediate impact on prompt clinical and epidemiological decisions [ , ] . lysis buffer can be used to inactivate the infectivity of specimens so the testing can be run at poc when a biosafety cabinet is not available. fast near-patient and poct could help more efficiently triage of suspected cases of novel coronavirus, helping to focus limited resources on enabling appropriate use of quarantine. a handful of diagnostics developers are now striving to bring fast sars-cov- tests to market as soon as possible, with hopes of ultimately assisting with the ongoing outbreak in china. molecular diagnostic tests for use at the are in development from cepheid and hibergene (dublin, ireland). cepheid has some advantages in the molecular poct space because it already has instruments placed in china. mobidiag, meanwhile, may offer additional benefits with a multiplex test for coronavirus and flu viruses (https://www. genomeweb.com/pcr/diagnostics-firms-rush-developrapid-point-care-tests-novel-coronavirus#.xkea sgzy x. accessed february ). mjl and y-wt are employees of cepheid, the commercial manufacturer of the xpert xpress sars-cov- test. figure . evolutions in molecular testing procedures. the point-of-care test (poct) devices incorporate nucleic acid extraction, amplification and detection together into an integrated and sealed cartridge making it simple, rapid and safe. during end-point pcr, dna is detected or measured at the completion of pcr amplification, requiring post-pcr processing. real-time pcr is a closed-tube system in which dna is detected or measured during the exponential phase of amplification. epidemiology, genetic recombination, and pathogenesis of coronaviruses a novel coronavirus associated with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus as a possible cause of severe acute respiratory syndrome epidemiological, demographic, and clinical characteristics of cases of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus disease from saudi arabia: a descriptive study clinical features and virological analysis of a case of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia outbreak of pneumonia of unknown etiology in wuhan china: the mystery and the miracle a novel coronavirus from patients with pneumonia in china the species severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus: classifying -ncov and naming it sars-cov- genomic characterisation and epidemiology of novel coronavirus: implications for virus origins and receptor binding a pneumonia outbreak associated with a new coronavirus of probable bat origin epidemiology and clinical presentations of the four human coronaviruses e, hku , nl , and oc detected over years using a novel multiplex real-time pcr method the role of super-spreaders in infectious disease covid- : epidemiology, evolution, and cross-disciplinary perspectives early transmission dynamics in wuhan, china, of novel coronavirus-infected pneumonia clinical features of patients infected with novel coronavirus in wuhan updated understanding of the outbreak of novel coronavirus ( -ncov) in wuhan clinical course and outcomes of critically ill patients with sars-cov- pneumonia in wuhan, china: a single-centered, retrospective, observational study characteristics of covid- infection in beijing first case of novel coronavirus in the united states diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of novel coronavirus infection in children: experts' consensus statement clinical characteristics of coronavirus disease in china practical guidance for clinical microbiology laboratories: viruses causing acute respiratory tract infections simple method for combining sputum and nasal samples for virus detection by reverse transcriptase pcr detection of sars-cov- in different types of clinical specimens viral shedding patterns of coronavirus in patients with probable severe 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acute respiratory syndrome (sars)-associated coronavirus in cells derived from throat wash samples of patients with sars comparison of immunofluorescence with monoclonal antibodies and rt-pcr for the detection of human coronaviruses e and oc in cell culture evaluation of a commercial colloidal gold assay for detection of influenza a and b virus in children's respiratory specimens rapid detection and monitoring of human coronavirus infections examination of seroprevalence of coronavirus hku infection with s protein-based elisa and neutralization assay against viral spike pseudotyped virus seroepidemiology of group i human coronaviruses in children molecular and serological investigation of -ncov infected patients: implication of multiple shedding routes middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus quasispecies that include homologues of human isolates revealed through whole-genome analysis and virus cultured from dromedary camels in saudi arabia rna based mngs approach identifies a novel human coronavirus from two individual pneumonia cases in wuhan outbreak a new coronavirus associated with human respiratory disease in china identification of a novel coronavirus causing severe pneumonia in human: a descriptive study co-infection with sars-cov- and influenza a virus in patient with pneumonia laboratory diagnosis of respiratory tract infections in children -the state of the art molecular diagnosis of severe acute respiratory syndrome: the state of the art emerging molecular assays for detection and characterization of respiratory viruses molecular assays for the detection and characterization of respiratory viruses no novel coronaviruses identified in a large collection of human nasopharyngeal specimens using family-wide codehop-based primers clinical disease in children associated with newly described coronavirus subtypes characterization and complete genome sequence of a novel coronavirus, coronavirus hku , from patients with pneumonia multicenter evaluation of the eplex respiratory pathogen panel for the detection of viral and bacterial respiratory tract pathogens in nasopharyngeal swabs comparison of the luminex xtag rvp fast assay and the idaho technology filmarray rp assay for detection of respiratory viruses in pediatric patients at a cancer hospital clinical evaluation of the luminex nxtag respiratory pathogen panel positive rate of rt-pcr detection of sars-cov- infection in cases from one hospital in transmission of -ncov infection from an asymptomatic contact in germany detection of novel coronavirus ( -ncov) by real-time rt-pcr genomic characterization of the novel human-pathogenic coronavirus isolated from a patient with atypical pneumonia after visiting wuhan establishing ebola virus disease (evd) diagnostics using genexpert technology at a mobile laboratory in liberia: impact on outbreak response, case management and laboratory systems strengthening point-of-care testing for infectious diseases: past, present, and future evaluation of alere i influenza a&b for rapid detection of influenza viruses a and b profile of the alere i influenza a & b assay: a pioneering molecular pointof-care test parallel validation of three molecular devices for simultaneous detection and identification of influenza a and b and respiratory syncytial viruses performance and impact of a clia-waived, point-of-care respiratory pcr panel in a pediatric clinic identification of a new human coronavirus development and evaluation of novel real-time reverse transcription-pcr assays with locked nucleic acid probes targeting leader sequences of human-pathogenic coronaviruses human coronavirus infections in rural thailand: a comprehensive study using real-time reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction assays key: cord- -vk lt x authors: ruiz, sara i.; zumbrun, elizabeth e.; nalca, aysegul title: animal models of human viral diseases date: - - journal: animal models for the study of human disease doi: . /b - - - - . - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: vk lt x as the threat of exposure to emerging and reemerging viruses within a naïve population increases, it is vital that the basic mechanisms of pathogenesis and immune response be thoroughly investigated. recent outbreaks of middle east respiratory syndrome corona virus, ebola virus, chikungunya virus, and zika virus illustrate the emerging threats that are encountered. by utilizing animal models in this endeavor, the host response to viruses can be studied in a more complex and integrated context to identify novel drug targets, and assess the efficacy and safety of new products rapidly. this is especially true in the advent and implementation of the fda animal rule. although no one animal model is able to recapitulate all aspects of human disease, understanding the current limitations allows for a more targeted experimental design. important facets to consider prior to an animal study are route of viral exposure, species of animal, biomarkers of disease, and a humane endpoint. this chapter covers the current animal models for medically important human viruses, and demonstrates where the gaps in knowledge exist. well-developed animal models are necessary to understand disease progression, pathogenesis, and immunologic responses to viral infections in humans. furthermore, to test vaccines and medical countermeasures, animal models are essential for preclinical studies. ideally, an animal model of human viral infection should mimic the host-pathogen interactions and the disease progression that is seen in the natural disease course. a good animal model of viral infection should allow assay of many parameters of infection, including clinical signs, growth of virus, clinicopathological parameters, cellular and humoral immune responses, and virus-host interactions. furthermore, viral replication should be accompanied by measurable clinical manifestations and pathology should resemble that of human cases such that a better understanding of the disease process in humans is attained. there is often more than one animal model that closely represents human disease for a given pathogen. small animal models are typically used for first-line screening, and for testing the efficacy of vaccines or therapeutics. in contrast, nonhuman primate (nhp) models are often used for pivotal preclinical studies. this approach is also used for basic pathogenesis studies, with most studies in small animal models when possible, and studies in nhps to fill in the remaining gaps in knowledge. the advantages of using mice to develop animal models are low cost, low genetic variability in inbred strains, and abundant molecular biological and immunological reagents. specific pathogen free (spf), transgenic and knockout mice are also available. a major pitfall of mouse models is that the pathogenesis and protection afforded by vaccines and therapeutics cannot always be extrapolated to humans. additionally, blood volumes for sampling are limited in small animals, and viruses often need to be adapted through serial passage in the species to induce a productive infection. the ferret's airways are anatomically and histologically similar to that of humans, and their size enables collection of larger or more frequent blood samples, making them an ideal model for certain respiratory pathogens. ferrets are outbred, with no standardized breeds or strains, thus greater numbers are required in studies to achieve statistical significance and overcome the resulting variable responses. additionally, spf and transgenic ferrets are not available, and molecular biological reagents are lacking. other caveats making ferret models more difficult to work with are their requirement for more space than mice (rabbit-style cages), and the development of aggressive behavior with repeated procedures. nhps are genetically, the closest species to humans, thus disease progression and host-pathogen responses to viral infections are often the most similar to that of humans. however, ethical concerns pertaining to experimentation on nhps along with the high cost and lack of spf nhps raise barriers for such studies. nhp studies should be carefully designed to ensure the fewest number of animals are used, and the studies should address the most critical questions regarding disease pathogenesis, host-pathogen responses, and protective efficacy of vaccines and therapeutics. well-designed experiments should carefully evaluate the choice of animal, including the strain, sex, and age. furthermore, depending on the pathogen, the route of exposure and the dose should mimic the route of exposure and dose of human disease. the endpoint for these studies is also an important criterion. depending on the desired outcome, the model system should emulate the host responses in humans when infected with the same pathogen. in summary, small animal models are helpful for the initial screening of vaccines and therapeutics, and are often beneficial in obtaining a basic understanding of the disease. nhp models should be used for a more detailed characterization of pathogenesis and for pivotal preclinical testing studies. ultimately, an ideal animal model may not be available. in this case, a combination of different well-characterized animal models should be considered to understand the disease progression and to test medical countermeasures against the disease. in this chapter, we will be reviewing the animal models for representative members of numerous virus families causing human diseases. we will focus on viruses for each family that are of the greatest concern for public health worldwide. norovirus, the genus of which norwalk is the prototypic member, is the most common cause of gastroenteritis in the united states (hall et al., ) . there are five distinct genogroups (gi-gv) and numerous strains of norwalk virus, including the particularly significant human pathogens gi. norwalk virus, gii. snow mountain virus, and gii. hawaii virus. in developing countries, norwalk virus, also known as "winter vomiting virus," is responsible for approximately , deaths annually (patel et al., ) . a typical disease course is self-limiting, but there have been incidences of necrotizing enterocolitis and seizures in infants (chen et al., ; lutgehetmann et al., ; turcios-ruiz et al., ) . symptoms of infection include diarrhea, vomiting, nausea, abdominal cramping, dehydration, and fever. incubation is normally - days, with symptoms persisting for - days (koopmans and duizer, ) . viral shedding can range from to days in healthy individuals (atmar et al., ) . however, longer illness duration can be indicative of immunocompromised status, with the elderly and young having a prolonged state of shedding (harris et al., ; rockx et al., ) . interestingly, individuals vary greatly in susceptibility to norovirus infection depending on their fucosyl transferase (fut ) allele functionality and histoblood group antigen status, with type a and o individuals susceptible and types ab and b resistant (hutson et al., ) . transmission occurs predominately through the oralfecal route with contaminated food and water being a major vector (atmar and estes, ; becker et al., ; koopmans and duizer, ) . vomiting results in airborne dissemination of the virus with areas of . m being contaminated and subsequent transmission from oral deposition of airborne particles or contact with contaminated fomites, which can remain contaminated for up to days (makison booth, ; tung-thompson et al., ) . each vomiting event in a classroom setting elevates the risk of norovirus illness among elementary students with proximity correlating with attack rates (evans et al., ; marks et al., ) . viral titers in emesis and fecal suspensions are as high as . × and . × ges (genomic equivalent copies per milliliter), respectively and the % infectious dose is ges (atmar et al., ) . therefore, outbreaks can be extremely difficult to contain. therapeutic intervention consists of rehydration therapy and antiemetic medication (bucardo et al., ; moe et al., ) . no approved vaccine or therapeutic is available, and development has been challenging given that immunity is short-lived after infection, new strains rapidly evolve and the correlates of protection are not completely understood (chen et al., ) . however, one promising strategy utilized a virus-like particle (vlp)-based vaccine that protected or reduced infection by almost % in human volunteers (aliabadi et al., ; atmar et al., ) . given the relatively benign disease in adults, experimental challenge has been carried out on human volunteers (ball et al., ; tacket et al., ) . viral titers are determined by shedding in feces and sera with histopathology changes monitored by biopsies particularly of the duodenum. the ph of emesis samples collected containing virus is consistent with viral replication in the small intestine with reflux to the stomach (kirby et al., ) . additionally, norwalk virus has been shown to bind to duodenal tissue (chan et al., ) . however, this type of research is technically difficult and expensive, and thus other models have been developed. a major hindrance to basic research into this pathogen is the lack of permissive cell culture systems or animal models for norwalk virus. nhps including marmosets, cotton-top tamarins, and rhesus macaques infected with norwalk virus are monitored for the extent of viral shedding; however, no clinical disease is observed in these models. disease progression and severity is measured exclusively by assay of viral shedding (rockx et al., ) . incidentally, more viruses were needed to create an infection when challenging by the oral route than by the intravenous (iv) route (purcell et al., ) . chimpanzees were exposed to a clinical isolate of norwalk virus by the iv route (bok et al., ) . although none of the animals developed disease symptoms, viral shedding within the feces was observed within - days postinfection and lasted anywhere from days to weeks. viremia never occurred and no histopathological changes were detected. the amount and duration of viral shedding was in-line with what is observed upon human infection. as such, chimeric chimpanzee-human antinorovirus neutralizing antibodies have been explored as a possible therapeutic strategy (chen et al., ) . a recently identified calicivirus of rhesus origin, named tulane virus, has been used as a surrogate model of infection. unlike norwalk virus, tulane virus can be cultured in cells. rhesus macaques exposed to tulane virus intragastrically developed diarrhea and fever days postinfection. viral shedding was detected for days. the immune system produced antibodies that dropped in concentration within days postinfection, mirroring the short-lived immunity documented in humans. the intestine developed moderate blunting of the villi as seen in human disease (sestak et al., ) . a murine norovirus has been identified and is closely related to human norwalk virus (karst et al., ) . however, clinically the virus presents a different disease. the murine norovirus model does not include observable gastrointestinal clinical signs, possibly in part because rodents lack a vomiting reflex. additionally, mice infected with norovirus develop a persistent infection in contrast to human disease (hsu et al., (hsu et al., , khan et al., ) . porcine enteric caliciviruses can induce diarrheal disease in young pigs, and an asymptomatic infection in adults (wang et al., . gnotobiotic pigs can successfully be infected with a passaged clinical norovirus isolate by the oral route. diarrheal disease developed in % of the animals and virus was detected in the stool of % of the animals. no major histopathological changes or viral persistence was noted (cheetham et al., ) . calves are naturally infected with bovine noroviruses (scipioni et al., ) . experimental challenge of calves by oral inoculation with a bovine isolate resulted in diarrheal disease - h postinfection. recovery of virus was achieved after . and h postinfection (otto et al., ) . eastern equine encephalitis virus (eeev), western equine encephalitis virus (weev), and venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (veev) present with near synonymous symptoms. the majorities of human cases are asymptomatic, but can present as a flu-like illness progressing to central nervous system (cns) involvement to include seizures and paralysis. mortality rates vary among the virus, with the highest reported for eev at %- % followed by weev and lastly veev at less than % (ayers et al., ; griffin, ; steele and twenhafel, ) . there are currently no licensed vaccines or therapies but a recent phase clinical trial of a veev dna vaccine resulted in veev-neutralizing antibody responses in % of the subjects (hannaman et al., ) . mouse models have been developed for numerous routes of infection including cutaneous, intranasal (in), intracranial (ic), and aerosol. eeev susceptibility in mouse models is correlated with age, with younger mice being more susceptible than adults. importantly, eeev pathogenesis is dependent on route of infection with delayed progression upon subcutaneous (subq) exposure (honnold et al., ) . newborn mice display neuronal damage with rapid disease progression, resulting in death (murphy and whitfield, ) . similarly, eeev produces fatal encephalitis in older mice when administered via the intracerebral route, while inoculation via the subq route causes a pantropic infection eventually resulting in encephalitis (liu et al., ; morgan, ) . a general drawback to the usage of the mouse model is the lack of vascular involvement during the disease course (liu et al., ) . after subq inoculation with weev, suckling mice started to show signs of disease by h and died within h (aguilar, ) . the heart was the only organ in which pathologic changes were observed. conversely, adult mice exhibited signs of lethargy and ruffled fur on day - postinfection. mice were severely ill by day and appeared hunched and dehydrated. death occurred between days and with brain and mesodermal tissues, such as heart, lungs, liver, and kidney involvement (aguilar, ; monath et al., ) . intracerebral and in routes of infection resulted in a fatal disease that was highly dependent on dose while intradermal (id) and subq inoculations caused only % fatality in mice regardless of the amount of virus (liu et al., ) . comparing susceptibility of inbred and outbred strains revealed that cd- , balb/c, a/j, and c bl mice were all highly susceptible to experimental infection via subq inoculation when challenged prior to weeks old with cns involvement and lethality (blakely et al., ) . subq/dermal infection in the mouse model results in encephalitic disease very similar to that seen in horses and humans (macdonald and johnston, ) . virus begins to replicate in the draining lymph nodes at h postinoculation. eventually, virus enters the brain primarily via the olfactory system. furthermore, aerosol exposure of mice to veev can result in massive infection of the olfactory neuroepithelium, olfactory nerves, and olfactory bulbs and viral spread to brain, resulting in necrotizing panencephalitis (charles et al., ; steele et al., ) . aerosol and dermal inoculation routes cause neurological pathology in mice much faster than other routes of exposure. the clinical signs of disease in mice infected by aerosol are ruffled fur, lethargy, and hunching progressing to death (charles et al., ; steele and twenhafel, ; steele et al., ) . in challenge of c h/hen mice with high dose veev caused high morbidity and mortality (julander et al., b) . viral titers in brain peaked on day postchallenge and remained elevated until animals succumbed on day - postchallenge. protein cytokine array performed on brains of infected mice showed elevated il- a, il- b, il- , il- , mcp- , ifnγ, mip- a, and rantes levels. this model was used successfully to test antivirals against veev (julander et al., a) . additionally, a veev vaccine inactivated with , -iodonaphthyl azide v protects against both footpad and aerosol challenge with virulent veev in a mouse model (gupta et al., ) . guinea pigs and hamsters have also been developed as animal models for eeev studies (paessler et al., ; roy et al., ) . guinea pigs developed neurological involvement with decreased activity, tremors, circling behavior, and coma. neuronal necrosis was observed in brain lesions in the experimentally challenged animals (roy et al., ) . subq inoculation of eeev produced lethal biphasic disease in hamsters with severe lesions of nerve cells. the early visceral phase with viremia was followed by neuroinvasion, encephalitis, and death. in addition, parenchyma necrosis were observed in the liver and lymphoid organs (paessler et al., ) . harlan sprague-dawley hamsters develop viremia and progress to respiratory, gastrointestinal, and nervous system involvement when inoculated via subq route. vasculitis and encephalitis were both evident in this model, which mirrors the human disease clinical spectrum (paessler et al., ) . weev is highly infectious to guinea pigs and has been utilized for prophylactic screening (sidwell and smee, ) . studies demonstrated that although the length of the incubation period and the disease duration varied, weev infection resulted in mortality in hamsters by all routes of inoculation. progressive lack of coordination, shivering, rapid and noisy breathing, corneal opacity, and conjunctival discharge resulting in closing of the eyelids were indicative of disease in all cases (zlotnik et al., ) . cns involvement was evident with intracerebral, intraperitoneal (ip), and id inoculations (zlotnik et al., ) . ip inoculation of weev is fatal in guinea pigs regardless of amount of virus inoculum, with the animals exhibiting signs of illness on day - , followed by death on day - (nalca, unpublished results) . id, im, or iv inoculations of eeev in nhps cause disease, but does not reliably result in neurological symptoms (dupuy and reed, ) . intracerebral infection of eeev produces nervous system disease and fatality in monkeys (nathanson et al., ) . the differences in these models indicate that the initial viremia and the secondary nervous system infection do not overlap in nhps when they are inoculated by the peripheral route (wyckoff, ) . in and intralingual inoculations of eeev also cause nervous system symptoms in monkeys, but are less drastic than intracerebral injections (wyckoff, ) . the aerosol route of delivery will result in uniformly lethal disease in cynomolgus macaques (reed et al., ) . in this model, fever was followed by elevated white blood cells and liver enzymes. neurological signs subsequently developed and nhps became moribund and were euthanized between - days postexposure. meningoencephalomyelitis was the main pathology observed in the brains of these animals (steele and twenhafel, ) . similar clinical signs and pathology were observed when common marmosets were infected with eeev by the in route (adams et al., ) . both aerosol and in nhp models had similar disease progression and pathology as seen in human disease. very limited studies have been performed with nhps. reed et al. exposed cynomolgus macaques to low and high doses of aerosolized weev. the animals subsequently developed fever, increased white blood counts, and cns involvement, demonstrating that the cynomolgus macaque model could be useful for testing of vaccines and therapeutics against weev (reed et al., ) . veev infection causes a typical biphasic febrile response in nhps. initial fever was observed at - h after infection and lasted less than h. secondary fever generally began on day and lasted - days (gleiser et al., ) . veev-infected nhps exhibited mild symptoms, such as anorexia, irritability, diarrhea, and tremors. leukopenia was common in animals exhibiting fever (monath et al., ) . supporting the leukopenia, microscopic changes in lymphatic tissues, such as early destruction of lymphocytes in lymph nodes and spleen, a mild lymphocytic infiltrate in the hepatic triads, and focal myocardial necrosis with lymphocytic infiltration have been observed in monkeys infected with veev. surprisingly, characteristic lesions of the cns were observed histopathologically in monkeys in spite of the lack of any clinical signs of infection (gleiser et al., ) . the primary lesions were lymphocytic perivascular cuffing and glial proliferation and generally observed at day postinfection during the secondary febrile episode. similar to these observations, when cynomolgus macaques were exposed to aerosolized veev, fever, viremia, lymphopenia, and clinical signs of encephalitis were observed but the nhps did not succumb to disease (reed et al., ) . a common marmoset model was utilized for comparison studies of south america (sa) and north america (na) strains of eeev (adams et al., ) . previous studies indicated that the sa strain is less virulent than na strain for humans. common marmosets were infected in with either the na or sa strain of eeev. na strain-infected animals showed signs of anorexia and neurological involvement and were euthanized - days after the challenge. although sa strain-infected animals developed viremia, they remained asymptomatic and survived until the end of study. chikungunya virus (chikv) is a member of the genus alphaviruses, specifically the semliki forest complex, and has been responsible for a multitude of epidemics centered within africa and southeast asia (griffin, ) . the virus is transmitted by aedes aegypti and aedes albopictus mosquitoes. given the widespread endemicity of aedes mosquitoes, chikv has the potential to spread to previously unaffected areas. this is typified by the emergence of disease reported for the first time in in the islands of south-west indian ocean, including the french la reunion island, and the appearance in central italy in (charrel et al., ; rezza et al., ) . the incubation period following a mosquito bite is - days, leading to a self-limiting acute phase that lasts - days. symptoms during this period include fever, arthralgia, myalgia, and rash. headache, weakness, nausea, vomiting, and polyarthralgia have all been reported (powers and logue, ) . individuals typically develop a stooped posture due to the pain. for approximately % of infected individuals, joint pain can last months after resolution of primary disease, and has the possibility to relapse. underlying health conditions including diabetes, alcoholism, or renal disease, increase the risk of developing a severe form of disease that includes hepatitis or encephalopathy. children between the ages of and years old have an increased risk of developing neurological manifestations (arpino et al., ) . there is currently no approved vaccine or antiviral. wild-type c bl/ adult mice are not permissive to chikv infection by id inoculation. however, it was demonstrated that neonatal mice were susceptible and severity was dependent upon age at infection. six-dayold mice developed paralysis by day , and all succumbed by day , whereas % of -day-old mice were able to recover from infection. by days, mice were no longer permissive to disease. symptomatic mice developed loss of balance, hind limb dragging, and skin lesions. neonatal mice were also used as a model for neurological complications (couderc et al., ; ziegler et al., ) . an adult mouse model has been developed by injection of the ventral side of the footpad of c bl/ j mice. viremia lasted - days accompanied with foot swelling and noted inflammation of the musculoskeletal tissue morrison et al., ) . adult ifnα/βr knockout mice also developed mild disease with symptoms including muscle weakness and lethargy, symptoms that mirrored human infection. all adult mice died within days. this model was useful in identifying the viral cellular tropism for fibroblasts (couderc et al., ) . icr and cd- mice can also be utilized as a disease model. neonatal mice inoculated subq with a passaged clinical isolate of chikv developed lethargy, loss of balance, and difficulty walking. mortality was low, and % for newborn cd- and icr mice, respectively. the remaining mice fully recovered within weeks after infection (ziegler et al., ) . a drawback of both the ifnα/βr and cd- mice is that the disease is not a result of immunopathogenesis as occurs in human cases, given that the mice are immunocompromised (teo et al., ) . a chronic infection model was developed using recombinant activating gene (rag −/− ) knockout mice. in this study, mice inoculated via the footpad lost weight in comparison to the control group. both footpad and subq injected mice developed viremia - days postinfection, which was detectable up to days postinfection. inflammation was evident in the brain, liver, and lung of the subq inoculated animals at - days postinfection. despite minimal footpad swelling on day postinfection, on day there was severe muscle damage noted at necropsy, which resolved by day (seymour et al., ) . golden hamsters serve as another option for small animal modeling. although hamsters do not appear to develop overt clinical symptoms following subq inoculation, viremia developed in the majority of animals within day postinfection with clearance following from day to . histologically, inflammation was noted at the skeletal muscle, fascia, and tendon sheaths of numerous limbs. this study was limited in the number of animals utilized, and more work is needed to further develop the hamster model (bosco-lauth et al., ) . nhp models of disease include adult, aged, and pregnant rhesus macaques in addition to cynomolgus macaques (broeckel et al., ) . differing routes of infection (subq, iv, and im) have been successfully administered, although there is not a clear understanding of the role that route of transmission plays in subsequent pathogenesis and clinical symptoms. typically, viremia is observed - days postinfection with a correlation between infectious titer and time to viremia observed in cynomolgus but not rhesus (labadie et al., ; messaoudi et al., ) . fever began at - days postinfection and persisted for - days and - days in cynomolgus and rhesus, respectively and coincided with rash (chen et al., ; labadie et al., ; messaoudi et al., ) . overall blood chemistries changed in conjunction with initiation of viremia, and returned to baseline - days postexposure (chen et al., ) . cns involvement has been difficult to reproduce in nhp models, although it was reported that high inoculum in cynomolgus did result in meningoencephalitis (labadie et al., ) . the nhp models have been utilized to conduct efficacy testing on novel vaccines and therapeutics (broeckel et al., ) . dengue virus (denv) is transmitted via the mosquito vectors a. aegypti and a. albopictus (moore and mitchell, ) . given the endemicity of the vectors, it is estimated that half of the world's population is at risk for exposure to denv. this results in approximately million cases of dengue each year, with the burden of disease in the tropical and subtropical regions of latin america, south asia, and southeast asia (gubler, ) . it is estimated that there are , deaths each year due to dengue hemorrhagic fever (dhf) (guzman and kouri, ) . there are four distinct serotypes of denv, numbered - , which are capable of causing a wide clinical spectrum that ranges from asymptomatic to severe with the development of dhf (world health organization, ) . incubation can range from to days, with the average being - days. the virus targets dendritic cells and macrophages following a mosquito bite (balsitis et al., ) . typical infection results in classic dengue fever (df), which is self-limiting and has flu-like symptoms in conjunction with retroorbital pain, headache, skin rash, and bone and muscle pain. dhf can follow, with vascular leak syndrome and low platelet count, resulting in hemorrhage. in the most extreme cases, dengue shock syndrome (dss) develops, characterized by hypotension, shock, and circulatory failure (world health organization, ) . thrombocytopenia is a hallmark clinical sign of infection, and aids in differential diagnosis (gregory et al., ) . severe disease has a higher propensity to occur upon secondary infection with a different denv serotype (thein et al., ) . this is hypothesized to occur due to antibody dependent enhancement (ade). there is no approved vaccine or drug, and hospitalized patients receive supportive care including fluid replacement. in order to further progress toward an effective drug or vaccine, small human cohort studies have taken place. however, to provide statistically relevant results, testing must progress in an animal model. in developing an animal model, it is important to note that mosquitoes typically deposit - pfu, and is considered the optimal range during experimental challenge . denv does not naturally replicate effectively in rodent cells, creating the need for mouse-adapted strains, engineered mouse lines, and a variety of inoculation routes to overcome the initial barrier. several laboratory mouse strains including a/j, balb/c, and c bl/ are permissive to dengue infection. however, the resulting disease has little resemblance to human clinical signs, and death results from paralysis (huang et al., ; paes et al., ; shresta et al., ) . a higher dose of an adapted denv strain induced dhf symptoms in both balb/c and c bl/ souza et al., ) . this model can also yield asymptomatic infections. a mouse-adapted strain of denv introduced into ag mice developed vascular leak syndrome similar to the severe disease seen in humans (shresta et al., ) . passive transfer of monoclonal dengue antibodies within mice leads to ade. during the course of infection, viremia was increased and animals died due to vascular leak syndrome (balsitis et al., ) . another mouse-adapted strain injected into balb/c caused liver damage, hemorrhagic manifestations, and vascular permeability (souza et al., ) . ic injection of suckling mice with denv leads to death by paralysis and encephalitis, which is rare in human infection (lee et al., ; parida et al., ; zhao et al., a) . immunocompromised mice have also been used to gain an understanding of the pathogenesis of denv. the most well-defined model is ag which is deficient in ifnα/β and γ receptors and can recapitulate dhf/dss if a mouse-adapted strain is utilized yauch et al., ) . scid mice engrafted with human tumor cells develop paralysis upon infection, and thus are not useful for pathogenesis studies (blaney et al., ; lin et al., ) . df symptoms developed after infection in nod/scid/il rγko mice engrafted with cd + human progenitor cells (mota and rico-hesse, ) . rag-hu mice developed fever, but no other symptoms upon infection with a passaged clinical isolate and labadapted strain of denv (kuruvilla et al., ) . a passaged clinical isolate of denv was used to create a model in immunocompetent adult mice. ip injection in c bl/ j and balb/c caused lethality by day - postinfection in a dose dependent manner. the first indication of infection was weight loss beginning on day followed by thrombocytopenia. a drop in systolic blood pressure along with noted increases in the liver enzymes, ast and alt, were also observed. viremia was established by day . this model mimicked the characteristic symptoms observed in human dhf/dss cases (costa et al., ) . vascular leakage was also observed when c bl/ were inoculated with denv (st john et al., ) . a murine model was developed that utilized infected mosquitoes as the route of transmission to hu-nsg mice. female mosquitoes were intrathoracically inoculated with a clinical isolate of denv . infected mosquitoes then fed upon the mouse footpad to allow for transmission of the virus via the natural route. the amount of virus detected within the mouse was directly proportional to the number of mosquitoes it was exposed to, with - being optimal. detectable viral rna was in line with historical human infection data. severe thrombocytopenia developed on day . this model is notable in that disease was enhanced with mosquito delivery of the virus in comparison to injection of the virus (cox et al., ) . nhp models have used a subq inoculation in an attempt to induce disease. although the animals are permissive to viral replication, it is to a lower degree than that observed in human infection (marchette et al., ) . the immunosuppressive drug, cyclophosphamide enhances infection in rhesus macaques by allowing the virus to invade monocytes (marchette et al., ) . throughout these preliminary studies, no clinical disease was detected. in order to circumvent this, a higher dose of denv was used in an iv challenge of rhesus macaques. hemorrhagic manifestations appeared by day and resulted in petechiae, hematomas, and coagulopathy; however, no other symptoms developed (onlamoon et al., ) . a robust antibody response was observed in multiple studies (marchette et al., ; onlamoon et al., ) . marmosets also mirror human dengue infection, developing fever, leukopenia, and thrombocytopenia following subq inoculation (omatsu et al., (omatsu et al., , . nhps are able to produce antibodies similar to those observed during the course of human infection, making them advantageous in studying ade. sequential infection led to a cross-reactive antibody response which has been demonstrated in both humans and mice (midgley et al., ) . this phenotype can also be seen upon passive transfer of a monoclonal antibody to dengue and subsequent infection with the virus. rhesus macaques exposed in this manner developed viremia that was -to -fold higher than previously reported, however, no clinical signs were apparent (goncalvez et al., ) . the lack of inducible dhf or dss symptoms hinders further examination of pathogenesis within this model. west nile virus (wnv) was first isolated from the blood of a woman in the west nile district of uganda in uganda in (smithburn et al., . after the initial isolation of wnv, the virus was subsequently isolated from patients, birds, and mosquitoes in egypt in the early s (melnick et al., ; taylor et al., ) and was shown to cause encephalitis in humans and horses. wnv is recognized as the most widespread of the flaviviruses, with a geographical distribution that includes africa, the middle east, western asia, europe, and australia (hayes, ) . the virus first reached the western hemisphere in the summer of , during an outbreak involving humans, horses, and birds in the new york city metropolitan area (centers for disease control and prevention, ; lanciotti et al., ) . since , the range of areas affected by wnv quickly extended. older people and children are most susceptible to wnv disease. wnv generally causes asymptomatic disease or a mild undifferentiated fever (west nile fever), which can last from to days (monath and tsai, ) . the mortality rate following neuroinvasive disease ranges from % to % (asnis et al., ; hayes, ; hubalek and halouzka, ; komar, ) . the most severe complications are commonly seen in the elderly, with reported case fatality rates from % to %. hepatitis, myocarditis, and pancreatitis are unusual, severe, nonneurologic manifestations of wnv infection. inoculation of wnv into nhps intracerebrally resulted in the development of either encephalitis, febrile disease, or an asymptomatic infection, depending on the virus strain and dose. viral persistence is observed in these animals regardless of the outcome of infection (i.e., asymptomatic, fever, encephalitis) (pogodina et al., ) . thus, viral persistence is regarded as a typical result of nhp infection with various wnv strains. after both intracerebral and subq inoculation, the virus localizes predominantly in the brain and may also be found in the kidneys, spleen, and lymph nodes. wnv does not result in clinical disease in nhps although the animals show a low level of viremia (lieberman et al., ; pletnev et al., ) . this is mirrored in new zealand white rabbits in that they only develop fever and low levels of viremia following inoculation via footpad (suen et al., ) . id inoculation of both marmosets and rhesus macaques did not yield any clinical signs of disease including fever. viremia was detected in both nhp species, but marmosets developed a higher titer for a greater duration than rhesus (verstrepen et al., ) . wnv has also been extensively studied in small animals. all classical laboratory mouse strains are susceptible to lethal infections by the intracerebral and ip routes, resulting in encephalitis and % mortality. id route pathogenesis studies indicated that langerhans dendritic cells are the initial viral replication sites in the skin (brown et al., ; johnston et al., ) . the infected langerhans cells then migrate to lymph nodes and the virus enters the blood through lymphatic and thoracic ducts and disseminates to peripheral tissues for secondary viral replication. virus eventually travels to the cns and causes pathology that is similar to human cases (byrne et al., ; cunha et al., ; diamond et al., ; fratkin et al., ) . the swiss mouse strain was inoculated ip in order to screen a variety of viral lineages to assess differences in pathogenesis (bingham et al., ) . tesh et al. developed a model for wn encephalitis using the golden hamster, mesocricetus auratus. hamsters appeared asymptomatic during the first days, became lethargic at approximately day , and developed neurologic symptoms between days and . many of the severely affected animals died - days after infection. viremia was detected in the hamsters within h after infection and persisted for - days. although there were no substantial changes in internal organs, progressive pathologic differences were seen in the brain and spinal cord of infected animals. furthermore, similar to the previously mentioned monkey experiments by pogodina et al. ( ) , persistent wnv infection was found in the brains of hamsters. zika virus recently came to the forefront of public health concerns with the outbreak in brazil at the end of . the clinical disease spectrum is highly variable with reports of a flu-like illness accompanied by rash, guillan-barre syndrome, and microcephaly in newborns (ramos da silva and gao, ) . to date, a correlation between gestational age at which exposure to the virus occurs and severity of microcephaly is not fully understood (brasil et al., ) . however, a recent study of pregnant women in columbia found that infection with zika virus during the third trimester was not associated with any obvious structural abnormalities of the fetus (pacheco et al., ) . transmission of the virus occurs via the bite from an infected a. aegypti or a. albopictus (ramos da silva and gao, ) . other reported routes of exposure include sexual transmission and blood transfusion (cunha et al., ; d'ortenzio et al., ; hills et al., ; mccarthy, ) . the emergence of this virus with no approved vaccine or therapy, and few diagnostic options demonstrates the utility of well-characterized animal model development. it was first demonstrated in that experimentally infected mosquitoes could be used to transmit the virus to mice and nhps (boorman and porterfield, ) . a mice were susceptible to nonadapted zika virus infection following subq inoculation of the limbs. mice began to lose weight days postinfection and met euthanasia criteria by day . microscopic lesions within the brain were noted upon necropsy. in conjunction, viral rna was detected in the blood, brain, ovary, spleen, and liver of the infected mice. wild-type sv/ev mice were also challenged with no observable clinical disease. however, viral rna was detected at day postinfection in the blood, ovary and spleen, and then remained at detectable levels in the ovaries and spleen on day (dowall et al., ) . footpad inoculation of the virus leads to a fatal disease in ag mice by day postinoculation with significant histopathological changes in the brain noted at necropsy (aliota et al., ) . ag mice were also observed to develop neurologic disease by day postexposure (rossi et al., ) . immunocompetent mice are resistant to infection via the subq route (rossi et al., ) . recently, a mouse model was identified to verify vertical transmission of the virus. pregnant c mice were injected either ip or in utero into the lateral ventricle of the fetal brain. ip inoculation induced transient viremia in the pregnant mice on day . viral rna was detected in five out of nine placentas on day postinfection. the virus was able to infect the radial glia cells in the fetal brain and leads to a reduction in the cortical neural progenitors . viral exposure via cerebroventricular space/ lateral ventricle of the fetal brain exhibited small brain size at day postexposure in addition to cortical thinning (cugola et al., ; li et al., a) . ifnar −/− pregnant mice exposed to the virus had nonviable fetuses. in the same study, wild-type mice were given an anti-ifnar antibody prior to and during infection resulting in detectable virus in the fetal head with mild intrauterine growth restriction (miner et al., ) . all of these murine studies will further study of the pathogenesis of vertical transmission and the resulting neurological disorders in conjunction with screening novel countermeasures. nhp studies are currently ongoing for animal model development. numerous viruses from the coronavirus (cov) family exist that infect a wide range of animals. six species have been identified that can infect humans. two of these are alpha coronavirues: hcov- e and hcov-nl . four are beta coronavirueses: hcov-oc , hcov-hku , hcov-sars, and mers-cov. hcov- e and hcov-oc were first detected in the s from the nasal passages of humans with the "common cold" (gaunt et al., ) . hcov-nl , which was first isolated in , causes upper and lower respiratory infections of varying intensity and has been continuously circulating among humans (van der hoek et al., ) . hcov-hku , first isolated in , has been identified more sporadically but also causes respiratory infections (lau et al., ) . a significant portion of common cold infections in humans are caused by coronaviruses. in and , two human coronaviruses, sars-cov and mers-cov, emerged that caused a great deal of alarm since these infections have resulted in nearly and % fatality, respectively (assiri et al., ; peiris et al., ) . the etiologic agent of severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars), sars-cov, emerged in as it spread throughout countries in a period of months, with confirmed infections and deaths (roberts and subbarao, ; world health organization, ) . no additional cases of community acquired sars-cov infection have been reported since . the natural reservoir of sars-cov is the horseshoe bat and the palm civet is an intermediate host (lau et al., ) . the main mechanism of transmission of sars-cov is through droplet spread, but it is also viable in dry form on surfaces for up to days and can be detected in stool, suggesting other modes of transmission are also possible (pearson et al., ; rabenau et al., ; rota et al., ) . sars-cov infection has a % case fatality with the majority of cases in people over the age of (peiris et al., ; wang et al., ) . after an incubation period of - days, clinical signs of sars include general malaise, fever, chills, diarrhea, dyspnea, and cough (drosten et al., ) . in some sars cases, pneumonia may develop and progress to acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards). fever usually dissipates within weeks and coincides with the induction of high levels of neutralizing antibodies (tan et al., ) . in humans, sars-cov replication destroys respiratory epithelium, and a great deal of the pathogenesis is due to the subsequent immune responses (chen and subbarao, ; perlman and dandekar, ) . infiltrates persisting within the lung and diffuse alveolar damage (dad) are common sequelae of sars-cov infection (perlman and dandekar, ) . virus can be isolated from secretions of the upper airways during early, but not later stages of infection as well as from other tissues (cheng et al., ) . sars-cov can replicate in many species, including: dogs, cats, pigs, mice, rats, ferrets, foxes, and monkeys (roper and rehm, ) . no model captures all aspects of human clinical disease (pyrexia and respiratory signs), mortality (∼ %), viral replication, and pathology (roberts et al., ) . in general, the sars-cov disease course in the model species is much milder and of shorter duration than in humans. viral replication in the various animal models may occur without clinical illness and/or histopathologic changes. the best-characterized models utilize mice, hamsters, ferrets, and nhps. mouse models of sars-cov typically are inoculated by the in route under light anesthesia (roberts et al., ) . young, -to -week-old balb/c mice exposed to sars-cov have viral replication detected in the lungs and nasal turbinate, with a peak on day and clearance by day postexposure (mcauliffe et al., ) . there is also viral replication within the small intestines of young balb/c mice. however, young mice have no clinical signs, aside from reduced weight gain, and have little to no inflammation within the lungs (pneumonitis) . in sars-cov infection of c bl/ (b ), also yields reduced weight gain and viral k. viral disease replication in the lungs, with a peak on day and clearance by day (glass et al., ) . in contrast, balb/c mice - months of age show weight loss, hunched posture, dehydration, and ruffled fur on day - postexposure (bisht et al., ) . interstitial pneumonitis, alveolar damage, and death also occur in old mice, resembling the age-dependent virulence observed in humans. s mice and b mice show outcomes to sars-cov infection similar to those observed for balb/c mice but have lower titers and less prolonged disease. while the aged mouse model is more frequently used then young mice, it is more difficult to obtain large numbers of mice older than year (table . ). a number of immunocompromised knockout mouse models of in sars-cov infection have also been developed. svev mice infected with sars-cov by the in route develop bronchiolitis, with peribronchiolar inflammatory infiltrates and interstitial inflammation in adjacent alveolar septae . viral replication and disease in these mice resolves by day postexposure. beige, cd −/− , and rag −/− mice infected with sars-cov have similar outcomes to infected balb/c mice with regard to viral replication, timing of viral clearance, and a lack of clinical signs (glass et al., ) . stat ko mice infected in with sars-cov have severe disease, with weight loss, pneumonitis, interstitial pneumonia, and some deaths . the stat ko mouse model is therefore useful for studies of pathogenicity, pathology, and evaluation of vaccines. angiotensin converting enzyme (ace ) and cd l were identified as cellular receptors for sars-cov, with affinity for the spike (s) protein of the virus (jeffers et al., ) . the variations in the ace sequence across animal species could partially explain the differences in infection severity (li et al., b; sutton and subbarao, ) . since mice in particular have a greater number of sequence differences in ace , transgenic mice were created that express human ace (mccray et al., ; netland et al., ; yang et al., ) . unlike other murine models of sars-cov, mice expressing hace had up to % mortality, with severity correlating to the level of hace expression (tseng et al., ) . with high levels of hace expression, mice developed a severe lung and brain infection. however, cns k. viral disease infection is only rarely observed in humans infected with sars-cov. syrian golden hamsters (strain lvg) are also susceptible to in exposure of sars-cov. after the administration of tcid , along with a period of transient viremia, sars-cov replicates in nasal turbinates and lungs, resulting in pneumonitis (roberts et al., ) . there are no obvious signs of disease, but exercise wheels can be used to monitor decrease in nighttime activity. limited mortality has been observed, but it was not dose dependent and could have more to do with genetic differences between animals because the strain is not inbred (roberts et al., ) . damage is not observed in the liver or spleen despite detection of virus within these tissues. several studies have shown that intratracheal (it) inoculation of sars-cov in anesthetized ferrets (mustela furo) results in lethargy, fever, sneezing, and nasal discharge (skowronski et al., ) . clinical disease has been observed in several studies excluding one, perhaps due to characteristics of the inoculating virus (kobinger et al., ) . sars-cov is detected in pharyngeal swabs, trachea, tracheobronchial lymph nodes, and high titers within the lungs. mortality has been observed around day postexposure as well as mild alveolar damage in %- % of the lungs, occasionally accompanied by severe pathology within the lungs (martina et al., ; ter meulen et al., ) . with fever, overt respiratory signs, lung damage, and some mortality, the ferret intratracheal model of sars-cov infection is perhaps most similar to human sars, albeit with a shorter time course. sars-cov infection of nhps by intransal or it routes generally results in a very mild infection that resolves quickly. sars-cov infection of old world monkeys, such as rhesus macaques, cynomolgus macaques (cynos), and african green monkeys (agms) have been studied with variable results, possibly due to the outbred nature of the groups studied or previous exposure to related pathogens. clinical illness and viral loads have not been consistent; however, replication within the lungs and dad are features of the infections for each of the primate species. some cynos have no illness but others have rash, lethargy, and respiratory signs and pathology martina et al., ; mcauliffe et al., ; rowe et al., ) . rhesus have little to no disease and only have mild findings upon histopathological analysis (rowe et al., ) . agms infected with sars-cov have no overt clinical signs but dad and pneumonitis has been documented (mcauliffe et al., ) . viral replication has been detected for up to days in the lungs of agms; however, the infection resolves, and does not progress to fatal ards. farmed chinese masked palm civets, sold in open markets in china, were involved in the sars-cov outbreak. it and in inoculation of civets with sars-cov results in lethargy, decreased aggressiveness, fever, diarrhea, and conjunctivitis . leucopenia, pneumonitis, and alveolar septal enlargement, with lesions similar to those observed in ferrets and nhps, have also been observed in laboratory-infected civets. squirrel monkeys, mustached tamarinds, and common marmosets have not been susceptible to sars-cov infection (greenough et al., ; roberts et al., ) . vaccines have been developed for related animal covs in chickens, cattle, dogs, cats, and swine, and have included live-attenuated, killed, dna and viral-vectored vaccine strategies (cavanagh, ) . an important issue to highlight from work on these vaccines is that cov vaccines, such as those developed for cats, may induce a more severe disease (perlman and dandekar, ; weiss and scott, ) . as such, immune mice had th type immunopathology upon sars-cov challenge (tseng et al., ) . severe hepatitis in vaccinated ferrets with antibody enhancement in liver has been reported (weingartl et al., ) . additionally, rechallenge of agms showed limited viral replication but significant lung inflammation, including alveolitis and interstitial pneumonia, which persisted for long periods of time after viral clearance (clay et al., ) . mouse and nhp models with increased virulence may be developed by adapting the virus by repeated passage within the species of interest. mouse-adapted sars with uniform lethality was developed from serial passages in the lungs of young balb/c mice (mccray et al., ; roberts et al., ; rockx et al., ) . middle east respiratory syndrome (mers-cov) emerged in saudi arabia and is associated with fever, severe lower respiratory tract infection, and oftentimes renal failure (al-tawfiq et al., ; omrani et al., ) . mers patients can also occasionally manifest with neurological symptoms. mers-cov infection has a high fatality rate. infections in humans can also be asymptomatic. as of october , there were confirmed cases and deaths (li et al., b) . bats serve as the likely natural reservoir since virus with % nucleotide identity to the index case was isolated from egyptian tomb bats (memish et al., ) . spread to humans likely comes from infected dromedary camels (adney et al., ; azhar et al., ) . the host range for mers-cov is dependent on the binding of the viral s protein to the host receptor, which is human dipeptidyl peptidase four (hdpp ), also known as cd (raj et al., ) . the expression and distribution of dpp in the human respiratory tract has recently been well characterized (meyerholz et al., ) . interestingly, dpp expression is preferentially localized to alveolar regions, perhaps explaining why mers predominantly manifests as an infection of the lower respiratory tract. humans with preexisting pulmonary disease have increased dpp expression in alveolar epithelia. small animals typically used for viral disease research, such as mice, hamsters, guinea pigs, and ferrets are naturally nonpermissive to mers-cov infection due to a low binding efficiency of the viral s protein to the host dpp (sutton and subbarao, ). in contrast the rhesus macaque and common marmoset have complete homology to human dpp , allowing productive mers-cov infection to occur falzarano et al., ; munster et al., ; yao et al., ) . new zealand white rabbits can be infected with mers-cov, and virus was isolated from the upper respiratory tract, but there were no clinical symptoms or significant histopathological changes (haagmans et al., ) . due to the lack of strong binding affinity of the mers-cov s protein to the murine dpp receptor, wildtype mice are not susceptible to mers-cov infection. as such, several approaches have been used to create susceptible murine animal models of mers-cov infection by inducing the expression of hdpp . one approach utilized an adenovirus vector expressing hdpp to transduce mice (zhao et al., b) . these mice developed pneumonia but survived mers-cov infection. in mers-cov infection of mice with global expression of hdpp resulted in id and ld values of < and tcid , respectively (tao et al., ) . thus, mers-cov infection of these transgenic mice can be either sublethal or uniformly lethal depending on the dose. inflammatory infiltrates were found in the lungs and brain stems of mice with some focal infiltrates in the liver as well. another strategy uses transgenic mice expressing hdpp under either a surfactant protein c or cytokeratin promoter (li et al., b) . in mers-cov infection in these mice resulted in a uniformly lethal disease characterized by alveolar edema and microvascular thrombosis and mononuclear clear cell infiltration in the lungs. the brain stem was also impacted by the infection. dpp expression with an ubiquitously expressing promoter from cytomegalovirus also had a uniformly lethal infection with predominant lung and brain involvement, but numerous other tissues were also impacted and contained virus (agrawal et al., ) . common marmosets infected with . × tcid (emc- ) mers-cov by the combined in, oral, ocular, and it routes capitulate the severe disease in human infections (falzarano et al., ) . the animals manifested moderate to severe clinical disease, with interstitial infiltration of both lower lung lobes. two of nine animals became moribund between days and . viral rna was detected in nasal and throat swabs, various organs, and in the blood of some animals, indicating a systemic infection. histologically, animals showed evidence of acute bronchial interstitial pneumonia as well as other pathological defects. infection of rhesus macaques with mers-cov results in a mild clinical disease characterized by a transient lung infection with pneumonia. rhesus macaques were inoculated with at least tcid (emc- ) mers-cov either by the it route or a combined in, it, oral, and ocular inoculation . the result was a mild respiratory illness including nasal swelling and a short fever with all animals surviving. viral rna was recovered from nasal swab samples and replicating virus was found in lung tissue . mild pathological lesions were found only in the lungs. radiographic imaging of the lungs revealed interstitial infiltrates, which are signs of pneumonia (yao et al., ) . interestingly, mer-cov infection is more severe in marmosets compared to rhesus macaques (falzarano et al., ) . this is despite the finding that both species have complete homology with humans within the dpp domain that interacts with the viral s protein. other host factors influencing disease severity have not yet been identified. transgenic mouse models expressing hdpp are ideal for initial development and screening of mers-cov countermeasures, and marmosets can be used for final selection and characterization. filoviridae consists of three genera, ebolavirus and marburgvirus, and a newly discovered group, cuevavirus (kuhn, ) . it is thought that various species of bats are the natural host reservoir for these viruses that have lethality rates from % to % in humans. there is evidence that the egyptian rousette bat (rousettus aegyptiacus) is the natural reservoir for marburgviruses but may not be for ebolaviruses (jones et al., ) . marburg virus (marv) first emerged in in germany when laboratory workers contracted the virus from agms (chlorocebus aerthiops) that were shipped from uganda. ebolaviruses sudan and zaire (sudv and ebov) caused nearly simultaneous outbreaks in in what is now the democratic republic of congo (drc). the most recent outbreak of ebov in west africa was by far the largest with over , suspected, probable and confirmed cases and over , deaths. bundibugyo virus (bdbv) first emerged in in bundibugyo, uganda with confirmed cases . two other ebolaviruses are known: taï forest (tafv) (previously named cote d'ivoire) (ciebov) and reston (restv), which have not caused major outbreaks or lethal disease in humans. filovirus disease in humans is a characterized by aberrant innate immunity and a number of clinical symptoms: fever, nausea, vomiting, k. viral disease arthralgia/myalgia, headaches, sore throat, diarrhea, abdominal pain, and anorexia as well as numerous others (mehedi et al., ; wauquier et al., ) . approximately % of patients develop petechia and a greater percentage, depending on the specific strain, may develop bleeding from various sites (gums, puncture sites, stools, etc.) (table . ). natural transmission in an epidemic is through direct contact or needle sticks in hospital settings. however, much of the research interest in filoviruses primarily stems from biodefense needs, particularly from aerosol biothreats. as such, im, ip, and aerosol models have been developed in mice, hamsters, guinea pigs, and nhps for the study of pathogenesis, correlates of immunity, and for testing countermeasures . since filoviruses have such high lethality rates in humans, scientists have looked for models that are uniformly lethal to stringently test efficacy of candidate vaccines and therapeutics. one issue to take note of in animal model development of filovirus infection is the impact of particle to plaque-forming unit (pfu) ratios on lethality, wherein it is possible that increasing the dose could actually decrease infectivity due to an immunogenic effect produced by inactive virions in the stock. additionally, the plaque assay used to measure live virions in a stock may greatly underestimate the true quantity of infectious virions in a preparation (alfson et al., ; smither et al., a) . immunocompetent mice have not been successfully infected with wild-type filoviruses due to the control of the infection by the murine type interferon response (bray, ) . however, wild-type inbred mice are susceptible to filovirus that has been mouse adapted (ma) by serial passage in mice (bray et al., ) . marv angola was particularly resistant to adaptation, but after serial passages in scid mice, infection caused severe disease in balb/c and c bl/ mice when administered in or ip (qiu et al., ) . these mice had pathology with some similarities to infection in humans including lymphopenia, thrombocytopenia, liver damage, and viremia. balb/c mice, which are the strain of choice for ip inoculation of ma-ebov, are not susceptible by the aerosol route (bray et al., ; zumbrun et al., a) . for aerosol infection of immunocompetent mice, a panel of bxd (balb/c x dba) recombinant inbred strains were screened and one strain, bxd , was particularly susceptible to airborne ma-ebov, with % lethality to low or high doses (approximately or pfu) ( zumbrun et al., a) . these mice developed weight loss of greater than % and succumbed to infection between days and postexposure. the aerosol infection model utilizes a whole-body exposure chamber to expose mice aged - weeks to ma-ebov aerosols with a mass median aerodynamic diameter (mmad) of approximately . µm and a geometric standard deviation (gsd) of approximately . for min. another approach uses immunodeficient mouse strains, such as scid, stat ko, ifn receptor ko, or perforin ko with a wild-type ebov inoculum by ip or aerosol routes (bray, ; lever et al., ; zumbrun et al., a) . mice are typically monitored for clinical disease "scores" based on activity and appearance, weight loss, and moribund condition (survival). coagulopathy, a hallmark of filovirus infection in humans, has been observed, with bleeding in a subset of animals and failure of blood samples to coagulate late in infection (bray et al., ) . liver, kidney, spleen, and lung tissue taken from moribund mice have pathology characteristic of filovirus disease in nhps (zumbrun et al., a) . while most mouse studies have used ma-ebov or ebov, an ip mouse-adapted marv model is also available (warfield et al., (warfield et al., , ). ma-marv and ma-ebov models are particularly useful for screening novel antiviral compounds (panchal et al., ) . recently, a model was created using immunodeficient nsg [nonobese diabetic (nod)/scid/il- receptor chain knockout] mice with transplanted human hematopoietic stem cells from umbilical cord blood. these mice were susceptible to lethal wt (nonadapted) ebov by ip and in exposure (ludtke et al., ) . the transplanted mice had all of the cellular components of a fully functional adaptive human immune system and upon ebov (brannan et al., ; lever et al., ) . interestingly, inoculation of infa/br −/− mice with tafv and restv does not result in clinical signs. yet another strategy uses knockout mice lacking possible receptors for filovirus entry, such as niemann-pick c and c (npc and npc ). npc (−/−) mice were fully susceptible to infection with ebov but npc (−/−) mice were completely resistant (herbert et al., ) . hamsters are frequently used to study cardiovascular disease, coagulation disorders, and thus serve as the basis for numerous viral hemorrhagic fever models (gowen and holbrook, ; herbert et al., ) . an ip ma-ebov infection model has been developed in syrian hamsters gowen and holbrook, ; herbert et al., ; tsuda et al., ) . this model, which has been used to test a vesicular stomatitis virus vectored vaccine approach, utilizes male -to -week-old syrian hamsters which are infected with ld of ma-ebov. virus is present in tissues and blood collected on day and all animals succumbed to the disease by day . infected hamsters had severe coagulopathy and uncontrolled host immune responses, similar to what is observed in primates. (ebihara et al., ) guinea pig models of filovirus infection have been developed for ip and aerosol routes using guinea pigadapted ebov (gp-ebov) and marv (gp-marv) (choi et al., ; connolly et al., ; twenhafel et al., ; zumbrun et al., c) . guinea pig models of filovirus infection are quite useful in that they develop fever, which can be monitored at frequent intervals by telemetry. additionally, the animals are large enough for regular blood sampling in which measurable coagulation defects are observed as the infection progresses. a comparison of ip infection of outbred guinea pigs with guinea pig-adapted marv angola and marv ravn revealed similar pathogenesis (cross et al., ) . infection with either strain resulted in features of the disease that are similar to what is seen in human and nhp infection, such as viremia, fever, coagulopathy, lymphopenia, elevated liver enzymes (alt and ast), thrombocytopenia, and splenic, gastrointestinal and hepatic lesions. gp-marv-ravn had a delayed disease progression relative to gp-marv-ang. hartley guinea pigs exposed to aerosolized gp-ebov develop lethal interstitial pneumonia. this is in contrast to subq infection of guinea pigs, aerosol ebov challenge of nhps, and natural human infection (twenhafel et al., ) . both subq and aerosol exposure of guinea pigs to gp-ebov resulted in only mild lesions in the liver and spleen. by aerosol exposure, gp-ebov is uniformly lethal at both high and low doses ( or pfu target doses) but lethality drops with low (less than pfu) presented doses of airborne gp-marv and more protracted disease is seen in some animals (our unpublished observations) (zumbrun et al., c) . weight loss of between % and % is a common finding in guinea pigs exposed to gp-ebov or gp-marv. fever, which becomes apparent by day , occurs more rapidly in gp-ebov exposed guinea pigs than with gp-marv exposure. lymphocytes and neutrophils increase during the earlier part of the disease, and platelet levels steadily drop as the disease progresses. increases in coagulation time can be seen as early as day postexposure. blood chemistries (i.e., alt, ast, alkp, and bun) indicating problems with liver and kidney function are also altered late in the disease course. transmission of ebov has been documented from swine to nhps via the respiratory tract (kobinger et al., ) . as such, guinea pigs have been used to establish transmission models (wong et al., a,b) . nonexposed guinea pigs were placed in the cages with infected guinea pigs day postexposure to gp-ebov. guinea pigs challenged intanasally were more likely to transmit virus to naive cagemates than those that were exposed by the ip route. nhp models of filovirus infection are the preferred models for more advanced disease characterization and testing of countermeasures because they most closely mimic the disease and immune correlates seen in humans (dye et al., ) . old world primates have been primarily used for development of ip, im, and aerosol models of filovirus infection ( twenhafel et al., ) . uniformly lethal filovirus models have been developed for most of the virus strains in cynomolgus macaques, rhesus macaques, and to a lesser degree, agms (alves et al., ; carrion et al., ; davis et al., ; hensley et al., a; reed et al., ; zumbrun et al., b) . low-passage human isolates that have not been passaged in animals have been sought for development of nhp models to satisfy the food and drug administration (fda) animal rule. ebov-makona, the strain responsible for the recent large outbreak in west africa, was compared to the "prototype" ebov strain (marzi et al., ) . the disease in cynos was similar for both viruses, but disease progression was delayed for ebov-makona. this delay as well as the lower fatality rate in the epidemic compared to the outbreak suggest that ebov-makona is less virulent. the large number of cases in the - ebov outbreak brought to light previously underappreciated eye pathology and ocular viral persistence in survivors. while survivors of nhp filovirus infection are infrequent, necrotizing scleritis, conjunctivitis, and other ocular pathology has been observed in ebov-infected animals (alves et al., ) . prominent features of the filovirus infections in nhps are onset of fever by day postexposure, viremia, lymphopenia, tachycardia, azotemia, alteration in liver function enzymes (alt, ast, and alkp), decrease in platelets, and increased coagulation times. petechial rash is a common sign of filovirus disease and may be more frequently observed in cynomolgus macaques than in other nhp species (zumbrun et al., b) . immunological parameters have been evaluated and t, b, and natural killer cells are greatly diminished as the infection progresses (fernando et al., ) . a cytokine storm occurs with rises in ifnγ, tnf, il- , and ccl (fernando et al., ) . however, there is also evidence from transcriptional profiling of circulating immune cells that the early immune response is skewed toward a th response (connor et al., ) . strikingly, animals surviving challenge may have a delay in the production of inflammatory cytokines and chemokines (martins et al., ) . clinical disease parameters may have a slightly delayed onset in aerosol models. dyspnea late in infection is a prominent feature of disease after aerosol exposure (zumbrun et al., b) . aerosol filovirus infection of nhps results in early infection of respiratory lymphoid tissues, dendritic cells, alveolar macrophages, blood monocytes, and fibroblastic reticular cells followed by spread to regional lymph nodes then multiple organs (ewers et al., ; twenhafel et al., ) . a number of pronounced pathology findings include multifocal hepatic necrosis and fibrin accumulation, particularly within the liver and the spleen. for aerosolized marv infection of rhesus, the most significant pathology included destruction of the tracheobronchial and mediastinal lymph nodes (ewers et al., ) . lymphocytolysis and lymphoid depletion are also observed (alves et al., ) . multilead, surgically implanted telemetry devices are useful in continuous collection of temperature, blood pressure, heart rate, and activity levels. as such, blood pressure drops as animals become moribund and heart rate variability (standard deviation of the heart rate) is altered late in infection (zumbrun et al., b) . the most recently developed telemetry devices can also aid in plethysmography to measure respiratory minute volume for accurate delivery of presented doses for aerosol exposure. standardized filovirus-infected nhp euthanasia criteria have also been developed to enhance reproducibility for studies that evaluate therapeutic and vaccine countermeasures (warren et al., ) . filovirus infection of common marmosets (callithrix jacchus) is also a viable model to study the disease course. respiratory infection of marmosets with marv results in a lethal infection with fever, hemorrhaging, transient rash, disseminated viral infection, increases in liver function enzymes, coagulopathy, hepatitis, and histological lesions particularly in the kidney and liver (smither et al., b) . marmosets are similarly susceptible to infection with ebov- kikwit (smither et al., ) . thus, ebov or marv infection of marmosets produces features of the disease that are very similar to that of other nhps and humans. hendra and nipah virus are unusual within the paramyxoviridae family given that they can infect a large range of mammalian hosts. both viruses are grouped under the genus henipavirus. the natural reservoirs of the viruses are the fruit bats from the genus pteropus. hendra and nipah have the ability to cause severe disease in humans with the potential for a high case fatality rate (rockx et al., ) . outbreaks due to nipah virus have been recognized in malaysia, singapore, bangladesh, and india, while hendra virus outbreaks have yet to be reported outside of australia (luby et al., a,b) . hendra was the first member of the genus identified and was initially associated with an acute respiratory disease in horses. all human cases have been linked to transmission through close contact with an infected horse. there have been no confirmed cases of direct transmission from bat to human. nipah has the distinction of transmission among, although the exact route is unknown (homaira et al., ) . the virus is susceptible to ph, temperature, and desiccation, and thus close contact is hypothesized as needed for successful transmission (fogarty et al., ) . both viruses have a tropism for the neurological and respiratory tracts. the incubation period for hendra virus is - days and is marked by a flu-like illness. symptoms at this initial stage include myalgia, headache, lethargy, sore throat, and vomiting (hanna et al., ) . disease progression can continue to pneumonitis or encephalitic manifestations, with the person succumbing to multiorgan failure (playford et al., ) . nipah virus has an incubation period of days to weeks (goh et al., ) . much like hendra, the first signs of disease are nondescript. severe neurological symptoms subsequently develop including encephalitis and seizures that can progress to coma within - h (lo and rota, ). survivors of infection typically make a full recovery; however, % suffer permanent sequelae, including persistent convulsions (tan and chua, ) . at this time, there is no approved vaccine or antiviral, and treatment is purely supportive. animal models are being used to not only test novel vaccines and therapeutics, but also deduce the early events of disease because documentation of human cases is at terminal stages. the best small animal model is the syrian golden hamster due to their high susceptibility to both henipaviruses. clinical signs upon infection recapitulate the disease course in humans including acute encephalitis and respiratory distress. challenged animals died within - days postinfection. the progression of disease and timeline is highly dependent on dose and route of infection. in inoculation leads to imbalance, limb paralysis, lethargy, and breathing difficulties whereas ip resulted in tremors and paralysis within h before death. virus was detected in lung, brain, spleen, kidney, heart, spinal cords, and urine, with the brain having the highest titer. this model is used for vaccination and passive protection studies (guillaume et al., ; rockx et al., ; wong et al., ) . the guinea pig model has not been widely used due to the lack of a respiratory disease upon challenge (torres-velez et al., ; williamson et al., ) . inoculation with hendra virus via the subq route leads to a generalized vascular disease with % mortality. clinical signs were apparent - days postinfection with death occurring within days of cns involvement. higher inoculum has been associated with development of encephalitis and cns lesions. id and in injection does not lead to disease, although the animals are able to seroconvert upon challenge. the inoculum source does not affect clinical progression. nipah virus challenge only causes disease upon ip injection and results in weight loss and transient fever for - days. virus was shed through urine and was present in the brain, spleen, lymph nodes, ovary, uterus, and urinary bladder (hooper et al., ) . ferrets infected with hendra or nipah virus display the same clinical disease as seen in the hamster model and human cases (bossart et al., ; pallister et al., ) . upon inoculation by the oronasal route, ferrets develop severe pulmonary and neurological disease within - days including fever, coughing, and dyspnea. lesions do develop in the ferret's brains, but to a lesser degree than seen in humans. cats have also been utilized as an animal model for henipaviruses. disease symptoms are not dependent upon the route of infection. the incubation period is - days and leads to respiratory and neurological symptoms (mungall et al., ; johnston et al., ; westbury et al., ) . this model has proven useful for vaccine efficacy studies. squirrel and agms are representative of the nhp models. for squirrel monkeys, nipah virus is introduced by either the in or iv route and subsequently leads to clinical signs similar to humans, although in challenge results in milder disease. upon challenge, only % of animals develop disease manifestations including anorexia, dyspnea, and acute respiratory syndrome. neurological involvement is characterized by uncoordinated motor skills, loss of consciousness, and coma. viral rna can be detected in lung, brain, liver, kidney, spleen, and lymph nodes but is only found upon iv challenge (marianneau et al., ) . agms are very consistent model of both viruses. it inoculation of the viruses results in % mortality, and death within . and - days postinfection for hendra and nipah viruses, respectively. the animals develop severe respiratory and neurological disease with generalized vasculitis rockx et al., ) . the reservoir of the viruses, gray-headed fruit bats, has been experimentally challenged. due to their status as the host organism for henipaviruses, the bats do not develop clinical disease. however, hendra virus can be detected in kidneys, heart, spleen, and fetal tissue, and nipah virus can be located in urine . pigs develop a respiratory disease upon infection with both nipah and hendra viruses (berhane et al., ; li et al., ; middleton et al., ) . oral inoculation does not produce a clinical disease, but subq injection represents a successful route of infection. live virus can be isolated from the oropharynx as early as days postinfection. nipah virus can also be transmitted between pigs. nipah virus was able to induce neurological symptoms in % of the pigs, even though virus was present in all neurological tissues regardless of symptoms (weingartl et al., ) . within the pig model, it appeared that nipah virus had a greater tropism for the respiratory tract, while hendra for the neurological system. horses are also able to develop a severe respiratory tract infection accompanied with fever and general weakness upon exposure to nipah and hendra viruses. oronasal inoculation led to systemic disease with viral rna detected in nasal swabs within days (marsh et al., ; williamson et al., ) . animals died within days postexposure and have interstitial pneumonia with necrosis of alveoli (murray et al., a,b) . virus could be detected in all major systems. mice, rats, rabbits, chickens, and dogs have been tested but are nonpermissive to infection (westbury et al., ; wong et al., ) . suckling balb/c mice succumb to infection if the virus is inoculated intracranially (mungall et al., ) . in exposure with nipah does not induce a clinical disease; however, there is evidence of a subclinical infection in the lungs following euthanasia of the mice (dups et al., ) . in addition, a human lung xenograph model in nsg mice demonstrated that the human lung is highly susceptible to nipah viral replication and damage (valbuena et al., ) . embryonated chicken eggs have been inoculated with nipah virus leading to a universally fatal disease within - days postinfection (tanimura et al., ) . annually, respiratory syncytial virus (rsv) is responsible for the lower respiratory tract infections of million children under the age of , which in turn results in million hospitalizations and approximately , deaths (nair et al., ) . within the united states, hospital costs alone amount to over million dollars per year (paramore et al., ) . outbreaks are common in the winter (yusuf et al., ) . the virus is transmitted by large respiratory droplets that replicate initially within the nasopharynx and spreads to the lower respiratory tract. incubation for the virus is - days. rsv is highly virulent leading to very few asymptomatic infections (collins and graham, ) . disease manifestations are highly dependent upon the age of the individual. rsv infections in neonates produce nonspecific symptoms including overall failure to thrive, apnea, and feeding difficulties. infants present with a mild upper respiratory tract disease that could develop into bronchiolitis and bronchopneumonia. contracting rsv at this age results in an increased chance of developing childhood asthma (wu et al., ) . young children develop recurrent wheezing while adults have exacerbation of previously existing respiratory conditions (falsey et al., ) . common clinical symptoms are runny nose, sneezing, and coughing accompanied by fever. mortality rates from rsv in hospitalized children are %- % with the greatest burden of disease seen in - month olds (ruuskanen and ogra, ). hematopoietic stem cell transplant patients, solid organ transplant patients, and copd patients are particularly vulnerable to rsv infection and have mortality rates between . % and . % upon infection (anderson et al., ) . although there are almost rsv vaccine candidates which are in preclinical and clinical phases, there is no licensed vaccine available and ribavirin usage is not recommended for routine treatment (american academy of pediatrics subcommittee on diagnosis and management of bronchiolitis, ; higgins et al., ; kim and chang, ) . animal models of rsv were developed in the hopes of formulating an effective and safe vaccine unlike the formalin-inactivated rsv (fi-rsv) vaccine. this vaccine induced severe respiratory illness in infants whom received the vaccine and were subsequently infected with live virus (kim et al., ) . mice can be used to model rsv infection, although a very high in inoculation is needed to achieve clinical symptoms (jafri et al., ; stark et al., ) . strain choice is crucial to reproducing a physiological relevant response (stokes et al., ). age does not affect primary disease manifestations (graham et al., ) . however, it does play a role in later sequelae showing increased airway hyperreactivity . primary rsv infection produces increased breathing with airway obstruction (jafri et al., ; van schaik et al., ) . virus was detected as early as day and reached maximum titer at day postinfection. clinical illness is defined in the mouse by weight loss and ruffled fur as opposed to runny nose, sneezing, and coughing as seen in humans. a humanized mouse model was recently developed by in inoculation. the challenged mice experienced weight loss and demonstrated a humoral and cellular immune response to the infection (sharma et al., ) . cotton rats are useful given that rsv is able to replicate to high titers within the lungs and can be detected in both the upper and lower airways after in inoculation (boukhvalova et al., ; niewiesk and prince, ) . viral replication is -to -fold greater in the cotton rat model than mouse model (wyde et al., ) . the cotton rats develop mild to moderate bronchiolitis or pneumonia (grieves et al., ; prince et al., ) . although age does not appear to factor into clinical outcome, it has been reported that older cotton rats tend to take longer to achieve viral clearance. viral loads peak by the th day, dropping to below the levels of detection by day . the histopathology of the lungs appears similar to that of humans after infection (piazza et al., ) . this model has limited use in modeling the human immune response to infection as challenge with the virus induces a th response in cotton rats, whereas humans tend to have a response skewed toward th (culley et al., ; dakhama et al., ; ripple et al., ) . fi-rsv disease was recapitulated upon challenge with live virus after being vaccinated twice with fi-rsv. chinchillas have been challenged experimentally with rsv via in inoculation. the virus was permissive within the nasopharynx and eustachian tube. the animals displayed an acute respiratory tract infection. this model is therefore useful in studying mucosal immunity during infection (gitiban et al., ) . ferrets infected by it were found to have detectable rsv in throat swabs up to day postinfection, and positive qpcr up to day . immunocompromised ferrets were observed to have higher viral loads accompanied with detectable viral replication in the upper respiratory tract (stittelaar et al., ) . chimpanzees are permissive to replication and clinical symptoms of rsv including rhinorrhea, sneezing, and coughing. adult squirrel monkeys, newborn rhesus macaques, and infant cebus monkeys were also challenged but did not exhibit any disease symptoms or high levels of viral replication (belshe et al., ) . bonnet monkeys were developed an inflammatory response by day with viral rna detected in both bronchial and alveolar cells (simoes et al., ) . the chimpanzee model has been proven useful for vaccine studies (hancock et al., ; teng et al., ) . sheep have also been challenged experimentally since they develop respiratory disease when exposed to ovine rsv (meyerholz et al., ) . lambs are also susceptible to human respiratory syncytial infection (olivier et al., ; sow et al., ) . when inoculated intratracheally, the lambs developed an upper respiratory tract infection with cough after days. some lambs went on to develop lower respiratory disease including bronchiolitis. the pneumonia resolved itself within days. rsv replication peaked at days, and rapidly declined. studying respiratory disease in sheep is beneficial given the shared structural features with humans (plopper et al., ; scheerlinck et al., ) . the influenza viruses consist of three types: influenza a, b, and c, based on antigenic differences. influenza a is further classified by subtypes; ha and na subtypes are known. seasonal influenza is the most common infection and usually causes a self-limited febrile illness with upper respiratory symptoms and malaise that resolves within days (taubenberger and morens, ) . the rate of infection is estimated at % in the general population and can result in billions of dollars of loss annually from medical costs and reduced work-force productivity. approximately , people in the united states die each year from seasonal influenza (dushoff et al., ) . thus, vaccines and therapeutics play a critical role in controlling infection, and development using animal models is ongoing (braun et al., b) . influenza virus replicates in the upper and lower airways, peaking at approximately -h postexposure. infection can be more severe in infants and children under the age of , people over the age of , or immunocompromised individuals where viral pneumonitis or pneumonia can develop or bacterial superinfection resulting in pneumonia or sepsis (barnard, ; glezen, ) . pneumonia from secondary bacterial infection, such as streptococcus pneumonia, streptococcus pyogenes, and neisseria meningitides, and more rarely, staphylococcus aureus, is more common than viral pneumonia from the influenza virus itself, accounting for ∼ % of all influenza associated fatalities (alonso et al., ; ison and lee, ; speshock et al., ) . death, often due to ards can occur as early as days after onset of symptoms. lung histopathology in severe cases may include dad, alveolar edema and damage, hemorrhage, fibrosis, and inflammation (taubenberger and morens, ) . the h n avian strain of influenza, has lethality rates of around ∼ % (of known cases), likely because the virus preferentially binds to the cells of the lower respiratory tract, and thus the potential for global spread is a major concern (matrosovich et al., ; wang et al., ) . h n is another avian influenza a strain that infected more than people and was implicated in deaths. approximately % of infected people had a known exposure to birds. there is no evidence of sustained spread between humans but these viruses are of great concern for their pandemic potential (zhang et al., ) . the most frequently used animal models of influenza infection include mice, ferrets, and nhps. a very thorough guide to working with mouse, guinea pig, ferret, and cynomolgus models was published by kroeze et al. ( ) . swine are not frequently utilized but are also a potentially useful model for influenza research since they share many similarities to human anatomy, genetics, susceptibility, and pathogenesis (rajao and vincent, ). lethality rates can vary with virus strain used (with or without adaptation), dose, route of inoculation, age, and genetic background of the animal. the various animal models can capture differing diseases caused by influenza: benign, severe, super infection, and sepsis, severe with ards, and neurologic manifestations (barnard, ) . also, models can utilize seasonal or avian strains and have been developed to study transmission, important for understanding the potential for more lethal strains, such as h n for spreading among humans. mouse models of influenza infection are very predictive for antiviral activity and tissue tropism in humans, and are useful in testing and evaluating vaccines (gilbert and mcleay, ; hagenaars et al., ; ortigoza et al., ) . inoculation is by the in route, utilizing approximately µl of inoculum in each nare of anesthetized mice. exposure may also be to small particle aerosols containing influenza with a mmad of < µl. most inbred strains are susceptible, with particularly frequent use of balb/c followed by c bl/ j mice. males and females have equivalent disease but influenza is generally more infectious in younger -to -week-old ( - g) mice. mice are of somewhat limited use in characterizing the immune response to influenza. most inbred laboratory mice lack the mxa gene which is an important part of human innate immune response to influenza infection. the mouse homolog to mxa, mx is defective in most inbred mouse strains (staeheli and haller, ) . mice with the knocked-in mx gene have a -fold higher ld- for an influenza a strain (pr ) than wildtype background c bl/ mice (grimm et al., ) . weight loss or reduced weight gain, decreased activity, huddling, ruffled fur, and increased respiration are the most common clinical signs in influenza infected mice. for more virulent strains, mice may require euthanasia as early as h postexposure, but most mortality occurs from to days postexposure accompanied by decreases in rectal temperature (sidwell and smee, ). pulse oximeter readings and measurement of blood gases for oxygen saturation are also used to determine the impact of influenza infection on respiratory function (sidwell et al., ) . virus can be isolated from bronchial lavage (bal) fluids throughout the infection and from tissues after euthanasia. for influenza strains with mild to moderate pathogenicity, disease is nonlethal and virus replication is detected within the lungs, but usually not other organs. increases in serum alpha- -acidglycoprotein and lung weight also frequently occur. however, mice infected with influenza do not develop fever, dyspnea, nasal exudates, sneezing, or coughing. mice can be experimentally infected with influenza a or b, but the virus generally requires adaptation to produce clinical signs. mice express the receptors for influenza attachment in the respiratory tract; however, the distribution varies and sa , predominates over sa , which is why h , h , and h subtypes usually need to be adapted to mice and h n , h , h , and h viruses do not require adaptation (o'donnell and subbarao, ). to adapt, mice are infected intratracheally or intranasally by virus isolated from the lungs, and reinfected into mice and then the process is repeated a number of times. once adapted, influenza strains can produce severe disease, systemic spread, and neurotropism. h n and the pandemic influenza virus can cause lethal infection in mice without adaptation (gao et al., ; taubenberger, ) . h n infection of mice results in viremia and viral replication in multiple organ systems, severe lung pathology, fulminant diffuse interstitial pneumonia, pulmonary edema, high levels of proinflammatory cytokines, and marked lymphopenia ( dybing et al., ; gubareva et al., ; lu et al., ) . as in humans, the virulence of h n is attributable to damage caused by an overactive host immune response. additionally, mice infected with the h n influenza virus produce severe lung pathology and oxygen saturation levels that decrease with increasing pneumonia (barnard et al., ) . reassortment influenza viruses of the h n virus and a low-pathogenicity avian h n virus can also induce disease in mice without adaptation . in superinfection models, a sublethal dose of influenza is given to mice followed days later by in inoculation of a sublethal dose of a bacterial strain, such as s. pneumoniae or s. pyogenes (chaussee et al., ) . morbidity, characterized by inflammation in the lungs, but not bacteremia, begins a couple of days after superinfection and may continue for up to weeks. at least one transmission model has also been developed in mice. with h n influenza, transmission rates of up to % among cagemates can be achieved after infection by the aerosol route and cocaging after h (schulman, ). rats (f and sd) inoculated with rat-adapted h n developed inflammatory infiltrates and cytokines in bronchoalveolar lavage fluids, but had no lethality and few histopathological changes (daniels et al., ) . additionally, an influenza transmission model has been developed in guinea pigs as an alternative to ferrets (lowen et al., ) . cotton rats (sigmodon hispidus) have been used to test vaccines and therapeutics in a limited number of studies (eichelberger et al., ) . cotton rats have an advantage over mice in that the immune system is similar to humans (including the presence of the mx gene) and influenza viruses do not have to be adapted (eichelberger et al., ; ottolini et al., ) . nasal and pulmonary tissues of cotton rats were infected with unregulated cytokines and lung viral load peaking at h postexposure. virus was cleared from the lung by day and from the nares by day , but animals had bronchial and alveolar damage, and pneumonia for up to weeks. there is also a s. aureus superinfection model in cotton rats (braun et al., a) . coinfection resulted in bacteremia, high bacterial load in lungs, peribronchiolitis, pneumonitis, alveolitis, hypothermia, and higher mortality. domestic ferrets (mustela putorius furo) are frequently the animal species of choice for influenza animal studies because the susceptibility, clinical signs, peak virus shedding, kinetics of transmission, local expression of cytokine mrnas, and pathology resemble that of humans (lambkin et al., ; maines et al., ; mclaren and butchko, ) . like humans, ferrets exclusively express neu ac, which acts as a receptor for influenza a virus, a feature likely contributing to the susceptibility of ferrets to human-adapted influenza a virus strains (ng et al., ) . the glycomic characterization of ferret respiratory tract tissues demonstrated some similarities and some differences to humans in terms of the potential glycan binding sites for the influenza virus (jia et al., ) . ferrets also have airway morphology, respiratory cell types, and a distribution of influenza receptors (sa , and sa , ) within the airways similar to that of humans (van riel et al., ) . influenza was first isolated from ferrets infected in with throat washes from humans harboring the infection and ferret models have since been used to test efficacy of vaccines and therapeutic treatments (huber et al., ; lambkin et al., ; maines et al., ) . when performing influenza studies in ferrets, animals should be serologically negative for circulating influenza viruses. infected animals should be placed in a separate room from uninfected animals. if animals must be placed in the same room, uninfected ferrets should be handled before infected ferrets. anesthetized ferrets are experimentally exposed to influenza by in inoculation of . - . ml containing approximately - egg id dropwise to each nostril. however, a larger inoculum volume of . ml has also been explored as being more appropriate, yielding more severe and consistent respiratory tract pathology, likely because the larger inoculum is more widely distributed in the lower respiratory tract (moore et al., ) . video tracking to assign values to activity levels in ferrets can aid ferret studies, eliminating the need for collection of subjective and arbitrary clinical scores (oh et al., ) . viral replication in the upper respiratory tract is typically measured by nasal washes, but virus can also be measured in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid using a noninvasive technique (lee et al., ) . influenza types a and b naturally infect ferrets, resulting in an acute illness, which usually lasts - days for mild to moderately virulent strains (maher and destefano, ) . ferrets are more susceptible to influenza a than influenza b strains and are also susceptible to avian influenza h n strains without adaptation (zitzow et al., ) . however, the localized immune responses within the respiratory tract of ferrets infected with influenza a and b have been characterized and are similar (carolan et al., ) . virulence and degree of pneumonitis caused by different influenza subtypes and strains vary from mild to severe and generally mirrors that seen in humans (stark et al., ) . nonadapted h n , h n , and h n have mild to moderate virulence in ferrets. the sequencing of the ferret genome has allowed for the characterization of the ferret host response using rnaseq analysis . distinct signatures were obtained depending on the particular influenza strain to inoculate the ferrets. also helpful is the sequencing and characterization of the influenza ferret infectome during different stages of the infection in naïve or immune ferrets (leon et al., ) . since influenza infection is particularly devastating to the elderly population, an aged ferret model of h n influenza infection was developed (paquette et al., ) . features associated with increased clinical disease are weakened hemagglutinin antibody generation and attenuated th responses. pregnant and breastfeeding women and infants are also susceptible to more severe illness from influenza virus. to study this dynamic, a breastfeeding mother-infant ferret influenza infection model was created (paquette et al., ) . notably, the mammary gland itself harbored virus and transcript analysis showed downregulation of milk production genes. in support of the development of therapies, the ferret influenza model for pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamics studies of antiviral drugs as also been developed (reddy et al., ) . critical to this model is ensuring pronounced clinical signs and robust viral replication upon influenza infection. strains of low virulence have predominant replication in the nasal turbinates of ferrets. clinical signs and other disease indicators in ferrets are similar to that of humans with mild respiratory disease, sneezing, nasal secretions containing virus, fever, weight loss, high viral titers, and inflammatory infiltrate in the airways, bronchitis, and pneumonia (svitek et al., ) . replication in both the upper and lower airways is associated with more severe disease and greater mortality. additionally, increased expression of proinflammatory mediators and reduced expression of antiinflammatory mediators in the lower respiratory tract of ferrets correlates with severe disease and lethal outcome. h n -infected ferrets develop severe lethargy, greater interferon response, transient lymphopenia, and replication in respiratory tract, brain, and other organs (peng et al., ; zitzow et al., ) . immunocompromised humans have influenza illness of greater duration and complications. immunocompromised ferrets infected with influenza similarly had prolonged virus shedding (van der vries et al., ) . interestingly, antiviral resistance emerged in both humans and ferrets with immunocompromised status infected with influenza. alveolar macrophage depleted of ferrets infected with pandemic h n influenza also had a more severe disease with greater viral replication in the lungs and greater induction of inflammatory chemokines (kim et al., ) . a superinfection model resembling that of mice has been developed by in instillation of influenza in -to -week-old ferrets followed by in inoculation of s. pneumonia days later (peltola et al., ) . this typically resulted in otitis media, sinusitis, and pneumonia. transmission models in ferrets have recently met with worldwide media attention and controversy with regard to the study of h n (enserink, ; fouchier et al., ; herfst et al., ; oh et al., ) . in general, some subtypes, such as the h n , can transmit easily through aerosol and respiratory droplets (munster et al., ) . of concern, h n isolated from humans was more pathogenic and readily transmissible between ferrets by larger respiratory droplets and smaller particle aerosols (kreijtz et al., ; richard et al., ; zhang et al., ) . h n became transmissible by adopting just four mutations, spreading between ferrets in separate cages (imai et al., ) . transmission occurs more readily at the height of pyrexia, but for the h n in particular, can occur before fever is detected (roberts et al., ) . ferret-to-ferret transmission of a mouseadapted influenza b virus has also been demonstrated (kim et al., ) . since ferrets can be expensive and cumbersome, influenza infection has been characterized and a transmission model developed in the guinea pig; however, this is a newer model with infrequent utilization thus far (lowen et al., ) . old and new world primates are susceptible to influenza infection and have an advantage over ferret and mouse models which are deficient for h n vaccine studies because there is a lack of correlation with hemagglutination inhibition (murphy et al., ) . of old world primates, cynomolgus macaque (macaca fascicularis) is most frequently utilized for studies of vaccines and antiviral drug therapies (stittelaar et al., ) . h n and h n infection of cynos is very similar to humans (rimmelzwaan et al., ) . cynos develop fever and ards upon in inoculation of h n with necrotizing bronchial interstitial pneumonia . nhps are challenged by multiple routes k. viral disease (ocular, nasal, and tracheal) simultaneously × pfu per site. virus antigen is primarily localized to the tonsils and pulmonary tissues. infection of cynos with h n results in fever, lethargy, nasal discharge, anorexia, weight loss, nasal and tracheal washes, pathologic and histopathologic changes, and alveolar and bronchial inflammation. the h n caused a very high mortality rate due to an aberrant immune response and ards and had more than % lethality (humans only had a %- % lethality) (kobasa et al., ) . ards and mortality also occur with the more pathogenic strains, but nhps show reduced susceptibility to less virulent strains, such as h n (o'donnell and subbarao, ) . influenza-infected rhesus macaques represent a mild disease model for vaccine and therapeutic efficacy studies (baas et al., ) . host microarray and qrt-pcr proved useful for analysis of infected lung tissues. other nhp models include influenza infection of pigtailed macaques as a mild disease model and infection of new world primates, such as squirrel and cebus monkeys (baskin et al., ) . domestic pig models have been developed for vaccine studies for swine flu. pigs are susceptible in nature as natural or intermediate hosts but are not readily susceptible to h n (isoda et al., ; lipatov et al., ) . while pigs infected with influenza may have fever, anorexia, and respiratory signs, such as dyspnea and cough, mortality is rare (van der laan et al., ) . size and space requirements make this animal difficult to work with, although the development of minipig models may provide an easier to use alternative. cat and dog influenza models have primarily been utilized to study their susceptibility to h n with the thought that these animals could act as sentinels or could serve to transmit the virus to humans (giese et al., ; rimmelzwaan et al., ) . these models are not generally used to better understand the disease in humans or for testing vaccines or antivirals. rift valley fever virus (rvfv) causes epizootics and human epidemics in africa. rvfv mainly infects livestock, such as sheep, cattle, goats, etc. after - days incubation period, animals show signs of fever, hepatitis, and abortion, which is a hallmark diagnostic sign known among farmers (balkhy and memish, ) . mosquito vectors, unpasteurized milk, aerosols of infected animal's body fluids, or direct contact with infected animals are the important routes of transmission to humans (abu-elyazeed et al., ; mundel and gear, ) . after -to -day-incubation period, rvfv causes a wide range of signs and symptoms in humans ranging from asymptomatic to severe disease with hepatitis, vision loss, encephalitis, and hemorrhagic fever (ikegami and makino, ; laughlin et al., ; peters and linthicum, ) . depending on the severity of the disease when the symptoms start, %- % of the hospitalized patients might die in - days or - days after the disease onset (ikegami and makino, ) . hepatic failure, renal failure or dic, and encephalitis are demonstrated within patients during postmortem examination. live domestic animals especially sheep and goats were used to develop animal models of rvfv (weingartl et al., ) . this study indicated that goats were more resistant to the disease compared to sheep. the viremia in goats was lower and had a shorter duration with only some animals developing fever. the susceptibility is influenced by route of infection, breed of animals, the rvfv strain, and growth conditions as well as the passage history. therefore, it might be difficult to establish an animal model with domestic ruminants. mice are one of the most susceptible animal species to rvfv infection. several mouse models including balb/c, ifnar −/− , mbt/pas, and c bl/ were exposed to rvfv via parental or aerosol routes of infection (ross et al., ) . subq or ip routes of infection cause acute hepatitis and lethal encephalitis at a late stage of the disease in mice (mims, ; smith et al., ) . mice start to show signs of decreased activity and ruffled fur by day - postexposure. immediately following these signs, they become lethargic and generally die - days postexposure. ocular disease or the hemorrhagic form of the disease has not been observed in mouse models so far (ikegami and makino, ) . increased viremia and tissue tropism were reported in mice with (smith et al., ) increased liver enzymes and lymphopenia observed in sick mice. aerosolized rvfv causes faster and more severe neuropathy in mice compared to the parental route (dodd et al., ; reed et al., ) . the liver is a target organ following aerosol exposure and liver failure results in fatality. rats and gerbils are also susceptible to rvfv infection. the rat's susceptibility is dependent on the rat strain utilized for the challenge model and route of exposure. there is also noted age dependence in the susceptibility of rats. while wistar-furth and brown norway strains, and young rats are highly susceptible to rvfv infection, fisher , buffalo and lewis strains, and old rats demonstrated resistance to infection via subq route of infection (findlay and howard, ; peters and slone, ) . similar pathologic changes, such as liver damage and encephalopathy were observed in both rats and mice. the recent study by bales et al. ( ) showed that aerosolized rvfv caused similar disease outcome in wistar-furth and aci rats while lewis rats developed fatal encephalitis which was much more severe than the subq route of infection. there was no liver involvement in the gerbil model and animals died from severe encephalitis. the mortality rate was dependent on the strain used and the dose given to gerbils (anderson et al., ) . similar to the rat model, the susceptibility of gerbils was also dependent on age. natural history studies with syrian hamsters indicated that the liver was the target organ with highly elevated alt levels and viral titers (scharton et al., ) . lethargy, ruffled fur, and hunched posture were observed in hamsters by day post-subq inoculation and the disease was uniformly lethal by day - postexposure. this model has been successfully used to test antivirals against rvfv (scharton et al., ) . studies thus far showed that rvfv does not cause uniform lethality in a nhp model. ip, in, iv, and aerosol routes have been utilized to develop nhp model. rhesus macaques, cynomolgus macaques, african monkeys, and south american monkeys were some of the nhp species used for this effort . monkeys showed a variety of signs ranging from febrile disease to hemorrhagic disease and mortality. temporal viremia, increased coagulation parameters (pt, aptt), and decreased platelets were some other signs observed in nhps. animals that succumbed to disease showed very similar pathogenesis to humans, such as pathological changes in the liver and hemorrhagic disease. there was no ocular involvement in this model. smith et al. compared iv, in and subq routes of infection in common marmosets and rhesus macaques (peng et al., ) . marmosets were more susceptible to rvfv infection than rhesus macaques with marked viremia, acute hepatitis, and late onset of encephalitis. increased liver enzymes were observed in both species. necropsy results showed enlarged livers in the marmosets exposed by iv or subq routes. although there were no gross lesions in the brains of marmosets, histopathology showed encephalitis in the brains of in challenged marmosets. a recent study by hartman et al. ( ) demonstrated that aerosolized rvfv only caused mild fever in cynomolgus macaques and rhesus macaques, while agms and marmosets had encephalitis and succumbed to disease between days and postexposure. in contrast to other lethal models, the brain was the target organ in agms and marmosets. although no change was observed in ast levels, alp levels were increased in marmosets. little or no change was observed in hepatic enzyme levels in agms. lack of information regarding human disease concerning the aerosol route of exposure makes it difficult to evaluate these animal models. crimean-congo hemorrhagic fever virus (cchfv) generally circulates in nature unnoticed in an enzootic tick-vertebrate-tick cycle and similar to other zoonotic agents, appears to produce little or no disease in its natural hosts, but causes severe disease in humans. cchfv transmits to humans by ixodid ticks, direct contact with sick animals/humans, or body fluids of animals/humans (ergonul and whitehouse, ) . incubation, prehemorrhagic, hemorrhagic, and convalescence are the four phases of the disease seen in humans. the incubation period lasts - days. during the prehemorragic phase, patients show signs of nonspecific flu-like disease for approximately a week. the hemorrhagic period results in circulatory shock and dic in some patients (mardani and keshtkar-jahromi, ; swanepoel et al., ) . over the years, several attempts have been made to establish an animal model for cchf in adult mice, guinea pigs, hamsters, rats, rabbits, sheep, nhps, etc. (fagbami et al., ; nalca and whitehouse, ; shepherd et al., ; smirnova, ) . until recently, the only animal that manifests disease is the newborn mouse. infant mice ip infected with cchfv resulted in fatality around day postinfection (tignor and hanham, ) . pathogenesis studies showed that virus replication was first detected in the liver, with subsequent spread to the blood (serum). virus was detected very late during the disease course in other tissues including the heart (day ) and the brain (day ). the recent studies utilizing knockout adult mice were successful to develop a lethal small animal model for cchfv infection (bente et al., ; bereczky et al., ) . bente et al. infected stat knockout mice by the ip route. in this model, after the signs of fever, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, viremia, elevated liver enzymes and proinflammatory cytokines, mice were moribund and succumbed to disease in - days postexposure. the second model was developed by using interferon alpha/beta (ifnα/β) receptor knockout mice (ifnar −/− ) (bereczky et al., ) . similar observations were made in this model as in the stat knockout mouse model. animals were moribund and died - days after exposure with high viremia levels in liver and spleen. characterization studies with ifnar −/− mice challenged with different routes (ip, in, im, and subq) showed that cchfv causes acute disease with high viral loads, pathology in liver and lymphoid tissues, increased proinflammatory response, severe thrombocytopenia, coagulopathy, and death, all of which are characteristics of human disease . proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines, such as g-csf, ifnγ, cxc-cl , ccl increased dramatically day postchallenge and gm-csf, il- a, il- b, il- , il- , il- p , il- , il- , cxcl , ccl , ccl , and tnf-α concentrations were extremely elevated at the time of death/euthanasia. this model is also utilized to test therapeutics, such as ribavirin, arbidol, and t- (favipiravir) successfully (oestereich et al., ) . experimental vaccines developed for cchf were evaluated in this model provided protection compare to unvaccinated mice (buttigieg et al., ; canakoglu et al., , p. ) . thus, the ifnar −/− mouse model would be a good choice to test medical countermeasures against cchfv, although they have an impaired ifn and immune response phenotype. other laboratory animals, including nhps, show little or no sign of infection or disease when infected with cchfv (nalca and whitehouse, ) . butenko et al. utilized agms (cercopithecus aethiops) for experimental cchfv infections. except one monkey with a fever on day postinfection, the animals did not show signs of disease. antibodies to the virus were detected in three out of five monkeys, including the one with fever. fagbami et al. ( ) infected two patas monkeys (erythrocebus patas) and one guinea baboon (papio papio) with cchfv. whereas all three animals had low-level viremia between days and after inoculation, only the baboon serum had neutralizing antibody activity on day postinfection. similar results were obtained when horses and donkeys have been used for experimental cchfv infections. donkeys develop a low-level viremia (rabinovich et al., ) and horses developed little or no viremia, but high levels of virus-neutralizing antibodies, which remained stable for at least months. these studies suggest that horses may be useful in the laboratory to obtain serum for diagnostic and possible therapeutic purposes (blagoveshchenskaya et al., (blagoveshchenskaya et al., ). shepherd et al. ( infected species of small african wild mammals and laboratory rabbits, guinea pigs, and syrian hamsters with cchfv. whereas scrub hares (lepus saxatilis), cape ground squirrels (xerus inauris), red veld rats (aethomys chrysophilus), white-tailed rats (mystromys pumilio), and guinea pigs had viremia; south african hedgehogs (atelerix frontalis), highveld gerbils (gerbilliscus brantsii), namaqua gerbils (desmodillus auricularis), two species of multimammate mouse (mastomys natalensis and mastomys coucha), and syrian hamsters were negative for virus. all species regardless of viremia levels developed antibody responses against cchfv. iv and intracranially infected animals showed onset of viremia earlier than those infected by the subq or ip routes. the genus hantavirus is unique among the family bunyaviridae in that it is not transmitted by an arthropod vector, but rather rodents (schmaljohn and nichol, ) . rodents of the family muridae are the primary reservoir for hantaviruses. infected host animals develop a persistent infection that is typically asymptomatic. transmission is achieved by inhalation of infected rodent saliva, feces, and urine (xu et al., ) . human infections can normally be traced to a rural setting with activities, such as farming, land development, hunting, and camping as possible sites of transmission. rodent control is the primary route of prevention (lednicky, ) . the viruses have a tropism for endothelial cells within the microvasculature of the lungs (zaki et al., ) . there are two distinct clinical diseases that infection can yield: hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (hfrs) due to infection with old world hantaviruses or hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (hps) caused by new world hantaviruses (nichol, ) . hfrs is mainly seen outside of the americas and is associated with the hantaviruses dobrava-belgrade (also known as dobrava), hantaan, puumala, and seoul (lednicky, ) . incubation lasts - weeks and presents as flu-like in the initial stages that can further develop into hemorrhagic manifestations and ultimately renal failure. thrombocytopenia subsequently develops which can further progress to shock in approximately % patients. overall mortality rate is %. infection with dobrava and hantaan viruses are typically linked to development of severe disease. hps was first diagnosed in within southwestern united states when healthy young adults became suddenly ill, progressing to severe respiratory distress and shock. the etiological agent responsible for this outbreak was identified as sin nombre virus (snv) (centers for disease control and prevention, ) . this virus is still the leading cause within north america of hps. hps due to other hantaviruses has been reported in argentina, bolivia, brazil, canada, chile, french guiana, panama, paraguay, and uruguay (padula et al., ; stephen et al., ) . the first report of hps in maine was recently documented (centers for disease control and prevention, ). andes virus (andv) was first identified in outbreaks in chile and argentina. this hantavirus is distinct in that it can be transmitted between humans (wells et al., ) . the fulminant disease is more lethal than that observed of hfrs with a mortality rate of %. there are four phases of disease including prodromal, pulmonary, cardiac depression, and hematologic manifestation (peters and khan, ) . incubation typically occurs - days following exposure (young et al., ) . unlike hfrs, renal failure is not a major contributing factor to the disease. there is a short prodromal phase that gives way to cardiopulmonary involvement accompanied by cough and gastrointestinal symptoms. it is at this point that individuals are typically admitted to the hospital. pulmonary function is hindered and continues to suffer within h after cardiopulmonary involvement. interstitial edema and air-space disease normally follow. in fatal cases, cardiogenic shock has been noted (hallin et al., ) . syrian golden hamsters are the most widely utilized small animal model for hantavirus infection. hamsters inoculated im with a passaged andes viral strain died within days postinfection. clinical signs did not appear until h prior to death at which point the hamsters were moribund and in respiratory distress. mortality was dose dependent, with high inoculums leading to a shorter incubation before death. during the same study, hamsters were inoculated with a passaged snv isolate. no hamsters developed any symptoms during the course of observation. however, an antibody response to the virus that was not dose dependent was determined via elisa. hamsters infected with andv have significant histopathological changes to their lung, liver, and spleen. all had an interstitial pneumonia with intraalveolar edema. infectious virus could be recovered from these organs. viremia began on day and lasted up to days postinfection. infection of hamsters with andv yielded a similar clinical disease progression as is seen in human hps including rapid progression to death, fluid in the pleural cavity, and significant histopathological changes to the lungs and spleen. a major deviation in the hamster model is the detection of infectious virus within the liver . normally, snv does not cause a disease in hamsters (wahl-jensen et al., ) . but a recent study showed that immunosuppression with dexamethasone and cyclophosphamide in combination causes lethal disease with snv in hamsters (brocato et al., ) . the disease was very similar to the disease caused by andv in hamsters. lethal disease can be induced in newborn mice, but does not recapitulate the clinical symptoms observed in human disease (kim and mckee, ) . the disease outcome is very much dependent on the age of the mice. younger mice are much more susceptible to virus than the adult mice. adult mice exposed to hanta virus leads to a fatal disease dependent upon viral strain and route of infection. the disease progression is marked by neurological or pulmonary manifestations that do not mirror human disease (seto et al., ; wichmann et al., ) . knockout mice lacking ifnα/β are highly susceptible to hanta virus infection (muller et al., ) . in a study of panel of laboratory strains of mice, c bl/ mice were most susceptible to a passaged hanta viral strain injected ip. animals progressed to neurological manifestation including paralyses and convulsions, and succumbed to infection within - h postinfection. clinical disease was markedly different from that observed in human cases (wichmann et al., ) . in a recent study, -weekold icr mice was exposed to htnv strain aa via the subq route (seto et al., ) . mice started to show signs of disease by day postinoculation. piloerection, trembling, hunching, loss of body weight, labored breathing, and severe respiratory disease were observed in mice. studies to develop nhp models were not successful until recently. nhps have been challenged with new world hantaviruses; however, no clinical signs were reported (hooper et al., ; mcelroy et al., ) . cynomolgus monkeys challenged with a clinical isolate of puumala virus developed a mild disease (klingstrom et al., ; sironen et al., ) . challenge with andv to cynomolgus macaques by both iv and aerosol exposure led to no signs of disease. all animals did display a drop in total lymphocytes within days postinfection. four of six aerosol exposed monkeys and of iv injected monkeys developed viremia. infectious virus could not be isolated from any of the animals. in a recent study, rhesus macaques were inoculated by the intramuscular route with snv passaged only in deer mice (safronetz et al., ) . characteristics of hps disease including rapid onset of respiratory distress, severe pulmonary edema, thrombocytopenia, and leukocytosis were observed in this promising model. viremia was observed - days prior to respiratory signs of the disease that were observed on days - postinoculation. with all aspects, this animal model would be very useful to test medical countermeasures against hanta virus. the family arenaviridae is composed of two serogroups: old world arenaviruses including lassa fever virus and lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus and the new world viruses of pichinde virus and junin virus. all of these viruses share common clinical manifestations (mccormick and fisher-hoch, ) . lassa fever virus is endemic in parts of west africa and outbreaks are typically seen in the dry season between january and april (curtis, ) . this virus is responsible for , - , infections per year, leading to approximately deaths (khan et al., ) . outbreaks have been reported in guinea, sierra leone, liberia, nigeria, and central african republic. however, cases have sprung up in germany, netherlands, united kingdom, and the united states due to transmission to travelers on commercial airlines (amorosa et al., ) . transmission of this virus typically occurs via rodents, in particular the multimammate rat, mastomys species complex (curtis, ) . humans become infected by inhaling the aerosolized virus or eating contaminated food. there has also been noted human-to-human transmission by direct contact with infected secretions or needle-stick injuries. the majority of infections are asymptomatic; however, severe disease occurs in % of individuals. the incubation period is from to days and initial onset is characterized by flu-like illness. this is followed by diarrheal disease that can progress to hemorrhagic symptoms including encephalopathy, encephalitis, and meningitis. a third of patients develop deafness in the early phase of disease that is permanent for a third of those affected. the overall fatality is about %; however, of those admitted to the hospital it is between % and %. there is no approved vaccine and besides supportive measures, ribavirin is effective only if started within days (mccormick et al., a,b) . the primary animal model used to study lassa fever is the rhesus macaque (jahrling et al., ) . aerosolized infection of lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus has been a useful model for lassa fever. both rhesus and cynomolgus monkeys exposed to the virus developed disease, but rhesus mirrored more closely the disease course and histopathology observed in human infection (danes et al., ) . iv or intragastric inoculation of the virus led to severe dehydration, erythematous skin, submucosal edema, necrotic foci in the buccal cavity, and respiratory distress. the liver was severely affected by the virus as depicted by measuring the liver enzymes ast and alt (lukashevich et al., ) . disease was dose dependent with iv, intramuscular, and subq inoculation requiring the least amount of virus to induce disease. aerosol infections and eating contaminated food could also be utilized, and mimic a more natural route of infection (peters et al., ) . within this model, the nhp becomes viremic after - days. clinical manifestations were present by day and death typically occurred within - days (lukashevich et al., ; rodas et al., ) . intramuscular injection of lassa virus into cynomolgus monkeys also produced a neurological disease due to lesions within the cns (hensley et al., b) . this pathogenicity is seen in select cases of human lassa fever (cummins et al., ; gunther et al., ) . a marmoset model has recently been defined utilizing a subq injection of lassa fever virus. virus was initially detected by day and viremia achieved by day . liver enzymes were elevated and an enlarged liver was noted upon autopsy. there was a gradual reduction in platelets and interstitial pneumonitis diagnosed in a minority of animals. the physiological signs were the same as seen in fatal human cases (carrion et al., ) . mice develop a fatal neurological disorder upon intracerebral inoculation with lassa, although the outcome of infection is dependent on the mhc background, age of the animal, and inoculation route (salvato et al., ) . stat knockout mice inoculated ip with both lethal and nonlethal lassa virus strains develop hearing loss accompanied by damage to the inner ear hair cells and auditory nerve (yun et al., ) . guinea pig inbred strain was highly susceptible to lassa virus infection. the outbred hartley strain was less susceptible, and thus strain has been the preferred model given its assured lethality. the clinical manifestations mirror those seen in humans and rhesus (jahrling et al., ) . infection with pichinde virus passaged in guinea pigs has also been used. disease signs include fever, weight loss, vascular collapse, and eventual death (lucia et al., ; qian et al., ) . the guinea pig is an excellent model given that it not only results in similar disease pattern, viral distribution, histopathology, and immune response to humans (connolly et al., ; katz and starr, ) . infection of hamsters with a cotton rat isolate of pirital virus is similar to what is characterized in humans, and the nhp and guinea pig models. the virus was injected ip resulting in lethargy and anorexia within - days. virus was first detected at days, and reached maximum titers within days. neurological symptoms began to appear at the same time, and all animals died by day . pneumonitis, pulmonary hemorrhage, and edema were also present (sbrana et al., ) . these results were recapitulated with a nonadapted pichinde virus (buchmeier and rawls, ; gowen et al., ; smee et al., ) . the lentiviruses are a subfamily of retroviridae, which includes human immunodeficiency virus (hiv), a virus that infects . % of the world's population. a greater proportion of infections and deaths occur in subsaharan africa. worldwide, there are approximately . million deaths per year with over , being children. transmission of hiv occurs by exposure to infectious body fluids. there are two species, hiv- and hiv- , with hiv- having lower infectivity and virulence (confined mostly to west africa). the vast majority of cases worldwide are hiv- (de cock et al., ) . hiv targets t-helper cells (cd +), macrophages, dendritic cells (fields et al., ) . acute infection occurs - weeks after exposure, with flu-like symptoms and viremia followed by chronic infection. symptoms in the acute phase may include fever, body aches, nausea, vomiting, headache, lymphadenopathy, pharyngitis, rash, and sores in the mouth or esophagus. cd + t-cells are activated which kill hiv-infected cells, and are responsible for antibody production and seroconversion. acquired immune deficiency syndrome (aids) develops when cd + t-cells decline to less than cells/µl; thus cell-mediated immunity becomes impaired and the person is more susceptible to opportunistic infections as well as certain cancers. hiv has a narrow host range likely because the virus is unable to antagonize and evade effector molecules of the interferon response (thippeshappa et al., ) . humanized mice, created by engrafting human cells and tissues into scid mice, have been critical for the development of mouse models for the study of hiv infection. a number of different humanized mouse models allow for the study of hiv infection in the context of an intact and functional human innate and adaptive immune responses (berges and rowan, ) . the scidhu hiv infection model has proven useful, particularly in screening antivirals and therapeutics (denton et al., ; melkus et al., ) . a number of different humanized mouse models have been developed for the study of hiv, including rag −/− γc −/− , rag −/− γc −/− , nod/scidγc −/− (hnog), nod/scidγc −/− (hnsg), nod/scid blt, and nod/scidγc −/− (hnsg) blt (karpel et al., ; li et al., ; shimizu et al., ) . cd + human stem cells derived from umbilical cord blood or fetal liver are used for humanization (baenziger et al., ; watanabe et al., ) . hiv- infection by ip injection can be successful with as little as % peripheral blood engraftment (berges et al., ) . vaginal and rectal transmission models have been developed in blt scid hu mice in which mice harbor human bone marrow, liver, and thymus tissue. hiv- viremia occurs within approximately days postinoculation . in many of these models, spleen, lymph nodes, and thymus tissues are highly positive for virus, similar to humans (brainard et al., ) . importantly, depletion of human t-cells can be observed in blood and lymphoid tissues of hivinfected humanized mice and at least some mechanisms of pathogenesis that occur in hiv-infected humans, also occur in the hiv-infected humanized mouse models (baenziger et al., ; neff et al., ) . the advantage of these models is that these mice are susceptible to hiv infection and thus the impact of drugs on the intended viral targets can be tested. one caveat is that while mice have a "common mucosal immune system," humans do not, due to differences in the distribution of addressins (holmgren and czerkinsky, ) . thus, murine mucosal immune responses to hiv do not reflect those of humans. another strategy uses a human cd -and human ccr -expressing transgenic luciferase reporter mouse to study hiv- pseudovirus entry (gruell et al., ) . hiv- transgenic (tg) rats are also used to study hiv related pathology, immunopathogenesis, and neuropathology (lentz et al., ; reid et al., ) . the clinical signs include skin lesions, wasting, respiratory difficulty, and neurological signs. brain volume decreases have been documented and the hiv- tg rat is thus used as a model of neuropathology in particular. there are a number of important nhp models for human hiv infection (hessell and haigwood, ) . an adaptation of hiv- was obtained by four passages in pigtailed macaques transiently depleted of cd (+) cells during acute infection (hatziioannou et al., ) . the resulting disease has several similarities to aids in humans, such as depletion of cd (+) t-cells (kimata, ) . simian immunodeficiency virus (siv) infection of macaques has been widely used as a platform for modeling hiv infection of humans (demberg and robert-guroff, ; walker et al., ) . importantly, nhps have similar, pharmacokinetics, metabolism, mucosal tcell homing receptors, and vascular addressins to those of humans. thus, while the correlates of protection against hiv are still not completely known, immune responses to hiv infection and vaccination are likely comparable. these models mimic infection through use of contaminated needles (iv), sexual transmission (vaginal or rectal), and maternal transmission in utero or through breast milk (keele et al., ; miller et al., ; stone et al., ) . there are also macaque models to study the emergence and clinical implications of hiv drug resistance (van rompay et al., ) . these models most routinely utilize rhesus macaques (macaca mulatta), cynomolgus macaques (m. fasicularis), and pigtailed macaques (macaca nemestrina). all ages are used, depending on the needs of the study. for instance, use of newborn macaques may be more practical for evaluating the effect of prolonged drug therapy on disease progression; however, adult nhps are more frequently employed. female pigtailed macaques have been used to investigate the effect of the menstrual cycle on hiv susceptibility (vishwanathan et al., ) . studies are performed in bsl- animal laboratories and nhps must be simian type-d retrovirus free and siv seronegative. siv infection of pigtailed macaques is a useful model for hiv peripheral nervous system pathology, wherein an axotomy is performed and regeneration of axons is studied (ebenezer et al., ) . exposure in model systems is typically through a single high-dose challenge. iv infection of rhesus macaques with tcid of the highly pathogenic siv/ deltab induces aids in most macaques within - months (mean of months) (fuller et al., ) . peak viremia occurs around week . aids in such models is often defined as cd + t-cells that have dropped to less than % of the baseline values. alternatively, repeated low dose challenges are often utilized, depending on the requirements of the model (henning et al., ; moldt et al., ; reynolds et al., ) . since nhps infected with hiv do not develop an infection with a clinical disease course similar to humans, siv or siv/hiv- laboratory-engineered chimeric viruses (shivs) are used as surrogates. nhps infected with pathogenic siv may develop clinical disease which progresses to aids, and are thus useful pathogenesis models. a disadvantage is that siv is not identical to hiv- and is more closely related to hiv- . however, the polymerase region of siv is % homologous to that of hiv- and it is susceptible to many reverse transcriptase (rt) and protease inhibitors. siv is generally not susceptible to nonnucleoside inhibitors, thus hiv- rt is usually put into siv for such studies (uberla et al., ) . sivmac is similar to hiv in the polymerase region and is therefore susceptible to nucleoside, rt, or integrase inhibition (witvrouw et al., ) . nhps infected with sivmac have an asymptomatic period and disease progression resembling aids in humans, characterized by weight loss/wasting, cd + t-cell depletion. additionally, sivmac utilizes the cxcr chemokine receptor as a coreceptor, similar to hiv, which is important for drugs that target entry (veazey et al., ) . nhps infected with shiv strains, may not develop aids, but these models are useful in testing vaccine efficacy . for example, rt-shivs and env-shivs are useful for testing and evaluation of drugs that may target the envelope or rt, respectively (uberla et al., ) . one disadvantage of the highly virulent env-shiv (shiv- . p), is that it uses the cxcr coreceptor. of note, env-shivs that do use the cxcr coreceptor are less virulent; viremia develops then resolves without further disease progression (humbert et al., ) . simian-tropic (st) hiv- contains the vif gene from siv. infection of pigtailed macaques with this virus results in viremia, which can be detected for months, followed by clearance (haigwood, ) . a number of routes are utilized for siv or shiv infection of nhps, with iv inoculation the most common route. mucosal routes include vaginal, rectal, and intracolonic. mucosal routes require a higher one-time dose than the iv route for infection. for the vaginal route, female macaques are treated with depo-provera (estrogen) month before infection to synchronize the menstrual cycle, thin the epithelial lining of the vagina, and increase susceptibility to infection by atraumatic vaginal instillation (burton et al., ) . upon vaginal instillation of tcid of shiv- p , peak viremia was seen around days postexposure with greater than copies/ml and dropping thereafter to a constant level of rna copies/ml at days and beyond. in another example, in an investigation of the effect of vaccine plus vaginal microbicide on preventing infection, rhesus macaques were vaginally infected with a high dose of sivmac (barouch et al., ) . an example of an intrarectal model utilized juvenile ( -year-old) pigtailed macaques, challenged intrarectally with tcid s of siv mne to study the pathogenesis related to the virulence factor, vpx (belshan et al., ) . here, viremia peaked at approximately days with more than copies/ml. viral rna was expressed in the cells of the mesenteric lymph nodes. the male genital tract is seen as a viral sanctuary with persistent high levels of hiv shedding even with antiretroviral therapy. to better understand the effect of haart therapy on virus and t-cells in the male genital tract, adult ( -to -year-old) male cynomolgus macaques were intravenously inoculated with aid s of sivmac and the male genital tract tissues were tested after euthanasia by pcr, ihc, and in situ hybridization (moreau et al., ) . pediatric models have been developed in infant rhesus macaques through the infection of siv, allowing for the study of the impact of developmental and immunological differences on the disease course (abel, ) . importantly, mother-to-infant transmission models have also been developed (jayaraman et al., ) . pregnant female pigtailed macaques were infected during the second trimester with mid shiv-sf p by the iv route. four of nine infants were infected, one in utero and three either intrapartum or immediately postpartum through nursing. this model is useful for the study of factors involved in transmission as well as the underlying immunology. nhps infected with siv or shiv are routinely evaluated for weight loss, activity level, stool consistency, appetite, virus levels in blood, and t-cell populations. cytokine and chemokine levels, antibody responses, and cytotoxic t-lymphocyte responses may also be evaluated. the ultimate goal of an hiv vaccine is sterilizing immunity (preventing infection). however, a more realistic result may be to reduce severity of infection and permanently prevent progression. strategies have included live attenuated, nonreplicating, and subunit vaccines. these have variable efficacy in nhps due to the genetics of the host (mhc and trim alleles), differences between challenge strains, and challenge routes (letvin et al., ) . nhp models have led to the development of antiviral treatments that are effective at reducing viral load and indeed transmission of hiv among humans. one preferred variation on the models for testing the long-term clinical consequences of antiviral treatment is to use newborn macaques and treat from birth onward, in some cases more than a decade (van rompay et al., ) . unfortunately, however, successes in nhp studies do not always translate to success in humans, as seen with the recent step study which used an adenovirus-based vaccine approach (buchbinder et al., ) . vaccinated humans were not protected and may have even been more susceptible to hiv, viremia was not reduced, and the infections were not attenuated as hoped. with regard to challenge route, iv exposure is more difficult to protect than mucosal exposure and is used as a "worst case scenario." however, efficacy at one mucosal route is usually comparable to other mucosal routes. human and animal papillomaviruses cause benign epithelial proliferations (warts) and malignant tumors of the various tissues that they infect (bosch and de sanjose, ) . there are over human papillomaviruses, with different strains causing warts on the skin, oropharynx, nasopharynx, larynx, and anogenital tissues. approximately one third of papillomaviruses are transmitted sexually. of these, virulent subtypes, such as hpv- , hpv- , hpv- , hpv- , and hpv- place individuals at high risk for cervical and other cancers. up to % of head and neck cancers are caused by hpv- , particularly oropharyngeal cancers. major challenges in the study of these viruses are that papillomaviruses generally do not infect any other species outside of the natural hosts and can cause a very large spectrum of severity. thus, no wild-type animal models have been identified that are susceptible to hpv. however, a number of useful surrogate models exist which use animal papillomaviruses in their natural host or a very closely related species (borzacchiello et al., ; brandsma, ; campo, ) . these models have facilitated the recent development of useful and highly effective prophylactic hpv vaccines (rabenau et al., ) . wild-type inbred mice cannot be used to study disease caused by papillomaviruses unless they are engrafted with relevant tissue, orthotopically transplanted or transgenic, but they are often used to look at immunogenicity of vaccines (jagu et al., ; oosterhuis et al., ) . transgenic mice used for hpv animal modeling typically express the viral oncogenes e , e , e , or the entire early region of hpv- from the keratin promoter which is only active in the basal cells of the mouse epithelium (chow, ) . cancers in these models develop upon extended estrogen exposure (maufort et al., ; ocadiz-delgado et al., ; stelzer et al., ; thomas et al., ) . transgenic mice with constitutively active wnt/b-catenin signaling in cervical epithelial cells expressing the hpb oncoprotein e develop invasive cervical squamous carcinomas (bulut and uren, ) . the tumors occur within months approximately % of the time. another model uses c bl/ mice expressing the hpv -e transgene which are then treated topically with , -dimethylbenz(a)anthracene (dmba) (de azambuja et al., ) . these mice developed benign and malignant cutaneous lesions. cervical cancers can also be induced in human cervical cancer xenografts transplanted onto the flanks of athymic mice and serially transplanted thereafter ( hiroshima et al., ; siolas and hannon, ) . a wild-type immunocompetent rodent model uses m. coucha, which is naturally infected with mastomys natalensis papillomavirus (mnpv) (vinzon et al., ) . mnpv induces papillomas, keratoacanthomas, and squamous cell carcinomas and provides a means to study vaccination in an immunocompetent small animal model. wild cottontail rabbits (sylvilagus floridanus) are the natural host for cottontail rabbit papillomavirus (crpv), but this virus also infects domestic rabbits (oryctolagus cuniculus), which is a very closely related species ( breitburd et al., ) . in this model, papillomas can range from cutaneous squamous cell carcinomas on one end of spectrum, and spontaneous regression on the other. lesions resulting from crpv in domestic rabbits do not typically contain infectious virus. canine oral papillomavirus (copv) causes florid warty lesions in mucosa of the oral cavity within - weeks postexposure in experimental settings (johnston et al., ) . the mucosatrophic nature of these viruses and the resulting oropharyngeal papillomas that are morphologically similar to human vaginal papillomas caused by hpv- and hpv- make this a useful model (nicholls et al., ) . these lesions typically spontaneously regress - weeks after appearing; this model is therefore useful in understanding the interplay between the host immune defense and viral pathogenesis. male and female beagles, aged weeks to years, with no history of copv, are typically used for these studies. infection is achieved by application of a µl droplet of virus extract to multiple . cm scarified areas within the mucosa of the upper lip of anesthetized beagles (nicholls et al., ) . some investigators have raised concerns that dogs are not a suitable model for high-risk hpv-induced oral cancer (staff, ) . bovine papillomavirus (bpv) has a wider host range than most papillomaviruses, infecting the fibroblasts cells of numerous ungulates (campo, ) . bpv- infection of cattle feeding on bracken fern, which is carcinogenic, can result in lesions of the oral and esophageal mucosa that lack detectable viral dna. bpv infections in cattle can result in a range of diseases, such as skin warts, cancer of the upper gastrointestinal tract and urinary bladder, and papillomatosis of the penis, teats, and udder. finally, rhesus papillomavirus (rhpv), a sexually transmitted papillomaviruses in rhesus macaques and cynomolgus macaques is very similar to hpv- and is associated with the development of cervical cancer ( ostrow et al., ; wood et al., ) . monkeypox virus (mpxv) causes disease in both animals and humans. human monkeypox, which is clinically almost identical to ordinary smallpox, occurs mostly in the rainforest of central and western africa. the virus is maintained in nature in rodent reservoirs including k. viral disease squirrels (charatan, ; khodakevich et al., ) . mpxv was discovered during the pox-like disease outbreak among laboratory monkeys (mostly cynomolgus and rhesus macaques) in denmark in . no human cases were observed during this outbreak. the first human case was not recognized as a distinct disease until in zaire (the present drc) with continued occurrence of a smallpox-like illness despite eradication efforts of smallpox in this area. during the global eradication campaign, extensive vaccination in central africa decreased the incidence of human monkeypox, but the absence of immunity in the generation born since that time and increased dependence on bush meat have resulted in renewed emergence of the disease. in the summer of , a well-known outbreak in the midwest was the first occurrence of monkeypox disease in the united states and western hemisphere. among reported cases, human cases were laboratory confirmed during an outbreak (nalca et al., ; sejvar et al., ) . it was determined that native prairie dogs (cynomys sp.) housed with rodents imported from ghana in west africa were the primary source of outbreak. the virus is mainly transmitted to humans while handling infected animals or by direct contact with the infected animal's body fluids, or lesions. person-to-person spread occurs by large respiratory droplets or direct contact (jeézek and fenner, ) . most of the clinical features of human monkeypox are very similar to those of ordinary smallpox (breman and arita, ) . after a -to -dayincubation period, the disease begins with fever, malaise, headache, sore throat, and cough. the main sign of the disease that distinguishes monkeypox from smallpox is swollen lymph nodes (lymphadenitis), which is observed in most of the patients before the development of rash (di giulio and eckburg, ; jeézek and fenner, ) . a typical maculopapular rash follows the prodromal period, generally lasting - days. the average size of the skin lesions are . - cm and the progress of lesions follows the order: macules, papules, vesicles, pustules, umblication then scab, and desquamation and lasts typically - weeks. the fatality rate is % among the unvaccinated population and death generally occurs during the nd week of the disease (jeézek and fenner, ; nalca et al., ) . mpxv is highly pathogenic for a variety of laboratory animals and many animal models have been developed by using different species and different routes of exposure (table . ). due to unavailability of variola virus (smallpox) to develop animal models and similar disease manifestations in humans that are similar, mpxv is one of the pox viruses that are utilized very heavily to develop a number of small animal models via different routes of exposure. wild-derived inbred mouse, stat -deficient c bl/ mouse, icr mouse, prairie dogs, african dormice, ground squirrels, and gambian pouched rats are highly susceptible to mpxv by different exposure routes (americo et al., ; falendysz et al., ; hutson et al., ; osorio et al., ; sbrana et al., ; schultz et al., ; sergeev et al., ; stabenow et al., ; tesh et al., ; xiao et al., ) . cast/eij mice, one of the inbred mouse strains tested for susceptibility to mpxv, showed weight loss and dose dependent mortality after in exposure to mpxv. studies with ip route of challenge indicated a fold higher susceptibility to mpxv when compared to in route (americo et al., ) . scid-balb/c mice were also susceptible to the ip challenge route and the disease resulted in mortality on day postinfection (osorio et al., ) . similarly, c bl/ stat −/− mice were infected in with mpxv and the infection resulted in weight loss and mortality days postexposure. recently sergeev et al. ( ) showed that in challenge of icr mice with mpxv resulted in purulent conjunctivitis, blepharitis, and ruffled fur in these mice although there was no death. the mouse models mentioned here are very promising for screening therapeutics against poxviruses but testing in additional models will be required for advanced development. high doses of the mpxv by ip or in routes caused % mortality in days postexposure and days postexposure, respectively, in ground squirrels (tesh et al., ) . the disease progressed very quickly and most of the animals were lethargic and moribund by day postexposure without any pox lesions or respiratory changes. a comparison study of usa mpxv and central african strain of mpxv strains in ground squirrels by the subq route resulted in systemic disease and mortality in - days postexposure. the disease resembles hemorrhagic smallpox with nosebleeds, impaired coagulation parameters, and hemorrhage in the lungs of the animals. another study by sergeev et al. ( ) showed that in challenge with mpxv caused fever, lymphadenitis, and skin rash in ground squirrels - days postexposure. mortality was observed in % of the animals - days postexposure (sergeev et al., ) . since mpxv was transmitted by infected prairie dogs in the us outbreak, this animal model has been more thoroughly studied and utilized to test therapeutics and vaccines compared to other small animal models ( hutson et al., ; keckler et al., ; smith et al., ; xiao et al., ) . studies using in, ip, and id routes of exposure showed that mpxv was highly infectious to prairie dogs, ip infection with the west african mpxv strain caused a more severe disease and % mortality than challenge by the in route. anorexia and lethargy were common signs of the disease for both exposure routes. in contrast to ip route, the in route of exposure caused severe pulmonary edema and necrosis of lungs in prairie dogs, while splenic necrosis and hepatic lesions were observed in ip-infected animals (xiao et al., ) . hutson et al. ( ) african and congo basin strains and showed that both strains and routes caused smallpox-like disease with longer incubation periods and most importantly generalized pox lesions. therefore, this model has the utility for testing therapeutics and vaccines against pox viruses. furthermore, mpxv challenged prairie dogs were used to perform in vivo bioluminescent imaging (bli) studies (falendysz et al., ) . bli studies showed real time spread of virus in prairie dogs as well as potential routes for shedding and transmission. the african dormouse is susceptible to mpxv by a footpad injection or in routes (schultz et al., ) . mice had decreased activity, hunched posture, dehydration, conjunctivitis, and weight loss. viral doses of and pfu provided % mortality with a mean time to death of days. upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage, hepatomegaly, lymphadenopathy, and lung hemorrhage were observed during necropsy. with the hemorrhage in several organs, this model resembles hemorrhagic smallpox. in a recent study, comparison of the disease pathogenesis was performed by using live bioluminescence imaging in the cast/eij mouse and african dormouse challenged with low dose of mpxv (earl et al., ) . following in challenge, mpxv dissemination occurred through the blood or lymphatic system in dormice compared to dissemination that was through the nasal cavity and lungs in cast/eij mice. the disease course was much faster in cast/eij mice (earl et al., ) . considering the limited availability of prairie dogs, ground squirrels and african dormice, lack of reagents specific for these species, and not having commercial sources of these species, these small animal models are as attractive for further characterization and vaccine, and countermeasure testing studies. nhps were exposed to mpxv by several different routes to develop animal model for mpxv (edghill-smith et al., ; johnson et al., ; nalca et al., ; stittelaar et al., ; zaucha et al., ) . during our studies using an aerosol route of exposure, we observed that macaques had mild anorexia, depression, fever, and lymphadenopathy on day postexposure (nalca et al., ) . complete blood count and clinical chemistries showed abnormalities similar to human monkeypox cases with leukocytosis and thrombocytopenia (huhn et al., ) . whole blood and throat swabs had viral loads peak around day , and in survivors, gradually decrease until day postexposure. since doses of × pfu, × pfu, or × pfu resulted in lethality for % of the animals, whereas a dose of × pfu resulted in % lethality, survival was not dose dependent. the main pitfall of this model was the lack of pox lesions. with the high dose, animals succumbed to disease before developing pox lesions. with the low challenge dose, pox lesions were observed but they were few in comparison to the iv model. a recent study also evaluated the cytokine levels in aerosol challenged animals. (tree et al., ) . tree et al. ( ) showed that ifnγ, il- rα, and il- increased dramatically on day postexposure the day that death was most likely to occur, and viral dna was detected in most of the tissues. these results support the idea of a cytokine storm causing mortality in monkeypox disease. mpxv causes dose dependent disease in nhps when given by the iv route (johnson et al., ) . studies showed that a × pfu iv challenge results in systemic disease with fever, lymphadenopathy, macula-papular rash, and mortality. an it infection model skips the upper respiratory system and deposits virus into the trachea, delivering the virus directly to the airways without regard to particle size and the physiological deposition that occurs during the process of inhalation. fibrinonecrotic bronchopneumonia was described in animals that received pfu of mpxv intratracheally (stittelaar et al., ) . although a similar challenge dose of it mpxv infection resulted in a similar viremia in nhps to the aerosol route of infection, the timing of the first peak was delayed by days in intratracheally exposed macaques compared to aerosol infection, and the amount of virus detected by qpcr was approximately -fold lower. this suggests that local replication is more prominent after aerosol delivery compared to the it route. an intrabronchial route of exposure resulted in pneumonia in nhps (johnson et al., ) . delayed onset of clinical signs and viremia were observed during the disease progression. in this model, similar to aerosol and it infection models, the number of pox lesions was much less than in the iv infection model. a major downside of the iv, it, and intrabronchial models is that the initial infection of respiratory tissue, incubation, and prodromal phases are circumvented with the direct inoculation of virus to the blood stream or to the lung. this is an important limitation when the utility of these models is to test possible vaccines and treatments in which the efficacy may depend on protecting the respiratory mucosa and targeting the subsequent early stages of the infection, which are not represented in these challenge models. although the aerosol model is the natural route of transmission for human varv infections and a secondary route for human mpxv infections, the lack of pox lesions is the main drawback of this model. therefore, when this model is used to test medical countermeasures, the endpoints and the biomarkers to initiate treatment should be chosen carefully. hepatitis b virus (hbv) is one of the most common infections worldwide with over million people chronically infected and , cases per year of liver cancer due to infection (lee, ) . the virus can naturally infect both humans and chimpanzees (guha et al., ) . hbv is transmitted parenterally or postnatally from infected mothers. it can also be transmitted by sexual contact, iv drug use, blood transfusion, and acupuncture (lai et al., ) . the age at which one is infected dictates the risk of developing chronic disease (hyams, ) . acute infection during adulthood is self-limiting and results in flu-like symptoms that can progress to hepatocellular involvement as observed with the development of jaundice. the clinical symptoms of hbv infection last for a few weeks before resolving (ganem and prince, ) . after this acute phase, lifetime immunity is achieved (wright and lau, ) . of those infected, less than % will develop the chronic form of the disease. chronicity is the most serious outcome of the disease as it can result in cirrhosis or liver cancer. hepatocellular carcinoma is times more likely to develop in a chronically infected individual than a noncarrier (beasley, ) . the viral determinant for cellular transformation has yet to be determined, although studies involving the woodchuck hepatitis virus suggest that x protein may be responsible (spandau and lee, ). many individuals are asymptomatic until complications emerge related to chronic hbv carriage. chimpanzees have a unique strain that circulates within the population (hu et al., ; . it was found that %- % of all wild-caught animals from africa are positive for hbv antigen ( lander et al., ) . natural and experimental challenge with the virus follows the same course as human disease; however, this is only an acute model of disease (prince, ) . to date, chimpanzees are the only reliable method to ensure that plasma vaccines are free from infectious particles (prince and brotman, ). this animal model has been used to study new therapeutics and vaccines. chimpanzees are especially ideal for these studies given that their immune response to infection directly mirrors humans (nayersina et al., ) . recent regulations by the national institute of health (nih) and restrictions to use great apes as animal models forced researches to find alternate models for hbv infection. other nhps that have been evaluated are gibbons, orangutans, and rhesus monkeys. although these animals can be infected with hbv, none develops hepatic lesions or liver damage as noted by monitoring of liver enzymes (pillot, ). mice are not permissible to infection, and thus numerous transgenic and humanized lines that express hbv proteins have been created to facilitate their usage as an animal model. these include both immunocompetent and immunosuppressed hosts. the caveat to all of these mouse lines is that they reproduce only the acute form of disease (guha et al., ) . recently, the entire genome of hbv was transferred to an immunocompetent mouse line via adenovirus. this provides a model for persistent infection (huang et al., ) . another model that has been developed is hydrodynamic injection of hbv genomes in the liver of mice (liu et al., ; yang et al., ) . although this model is very stressful to mice and has liver toxicity, it is successfully used to evaluate antivirals against hbv (mccaffrey et al., ) . liver chimeric mouse models are an additional set of surrogate models for hbv infection (dandri and lutgehetmann, ) . in these models human hepatocytes are integrated into the murine liver parenchyma (allweiss and dandri, ) . this model might be used to test antivirals as well as to study the molecular biology of hbv infection. hbv can also be studied using surrogate viruses, naturally occurring mammalian hepadna viruses (mason et al., ) . the woodchuck hepatitis virus induces hepatocellular carcinoma (summers et al., ) . within a population, %- % of all neonatal woodchucks are susceptible to chronic infection (cote et al., ) . a major difference between the two hepatitis isolates is the rate at which they induce cancer; almost all chronic carriers developed hepatocellular carcinoma within years of the initial infection in woodchucks, whereas human carcinogenesis takes much longer (gerin et al., ) . the acute infection strongly resembles what occurs during the course of human disease. there is a self-limiting acute phase resulting in a transient viremia that has the potential of chronic carriage (tennant, ) . challenge with virus in neonates leads to a chronic infection while adults only develop the acute phase of disease (buendia, ) . a closely related species to the woodchuck is the marmota himalayan. this animal is also susceptible to the woodchuck hepadna virus upon iv injection. the marmot himalayan develops an acute hepatitis with a productive infection (lucifora et al., ) . hepatitis d virus (hdv) is dependent upon hbv to undergo replication and successful infection in its human host (gerin, ) . there are two modes of infection possible between the viruses: coinfection where a person is simultaneously infected or superinfection in which a chronic carrier of hbv is subsequently infected with hdv (purcell et al., ) . coinfection leads to a similar disease as seen with hbv alone; however, superinfection can result in chronic hdv infection and severe liver damage (guilhot et al., ) . both coinfection and superinfection can be demonstrated within the chimpanzee and woodchuck by inoculation of human hepatitis d (ponzetto et al., ) . a recently published report demonstrated the use of a humanized chimeric upa mouse to study interactions between the two viruses and drug testing (lutgehetmann et al., ) new models ranging from nhps to small animals and representing the disease characteristics in humans are necessary to study viral and host factors that drive disease pathogenesis and evaluate medical countermeasures. the ideal animal model for human viral disease should closely recapitulate the spectrum of clinical symptoms and pathogenesis observed during the course of human infection. whenever feasible, the model should use the same virus and strain that infects humans. it is also preferable that the virus is a low passage clinical isolate thus animal passage or adaptation should be avoided if model species can be identified that are susceptible. ideally, the experimental route of infection would mirror that occurs in natural disease. in order to understand the interplay and contribution of the immune system during infection, an immunocompetent animal should be used. the aforementioned characteristics cannot always be satisfied; however, and often virus must be adapted, knockout mice must be used, and/or the disease is not perfectly mimicked in the animal model. well-characterized animal models are critical for licensure to satisfy fda "animal rule." this rule applies to situations in which vaccine and therapeutic efficacy cannot safely or ethically be tested in humans; thus licensure will come only after preclinical tests are performed in animal models. many fields in virology are moving toward standardized models that can be used across institutions to test vaccines and therapeutics. a current example of such an effort is within the filovirus community, where animal models, euthanasia criteria, assays, and virus strains are in the process of being standardized. the hope is that these efforts will enable results of efficacy tests on medical countermeasures compared across institutions. this chapter has summarized the best models available for each of the viruses described. the rhesus macaque pediatric siv infection model-a valuable tool in understanding infant hiv- pathogenesis and for designing pediatric hiv- prevention strategies prevalence of anti-rift-valley-fever igm antibody in abattoir workers in the nile delta during the outbreak in egypt common marmosets (callithrix jacchus) as a nonhuman primate model to assess the virulence of eastern equine encephalitis virus strains replication and shedding of mers-cov in upper respiratory tract of inoculated dromedary camels. emerg generation of a transgenic mouse model of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection and disease pathological changes in brain and other target organs of infant and weanling mice after infection with nonneuroadapted western equine encephalitis virus particle-to-pfu ratio of ebola virus influences disease course and survival in cynomolgus macaques progress toward norovirus vaccines: considerations for further development and implementation in potential target populations characterization of lethal zika virus infection in ag mice experimental in vitro and in vivo models for the study of human hepatitis b virus infection a model of meningococcal bacteremia after respiratory superinfection in influenza a virus-infected mice middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: current situation and travel-associated concerns aerosol exposure to the angola strain of marburg virus causes lethal viral hemorrhagic fever in cynomolgus macaques necrotizing scleritis, conjunctivitis, and other pathologic findings in the left eye and brain of an ebola virus-infected rhesus macaque (macaca mulatta) with apparent recovery and a delayed time of death american academy of pediatrics subcommittee on diagnosis and management of bronchiolitis identification of wild-derived inbred mouse strains highly susceptible to monkeypox virus infection for use as small animal models the gerbil, meriones unguiculatus, a model for rift valley fever viral encephalitis morbidity and mortality among patients with respiratory syncytial virus infection: a -year retrospective review chikungunya and the nervous system: what we do and do not know the west nile virus outbreak of in new york: the flushing hospital experience hospital outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus diagnosis of noncultivatable gastroenteritis viruses, the human caliciviruses norovirus vaccine against experimental human norwalk virus illness determination of the % human infectious dose for norwalk virus an epizootic attributable to western equine encephalitis virus infection in emus in texas evidence for camel-to-human transmission of mers coronavirus integrated molecular signature of disease: analysis of influenza virus-infected macaques through functional genomics and proteomics disseminated and sustained hiv infection in cd + cord blood cell-transplanted rag −/− gamma c −/− mice choice of inbred rat strain impacts lethality and disease course after respiratory infection with rift valley fever virus rift valley fever: an uninvited zoonosis in the arabian peninsula recombinant norwalk virus-like particles given orally to volunteers: phase i study tropism of dengue virus in mice and humans defined by viral nonstructural protein -specific immunostaining lethal antibody enhancement of dengue disease in mice is prevented by fc modification animal models for the study of influenza pathogenesis and therapy effect of oral gavage treatment with znal and other metallo-ion formulations on influenza a h n and h n virus infections in mice macaque studies of vaccine and microbicide combinations for preventing hiv- sexual transmission early and sustained innate immune response defines pathology and death in nonhuman primates infected by highly pathogenic influenza virus hepatitis b virus. the major etiology of hepatocellular carcinoma transmission of norwalk virus during football game vpx is critical for sivmne infection of pigtail macaques experimental respiratory syncytial virus infection of four species of primates pathogenesis and immune response of crimean-congo hemorrhagic fever virus in a stat- knockout mouse model crimean-congo hemorrhagic fever virus infection is lethal for adult type i interferon receptor-knockout mice the utility of the new generation of humanized mice to study hiv- infection: transmission, prevention, pathogenesis, and treatment hiv- infection and cd t cell depletion in the humanized rag −/− gamma c −/− (rag-hu) mouse model bacterial infections in pigs experimentally infected with nipah virus evaluation of a mouse model for the west nile virus group for the purpose of determining viral pathotypes severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus spike protein expressed by attenuated vaccinia virus protectively immunizes mice study of susceptibility to crimean hemorrhagic fever (chf) virus in european and long-eared hedgehogs. tezisy konf manipulation of host factors optimizes the pathogenesis of western equine encephalitis virus infections in mice for antiviral drug development genetic basis of attenuation of dengue virus type small plaque mutants with restricted replication in suckling mice and in scid mice transplanted with human liver cells chimpanzees as an animal model for human norovirus infection and vaccine development a simple technique for infection of mosquitoes with viruses; transmission of zika virus human papillomavirus research: do we still need animal models? human papillomavirus in cervical cancer development of a hamster model for chikungunya virus infection and pathogenesis a neutralizing human monoclonal antibody protects against lethal disease in a new ferret model of acute nipah virus infection the cotton rat model of respiratory viral infections correlates of immunity to filovirus infection filovirus vaccines induction of robust cellular and humoral virusspecific adaptive immune responses in human immunodeficiency virus-infected humanized blt mice animal models of human-papillomavirus-associated oncogenesis interferon alpha/beta receptor-deficient mice as a model for ebola virus disease zika virus outbreak in rio de janeiro, brazil: clinical characterization, epidemiological and virological aspects co-infection of the cotton rat (sigmodon hispidus) with staphylococcus aureus and influenza a virus results in synergistic disease effectiveness of influenza vaccination the role of the type i interferon response in the resistance of mice to filovirus infection a mouse model for evaluation of prophylaxis and therapy of ebola hemorrhagic fever the rabbit viral skin papillomas and carcinomas: a model for the immunogenetics of hpv-associated carcinogenesis the confirmation and maintenance of smallpox eradication a lethal disease model for hantavirus pulmonary syndrome in immunosuppressed syrian hamsters infected with sin nombre virus nonhuman primate models of chikungunya virus infection and disease tissue tropism and neuroinvasion of west nile virus do not differ for two mouse strains with different survival rates pediatric norovirus diarrhea in nicaragua efficacy assessment of a cell-mediated immunity hiv- vaccine (the step study): a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled, test-of-concept trial variation between strains of hamsters in the lethality of pichinde virus infections hepatitis b viruses and hepatocellular carcinoma generation of k -e /n betacat double transgenic mice as a model of cervical cancer limited or no protection by weakly or nonneutralizing antibodies against vaginal shiv challenge of macaques compared with a strongly neutralizing antibody a novel vaccine against crimean-congo haemorrhagic fever protects % of animals against lethal challenge in a mouse model interleukin- beta but not tumor necrosis factor is involved in west nile virusinduced langerhans cell migration from the skin in c bl/ mice animal models of papillomavirus pathogenesis immunization of knock-out alpha/beta interferon receptor mice against high lethal dose of crimean-congo hemorrhagic fever virus with a cell culture based vaccine characterization of the localized immune response in the respiratory tract of ferrets following infection with influenza a and b viruses lassa virus infection in experimentally infected marmosets: liver pathology and immunophenotypic alterations in target tissues a small nonhuman primate model for filovirus-induced disease severe acute respiratory syndrome vaccine development: experiences of vaccination against avian infectious bronchitis coronavirus outbreak of acute illness-southwestern united states outbreak of west nile-like viral encephalitis-new york, . mmwr morb. mortal in vitro whole-virus binding of a norovirus genogroup ii genotype strain to cells of the lamina propria and brunner's glands in the human duodenum animal models for studying dengue pathogenesis and therapy us doctors investigate more than possible cases of monkeypox mechanism of neuroinvasion of venezuelan equine encephalitis virus in the mouse chikungunya outbreaks-the globalization of vectorborne diseases inactivated and live, attenuated influenza vaccines protect mice against influenza: streptococcus pyogenes super-infections pathogenesis of a genogroup ii human norovirus in gnotobiotic pigs the immunobiology of sars* induction of tetravalent protective immunity against four dengue serotypes by the tandem domain iii of the envelope protein norovirus infection as a cause of diarrhea-associated benign infantile seizures comparative pathogenesis of epidemic and enzootic chikungunya viruses in a pregnant rhesus macaque model development of norwalk virus-specific monoclonal antibodies with therapeutic potential for the treatment of norwalk virus gastroenteritis viral shedding patterns of coronavirus in patients with probable severe acute respiratory syndrome a single sublingual dose of an adenovirus-based vaccine protects against lethal ebola challenge in mice and guinea pigs model systems to study the life cycle of human papillomaviruses and hpv-associated cancers primary severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus i nfection limits replication but not lung inflammation upon homologous rechallenge viral and host factors in human respiratory syncytial virus pathogenesis pathogenesis of pichinde virus infection in strain guinea pigs: an immunocytochemical, virologic, and clinical chemistry study pathogenesis of experimental ebola virus infection in guinea pigs transcriptional profiling of the immune response to marburg virus infection the use of a neonatal mouse model to study respiratory syncytial virus infections a model of denv- infection that recapitulates severe disease and highlights the importance of ifn-gamma in host resistance to infection effects of age and viral determinants on chronicity as an outcome of experimental woodchuck hepatitis virus infection a mouse model for chikungunya: young age and inefficient type-i interferon signaling are risk factors for severe disease mosquito bite delivery of dengue virus enhances immunogenicity and pathogenesis in humanized mice comparison of the pathogenesis of the angola and ravn strains of marburg virus in the outbred guinea pig model the brazilian zika virus strain causes birth defects in experimental models age at first viral infection determines the pattern of t cell-mediated disease during reinfection in adulthood lassa fever encephalopathy: clinical and laboratory findings profound and prolonged lymphocytopenia with west nile encephalitis first complete genome sequence of zika virus (flaviviridae, flavivirus) from an autochthonous transmission in brazil viral haemorrhagic fevers caused by lassa, ebola, and marburg viruses the enhancement or prevention of airway hyperresponsiveness during reinfection with respiratory syncytial virus is critically dependent on the age at first infection and il- production mouse models of hepatitis b and delta virus infection [experimental inhalation infection of monkeys of the macacus cynomolgus and macacus rhesus species with the virus kinetic profile of influenza virus infection in three rat strains pathology of experimental ebola virus infection in african green monkeys. involvement of fibroblastic reticular cells validation of an hpv -mediated carcinogenesis mouse model middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) causes transient lower respiratory tract infection in rhesus macaques selection of unadapted, pathogenic shivs encoding newly transmitted hiv- envelope proteins b-cells and the use of non-human primates for evaluation of hiv vaccine candidates antiretroviral pre-exposure prophylaxis prevents vaginal transmission of hiv- in humanized blt mice innate and adaptive immune responses determine protection against disseminated infection by west nile encephalitis virus rift valley fever virus encephalitis is associated with an ineffective systemic immune response and activated t cell infiltration into the cns in an immunocompetent mouse model evidence of sexual transmission of zika virus a susceptible mouse model for zika virus infection identification of a novel coronavirus in patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome subclinical infection without encephalitis in mice following intranasal exposure to nipah virus-malaysia and nipah virus-bangladesh nonhuman primate models of encephalitic alphavirus infection: historical review and future perspectives mortality due to influenza in the united states-an annualized regression approach using multiple-cause mortality data distinct pathogenesis of hong kong-origin h n viruses in mice compared to that of other highly pathogenic h avian influenza viruses postexposure antibody prophylaxis protects nonhuman primates from filovirus disease comparative live bioluminescence imaging of monkeypox virus dissemination in a wild-derived inbred mouse (mus musculus castaneus) and outbred african dormouse (graphiurus kelleni) siv-induced impairment of neurovascular repair: a potential role for vegf smallpox vaccine does not protect macaques with aids from a lethal monkeypox virus challenge influenza-induced tachypnea is prevented in immune cotton rats, but cannot be treated with an anti-inflammatory steroid or a neuraminidase inhibitor distinct cellular immune responses following primary and secondary influenza virus challenge in cotton rats an outbreak of viral gastroenteritis following environmental contamination at a concert hall natural history of aerosol exposure with marburg virus in rhesus macaques experimental congo virus (ib-an ) infection in primates further assessment of monkeypox virus infection in gambian pouched rats (cricetomys gambianus) using in vivo bioluminescent imaging respiratory syncytial virus infection in elderly and high-risk adults infection with mers-cov causes lethal pneumonia in the common marmoset immune response to marburg virus angola infection in nonhuman primates fields' virology the susceptibility of rats to rift valley fever in relation to age henipavirus susceptibility to environmental variables pause on avian flu transmission research aetiology: koch's postulates fulfilled for sars virus spinal cord neuropathology in human west nile virus infection therapeutic dna vaccine induces broad t cell responses in the gut and sustained protection from viral rebound and aids in siv-infected rhesus macaques hepatitis b virus infection-natural history and clinical consequences biological heterogeneity, including systemic replication in mice, of h n influenza a virus isolates from humans in hong kong chikungunya virus arthritis in adult wild-type mice epidemiology and clinical presentations of the four human coronaviruses e, hku , nl , and oc detected over years using a novel multiplex real-time pcr method development of an acute and highly pathogenic nonhuman primate model of nipah virus infection animal models of hepatitis delta virus infection and disease hepadnavirusinduced liver cancer in woodchucks experimental infection and natural contact exposure of dogs with avian influenza virus (h n ). emerg megaribavirin aerosol for the treatment of influenza a virus infections in mice discovery of novel human and animal cells infected by the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus by replication-specific multiplex reverse transcription-pcr chinchilla and murine models of upper respiratory tract infections with respiratory syncytial virus mechanisms of host defense following severe acute respiratory syndromecoronavirus (sars-cov) pulmonary infection of mice studies on the virus of venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis. i. modification by cortisone of the response of the central nervous system of macaca mulatta serious morbidity and mortality associated with influenza epidemics a novel respiratory model of infection with monkeypox virus in cynomolgus macaques clinical features of nipah virus encephalitis among pig farmers in malaysia monoclonal antibody-mediated enhancement of dengue virus infection in vitro and in vivo and strategies for prevention animal models of highly pathogenic rna viral infections: hemorrhagic fever viruses interferon alfacon- protects hamsters from lethal pichinde virus infection primary respiratory syncytial virus infection in mice pneumonitis and multiorgan system disease in common marmosets (callithrix jacchus) infected with the severe acute respiratory syndrome-associated coronavirus clinical and laboratory features that differentiate dengue from other febrile illnesses in an endemic area-puerto rico acute and chronic airway disease after human respiratory syncytial virus infection in cotton rats (sigmodon hispidus) alphaviruses replication fitness determines high virulence of influenza a virus in mice carrying functional mx resistance gene antibody and antiretroviral preexposure prophylaxis prevent cervicovaginal hiv- infection in a transgenic mouse model characterization of influenza a/hongkong/ / (h n ) virus in a mouse model and protective effect of zanamivir on h n infection in mice epidemic dengue/dengue hemorrhagic fever as a public health, social and economic problem in the st century cell culture and animal models of viral hepatitis. part i: hepatitis b expression of the hepatitis delta virus large and small antigens in transgenic mice acute hendra virus infection: analysis of the pathogenesis and passive antibody protection in the hamster model lassa fever encephalopathy: lassa virus in cerebrospinal fluid but not in serum , -iodonaphthyl azide-inactivated v protects against aerosol challenge with virulent venezuelan equine encephalitis virus dengue: an update pegylated interferonalpha protects type pneumocytes against sars coronavirus infection in macaques asymptomatic middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in rabbits head-to-head comparison of four nonadjuvanted inactivated cell culture-derived influenza vaccines: effect of composition, spatial organization and immunization route on the immunogenicity in a murine challenge model update on animal models for hiv research norovirus disease in the united states. emerg cardiopulmonary manifestations of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome serum neutralizing antibody titers of seropositive chimpanzees immunized with vaccines coformulated with natural fusion and attachment proteins of respiratory syncytial virus hendra virus infection in a veterinarian a phase clinical trial of a dna vaccine for venezuelan equine encephalitis delivered by intramuscular or intradermal electroporation deaths from norovirus among the elderly, england and wales. emerg aerosolized rift valley fever virus causes fatal encephalitis in african green monkeys and common marmosets hiv- -induced aids in monkeys west nile fever short communication: viremic control is independent of repeated low-dose shivsf p exposures pathogenesis of marburg hemorrhagic fever in cynomolgus macaques pathogenesis of lassa fever in cynomolgus macaques niemann-pick c is essential for ebolavirus replication and pathogenesis in vivo airborne transmission of influenza a/ h n virus between ferrets animal models in hiv- protection and therapy advances in rsv vaccine research and development-a global agenda transmission of zika virus through sexual contact with travelers to areas of ongoing transmissioncontinental united states establishment of a patient-derived orthotopic xenograft (pdox) model of her- -positive cervical cancer expressing the clinical metastatic pattern resolution of primary severe acute respiratory syndromeassociated coronavirus infection requires stat mucosal immunity and vaccines nipah virus outbreak with person-to-person transmission in a district of bangladesh eastern equine encephalitis virus in mice i: clinical course and outcome are dependent on route of exposure the lesions of experimental equine morbillivirus disease in cats and guinea pigs a lethal disease model for hantavirus pulmonary syndrome hantaan/ andes virus dna vaccine elicits a broadly cross-reactive neutralizing antibody response in nonhuman primates persistent infection with and serologic cross-reactivity of three novel murine noroviruses molecular characterization of three novel murine noroviruses identification of hepatitis b virus indigenous to chimpanzees manifestation of thrombocytopenia in dengue- -virusinfected mice transfer of hbv genomes using low doses of adenovirus vectors leads to persistent infection in immune competent mice west nile fever-a reemerging mosquito-borne viral disease in europe. emerg live, attenuated influenza virus (laiv) vehicles are strong inducers of immunity toward influenza b virus clinical characteristics of human monkeypox, and risk factors for severe disease shiv- i and passaged progeny viruses encoding r hiv- clade c env cause aids in rhesus monkeys norwalk virus infection associates with secretor status genotyped from sera a prairie dog animal model of systemic orthopoxvirus disease using west african and congo basin strains of monkeypox virus risks of chronicity following acute hepatitis b virus infection: a review the pathogenesis of rift valley fever experimental adaptation of an influenza h ha confers respiratory droplet transmission to a reassortant h ha/h n virus in ferrets pathogenicity of a highly pathogenic avian influenza virus, a/chicken/yamaguchi/ / (h n ) in different species of birds and mammals respiratory syncytial virus induces pneumonia, cytokine response, airway obstruction, and chronic inflammatory infiltrates associated with long-term airway hyperresponsiveness in mice a multimeric l vaccine for prevention of animal papillomavirus infections lassa virus infection of rhesus monkeys: pathogenesis and treatment with ribavirin pathogenesis of lassa virus infection in guinea pigs perinatal transmission of shiv-sf p in macaca nemestrina human monkeypox and other poxvirus infections of man cd l (l-sign) is a receptor for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus glycomic characterization of respiratory tract tissues of ferrets: implications for its use in influenza virus infection studies comparative analysis of monkeypox virus infection of cynomolgus macaques by the intravenous or intrabronchial inoculation route phenotypic changes in langerhans' cells after infection with arboviruses: a role in the immune response to epidermally acquired viral infection? protection of beagle dogs from mucosal challenge with canine oral papillomavirus by immunization with recombinant adenoviruses expressing codon-optimized early genes detailed analysis of the african green monkey model of nipah virus disease experimental inoculation of egyptian rousette bats (rousettus aegyptiacus) with viruses of the ebolavirus and marburgvirus genera treatment of venezuelan equine encephalitis virus infection with (-)-carbodine c h/hen mouse model for the evaluation of antiviral agents for the treatment of venezuelan equine encephalitis virus infection blt humanized mice as a small animal model of hiv infection stat -dependent innate immunity to a norwalk-like virus pichinde virus infection in strain guinea pigs reduces intestinal protein reflection coefficient with compensation establishment of the black-tailed prairie dog (cynomys ludovicianus) as a novel animal model for comparing smallpox vaccines administered preexposure in both high-and low-dose monkeypox virus challenges low-dose rectal inoculation of rhesus macaques by sivsme or sivmac recapitulates human mucosal infection by hiv- new opportunities for field research on the pathogenesis and treatment of lassa fever gastrointestinal norovirus infection associated with exacerbation of inflammatory bowel disease isolation of monkeypox virus from wild squirrel infected in nature in hot pursuit of the first vaccine against respiratory syncytial virus pathogenesis of hantaan virus infection in suckling mice: clinical, virologic, and serologic observations respiratory syncytial virus disease in infants despite prior administration of antigenic inactivated vaccine the severe pathogenicity of alveolar macrophage-depleted ferrets infected with pandemic h n influenza virus mouse adaptation of influenza b virus increases replication in the upper respiratory tract and results in droplet transmissibility in ferrets stepping toward a macaque model of hiv- induced vomiting as a symptom and transmission risk in norovirus illness: evidence from human challenge studies wild-type puumala hantavirus infection induces cytokines, c-reactive protein, creatinine, and nitric oxide in cynomolgus macaques aberrant innate immune response in lethal infection of macaques with the influenza virus adenovirus-based vaccine prevents pneumonia in ferrets challenged with the sars coronavirus and stimulates robust immune responses in macaques replication, pathogenicity, shedding, and transmission of zaire ebolavirus in pigs west nile viral encephalitis foodborne viruses: an emerging problem low pathogenic avian influenza a(h n ) virus causes high mortality in ferrets upon intratracheal challenge: a model to study intervention strategies filoviruses: a compendium of years of epidemiological, clinical, and laboratory studies pathology of human influenza a (h n ) virus infection in cynomolgus macaques (macaca fascicularis) dengue virus infection and immune response in humanized rag (-/-)gamma(c) (-/-) (rag-hu) mice chikungunya disease in nonhuman primates involves long-term viral persistence in macrophages viral hepatitis b strong local and systemic protective immunity induced in the ferret model by an intranasal virosome-formulated influenza subunit vaccine origin of the west nile virus responsible for an outbreak of encephalitis in the northeastern united states antibody to hepatitis-associated antigen. frequency and pattern of response as detected by radioimmunoprecipitation severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-like virus in chinese horseshoe bats coronavirus hku and other coronavirus infections in hong kong epidemic rift valley fever in egypt: observations of the spectrum of human illness hantaviruses. a short review hepatitis b virus infection quantitative measurement of influenza virus replication using consecutive bronchoalveolar lavage in the lower respiratory tract of a ferret model characterization of the activity of '-c-methylcytidine against dengue virus replication diffusion tensor and volumetric magnetic resonance measures as biomarkers of brain damage in a small animal model of hiv sequencing, annotation, and characterization of the influenza ferret infectome lethality and pathogenesis of airborne infection with filoviruses in a alpha/beta −/− interferon receptor-deficient mice experimental inoculation study indicates swine as a potential host for hendra virus early initiation of antiretroviral therapy can functionally control productive hiv- infection in humanized-blt mice zika virus disrupts neural progenitor development and leads to microcephaly in mice middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus causes multiple organ damage and lethal disease in mice transgenic for human dipeptidyl peptidase immunogenicity and protective efficacy of a recombinant subunit west nile virus vaccine in rhesus monkeys study of dengue virus infection in scid mice engrafted with human k cells a comparative study of the pathogenesis of western equine and eastern equine encephalomyelitis viral infections in mice by intracerebral and subcutaneous inoculations hydrodynamics-based transfection in animals by systemic administration of plasmid dna the emergence of nipah virus, a highly pathogenic paramyxovirus the guinea pig as a transmission model for human influenza viruses transmission in the guinea pig model a mouse model for the evaluation of pathogenesis and immunity to influenza a (h n ) viruses isolated from humans transmission of human infection with nipah virus recurrent zoonotic transmission of nipah virus into humans the effect of an arenavirus infection on liver morphology and function hepatitis b virus replication in primary macaque hepatocytes: crossing the species barrier toward a new small primate model ebola virus disease in mice with transplanted human hematopoietic stem cells arenavirus-mediated liver pathology: acute lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus infection of rhesus macaques is characterized by high-level interleukin- expression and hepatocyte proliferation humanized chimeric upa mouse model for the study of hepatitis b and d virus interactions and preclinical drug evaluation role of dendritic cell targeting in venezuelan equine encephalitis virus pathogenesis detection of hepatitis b virus infection in wild-born chimpanzees (pan troglodytes verus): phylogenetic relationships with human and other primate genotypes proportion of deaths and clinical features in bundibugyo ebola virus infection the ferret: an animal model to study influenza virus local innate immune responses and influenza virus transmission and virulence in ferrets vomiting larry: a simulated vomiting system for assessing environmental contamination from projectile vomiting related to norovirus infection studies on the pathogenesis of dengue infection in monkeys. . sequential distribution of virus in primary and heterologous infections studies on dengue virus infection in cyclophosphamide-treated rhesus monkeys crimean-congo hemorrhagic fever experimental infection of squirrel monkeys with nipah virus. emerg a school outbreak of norwalk-like virus: evidence for airborne transmission virology: sars virus infection of cats and ferrets characterization of clinical and immunological parameters during ebola virus infection of rhesus macaques delayed disease progression in cynomolgus macaques infected with ebola virus makona strain. emerg asymmetric replication of duck hepatitis b 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mice a characterization of aerosolized sudan ebolavirus infection in african green monkeys, cynomolgus macaques, and rhesus macaques characterization of disease and pathogenesis following airborne exposure of guinea pigs to filoviruses manuscripts in preparation opinions, interpretations, conclusions, and recommendations are those of the authors and are not necessarily endorsed by the us army. key: cord- - p nyz authors: perlman, stanley; zumla, alimuddin title: mers-cov in africa—an enigma with relevance to covid- date: - - journal: lancet infect dis doi: . /s - ( ) - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: p nyz nan three novel zoonotic coronaviruses that have jumped the species barrier and caused lethal disease in humans have focused global public health attention in the past two decades: severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov) in , middle east respi ratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) in , and sars-cov- in late december -the cause of the ongoing covid- pandemic. all these coronaviruses are featured in the who blueprint list of priority pathogens for research and development, because they threaten global health security, they have epidemic potential, and there are no effective treatments or vaccines. in africa, only sars-cov- has caused significant outbreaks and disruption to health services. while african governments implement national mitigation and containment strategies to control the spread of covid- , mers-cov continues to circulate in the middle east causing intermittent outbreaks with up to % mortality. mers-cov is highly prevalent in dromedary camels on the arabian peninsula and, they are the main sources of primary human mers-cov infections. however, there have not been any reported clinical cases from africa of confirmed human mers, despite % of the world's dromedaries residing in africa (with high mers-cov infection rates) and frequent occupational and domestic contact between dromedaries and humans. little serological evidence of human infection exists. , this anomalous disparity between human mers-cov infections in the arabian peninsula and africa has not been easily explained and there has been a longstanding need for further studies of mers-cov at the animal-human interface. in the lancet infectious diseases, chris ka pub mok and colleagues present data that indicate that human mers-cov infection is an occupational hazard in dromedary abattoir workers in nigeria. they focus our attention on the potential for mers-cov transmission and human infection and consequent threat to people living in africa and to public health services. their observational cohort study of people working at a slaughterhouse in kano, nigeria, identified mers-cov-specific cd + or cd + t cells in pbmcs obtained from workers with close contact to dromedaries, but not in other workers from the same slaughterhouse with no dromedary contact. these results agree with others showing that mers-cov virus-specific t-cell responses are more sensitive than serological tests for detecting past infection. thus, zoonotic mers-cov infections of dromedary-exposed individuals are probably taking place in nigeria, and, by extrapolation, the incidence of human mers infections in all regions of africa with dromedaries has probably been underestimated. further studies are required to determine the extent of human mers-cov infections across africa. genetic and phenotypic differences in west african viruses might also be relevant to zoonotic outbreak potential. the great diversity of mers-cov lineages, and the large number of mers-cov infected dromedaries in africa, might, with time, lead to mers-cov adapting and transmitting more efficiently, with epidemic potential. the findings of ka pub mok and colleagues also have implications for ongoing efforts on covid- diagnostics development, testing, and tracing in africa and for vaccine development in general. mild cases of mers and covid- induce antibody responses that are transient or wane rapidly. specific diagnostic tests for mers-cov and sars-cov- infected individuals based on relevant antigenspecific cd + or cd + t-cell responses could allow for more sensitive detection of past or present infection than serological tests and identify additional human mers and covid- cases. t-cell responses appear to be more stable and useful for detection of previous infection or vaccine response in settings where virusspecific antibody titres are absent. it would also be interesting to know if dromedary-exposed workers with mers-cov-specific t-cell responses are protected from developing severe mers on rechallenge, and by extrapolation, whether t-cell responses are protective against severe covid- disease, even if virus-specific antibody is not detectable. to confirm these results, these studies should be repeated at other sites in africa and with larger numbers of samples. furthermore, no mers-specific t-cell responses were detected in abattoir workers with no dromedary exposure. by contrast, low numbers of sars-cov- -specific t cells have been detected in uninfected individuals. these apparent differences in pre-existing immunity to the two coronaviruses are unexpected and need to be flickr -jean & nathalie reconciled. the results also suggest that covid- and mers vaccines should be formulated to induce t-cell responses to maximise the likelihood of long-term protection. covid- and mers provide unique opportunities for african and middle eastern countries with relevant stakeholders to align and synergise ongoing covid- and mers surveillance, diagnostics, vaccine development, and evaluation, with basic science and translational research activities. , african and middle eastern countries must invest more in surveillance and urgent priority research to fill major knowledge gaps in the epidemiology, transmission, pathogenesis, and evolution of mers-cov and sars-cov- , especially because they are co-circulating. the need for an effective one human-environmental-animal health multidisciplinary consortium across africa, middle east, and asia to tackle the ever-present threat of lethal coronaviruses and other emerging infections remains a global priority. middle east respiratory syndrome another decade, another coronavirus prioritizing diseases for research and development in emergency contexts. world health organization from easing lockdowns to scaling-up community-based covid- screening, testing, and contact tracing in africa-shared approaches, innovations, and challenges to minimize morbidity and mortality enzootic patterns of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in imported african and local arabian dromedary camels: a prospective genomic study mers-cov in camels but not camel handlers t-cell responses to mers coronavirus infection in people with occupational exposure to dromedary camels in nigeria: an observational cohort study recovery from the middle east respiratory syndrome is associated with antibody and t-cell responses targets of t cell responses to sars-cov- coronavirus in humans with covid- disease and unexposed individuals confronting the persisting threat of the middle east respiratory syndrome to global health security we have a special interest in coronaviruses and infectious diseases with epidemic potential. we declare no competing interests. key: cord- -bnh bqg authors: ko, jae-hoon; seok, hyeri; park, ga eun; lee, ji yeon; lee, ji yong; cho, sun young; ha, young eun; kang, ji-man; kim, yae-jean; kang, cheol-in; chung, doo ryeon; song, jae-hoon; peck, kyong ran title: host susceptibility to mers-cov infection, a retrospective cohort study of the korean mers outbreak date: - - journal: j infect chemother doi: . /j.jiac. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: bnh bqg to evaluate host susceptibility factors to middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) infection, we conducted a retrospective cohort study from the single largest exposure event of the korean mers outbreak. a total of patients were closely exposed to a super-spreader, of which were infected ( . %). in a multivariate analysis, history of autologous stem cell transplantation (hr, . ; % ci, . – . ; p < . ) and tachypnea at ed (hr, . ; % ci, . – . ; p = . ) were significantly associated with mers-cov infection. close exposure is a critical factor for human-to-human transmission of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov), but clinical factors affecting host susceptibility to mers-cov have not been properly identified [ e ] . to identify host susceptibility factors to mers-cov infection, we performed a retrospective cohort study from the largest exposure event during the korean mers outbreak [ , ] . a retrospective cohort study was performed to identify risk factors for increased host susceptibility to mers-cov. this exposure event was previously described in detail [ ] : while a severelycoughing mers patient stayed at our emergency department (ed) for three days, patients stayed at the ed and had chance to be exposed. after meticulous contact tracing, closely exposed patients were identified and classified into two groups by exposure time and location: group a, patients who stayed in the same examination rooms at the same time with the index case (our ed is composed of zone i~iv for adult patients, and the index case used zone ii~iv); and group b, patients who shared the same radiology room or registration area at the same time period ( min before and h after) with the index case. exposure sites of group a were subdivided into the zone ii, iii, and iv, as attack rates of each zone were significantly different ( % ( / ), % ( / ), and % ( / ), respectively; p ¼ . ) [ ] . included patients were followed for days, which is a previously determined incubation period of mers-cov [ ] . the institutional review board of samsung medical center approved this study. for simple comparison of clinical variables, student's t-tests or mann-whitney u tests were used for continuous variables, and chi-square tests or fisher's exact tests for categorical variables. the cox proportional hazard model was used to examine the association of clinical variables with mers-cov infection. variables with statistical significance in univariate analyses were included in the multivariate analysis. the effect of exposure intensity was adjusted by including exposure sites in the multivariate analysis. all p-values were two-tailed, and those < . were considered to be statistically significant. ibm spss statistics version . for windows (ibm, armonk, ny, usa) was used for all statistical analyses. during the study period, a total of patients were closely exposed to the index case, of whom ( . %) were infected with mers-cov ( patients at radiology rooms or registration area, at zone ii, at zone iii, and at zone iv) [ ] . baseline characteristics and clinical presentation of the study population at the time of ed visit are presented in table . there was no statistical difference in age, sex, body mass index, and immunosuppressive conditions. patients exposed at zone ii and iii showed higher attack rates as previously described [ ] . among underlying diseases, hypertension and cardiovascular diseases were significantly different between infected and non-infected patients (all p < . ). significantly higher proportion of mers-infected patients presented with tachypnea (respiratory rate > /min) at ed visit, compared to noninfected patients ( . % ( / ) and . % ( / ), respectively; p ¼ . ). the proportion of concomitant infections and laboratory test results were not statistically different between the two groups. to identify possible risk factors for increased host susceptibility to mers-cov, all the obtained clinical variables and exposure sites were evaluated. history of autologous stem cell transplantation (sct), underlying hypertension and cardiovascular disease, tachypnea at ed visit, and exposure sties of zone ii and iii were statistically significantly associated with mers-cov infection in univariate analyses (supplementary table ). in the multivariate analysis, history of autologous sct (hr, . ; % ci, . e . ; p < . ) and tachypnea at ed visit (hr, . ; % ci, . e . ; p ¼ . ) were identified as risk factors for increased host susceptibility to mers-cov (table ). significant association of exposure sties of zone ii and iii was relevant with the previous analysis [ ] . although many studies have reported poor prognosis factors of mers-cov infection since the discovery of mers-cov in , little has been determined about host susceptibility to the virus [ ] . evaluating an exposure cohort for host susceptibility is often not feasible as enough number, medical records, contact tracing, and follow-up of the exposed patients is required. we experienced a unique situation in that discrete population of patients was exposed to the single index case in the defined space of ed, which made it possible to conduct the first cohort study to evaluate host susceptibility to mers-cov. of note, previously reported poor prognostic factors, including old age, male sex, concomitant infection, low albumin concentrations, lymphopenia, diabetes, and multiple comorbidities [ , , ] , were not statistically significant in the multivariate analysis. these factors were evaluated in the present cohort with sufficient numbers, and the analysis indicated that they did not play critical roles in host susceptibility to mers-cov infection. this finding suggests that risk factors associated with poor prognosis and host susceptibility need to be separately considered. meticulous surveillance of mers-cov exposed patients should be conducted regardless of presence of poor prognosis factors. on the other hand, history of autologous sct showed statistical significance in the multivariate analysis. although susceptibility of autologous sct recipients to viral infections after engraftment has not been well evaluated, two of three autologous sct recipients ( . %) in the present cohort were infected with mers-cov despite relatively low exposure intensity (at radiology room and zone iv). because all the autologous sct recipients in this cohort had underlying lymphoma and had multiple chemotherapy before sct, whether autologous sct per se or heavily-treated aggressive lymphoma would be a risk for increased host susceptibility for mers-cov infection is not conclusive. also, immunocompromising conditions generally associated with viral infections including hematologic malignancies other than lymphoma, allogeneic sct, and corticosteroid use were scarcely included in this cohort [ , ] . therefore, it would be more relevant to interpret the present data that severely immunocompromised hosts could be more vulnerable to mers-cov infection and need special caution when exposed to the virus. interestingly, tachypnea at ed (hr, . ; % ci, . e . ; p ¼ . ) was associated with mers-cov infection. although association between respiratory rate and increased susceptibility to a certain respiratory virus has not been evaluated, theoretically patients with tachypnea may inhale more virus-containing droplets or aerosols. a recent study reported isolation of mers-cov from the air in mers outbreak units, suggesting possibility of air-borne transmission [ ] . although this association needs to be further evaluated, patients with tachypnea at the time of exposure should to be monitored with caution, especially when the exposure occurs from severely-coughing mers patients at a restricted space. our study has several limitations. although we could not identify entire routes of exposed patients, we adjusted the exposure intensity by specific exposure sites. sizes, structure, crowdedness, exposure time from the index case were different between each site, which resulted in significantly different attack rates by exposure site [ ] . in addition, we only evaluated a single exposure cohort, which could be biased by some special situation. in conclusion, in a cohort study from the single largest exposure event, history of autologous sct and tachypnea at ed were identified as host susceptibility factors to mers-cov infection. previously reported poor prognostic factors did not show association with increased host susceptibility to the virus. there are no potential conflicts of interest relevant to this article to report. middle east respiratory syndrome an observational, laboratory-based study of outbreaks of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus in jeddah and riyadh, kingdom of saudi arabia predictive factors for pneumonia development and progression to respiratory failure in mers-cov infected patients control of an outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome in a tertiary hospital in korea clinical aspects and outcomes of patients with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection: a single-center experience in saudi arabia epidemiological, demographic, and clinical characteristics of cases of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus disease from saudi arabia: a descriptive study an overview of infectious complications after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation clinical presentation and risk factors for cytomegalovirus colitis in immunocompetent adult patients extensive viable middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) coronavirus contamination in air and surrounding environment in mers isolation wards we would like to express our sincerest condolences to the patients and families who suffered from the mers outbreak. we also greatly appreciate the health care personnel and staff members at samsung medical center and all other hospitals who worked together to overcome the mers outbreak. supplementary data related to this article can be found at https://doi.org/ . /j.jiac. . . . key: cord- -b n dx authors: cao, yu-chen; deng, qi-xin; dai, shi-xue title: remdesivir for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus causing covid- : an evaluation of the evidence date: - - journal: travel med infect dis doi: . /j.tmaid. . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: b n dx the novel coronavirus infection that initially found at the end of has attracted great attention. so far, the number of infectious cases has increased globally to more than thousand and the outbreak has been defined as a pandemic situation, but there are still no “specific drug” available. relevant reports have pointed out the novel coronavirus has % homology with sars. in the difficulty where new synthesized drug cannot be applied immediately to patients, “conventional drug in new use” becomes a feasible solution. the first medication experience of the recovered patients in the us has led remdesivir to be the “specific drug”. china has also taken immediate action to put remdesivir into clinical trials with the purpose of applying it into clinical therapeutics for corona virus disease (covid- ). we started from the structure, immunogenicity, and pathogenesis of coronavirus infections of the novel coronavirus. further, we analyzed the pharmacological actions and previous trials of remdesivir to identify the feasibility of conducting experiments on covid- . the novel coronavirus ( -ncov), officially named severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov- ), is a newlyemerged human infectious coronavirus. since december , it has spread rapidly in china in a short period of time. as of march , , there have been confirmed cases and deaths. it has also outbreak in other countries, such as korea, japan, italy, singapore, and iran, with a total of cases confirmed. due to it is a newlyemerged virus, researchers have taken quick actions to isolate the virus and perform gene sequencing, making identifying treatments possible. even so, it takes time to develop new drugs and vaccines, as well as to explore biotherapeutics, thus it is unlikely to be applied to patients with urgent need. therefore, "conventional drug in new use" becomes a viable solution. the sars-cov- is % homologous with the acute respiratory syndrome-associated coronavirus (sars-cov), which also broke out in china in , and some enzymes are even more than % homologous [ ] . consequently, we are expecting to find drugs for the treatment of covid- from the experience of sars-cov and middle east respiratory syndrome (mers-cov). some drugs, such as ribavirin, interferon, lopinavir, and corticosteroids, have been used in patients with sars or mers [ ] , within the selection range of "conventional drug in new use". through clinical treatment of the covid- , it has been found that neuraminidase inhibitors (oseltamivir, peramivir, zanamivir), ganciclovir, acyclovir, ribavirin are ineffectual and not recommended for clinical application [ ] . when we set our sights on the broad-spectrum antiviral drugs, we found that a drug unlisted, remdesivir, has demonstrated strength in trials related to mers-cov and ebola virus infection. in the united states, the first patient with covid- has shown significant improvement in clinical symptoms within h of treatment with remdesivir. this case has convinced the public that remdesivir could become a new "specific drug" for covid- . this article starts from the structure, immunogenicity, and pathogenesis of infection of the sars-cov- , and then analyzes the feasibility of conducting trials and putting into clinical use of covid- from the pharmacological characteristics and successful cases of remdesivir. different from sars-cov and mers-cov, and becomes the seventh member of the coronavirus family to infect humans [ ] . sars-cov- shows the typical beta coronavirus organization: ′ untranslated region (utr), replication enzyme coding region, s gene, e gene, m gene, n gene, ' utr, and several unidentified nonstructural open reading frames ( fig. ) [ ] . the replication enzyme coding region mainly expresses and encodes two large genes: orf a and orf b, which encode nonstructural proteins (nsp ~nsp ) that are highly conserved throughout the coronavirus. s gene, m gene, e gene, and n gene respectively encode four main structural proteins: spike (s), membrane (m), envelope (e), and nucleocapsid (n) proteins. the s protein is the receptor binding site, which is on the viral surface; the m protein shapes the virions, promotes membrane curvature, and is responsible for the transport of nutrients across cell membranes; the e protein plays a role in the assembly and release of virus, and is involved in viral pathogenesis; the n protein can bind virus rna genome and maintain its stability [ ] . among them, s protein plays a key role in virus recognizing and binding to host cell surface receptors, and mediating the fusion of virus envelope and cell membrane [ ] . through the analysis of the whole genome sequence of sars-cov- , it shares % sequence similarity with mers-cov and % sequence similarity with sars-cov, indicating that sars-cov- is more compatible with sars-cov [ ] . in addition, by performing systematic structural simulations and immunogenicity scans of the s proteins of all coronaviruses, as well as calculating the immunogenic distance between sars-cov- and other coronavirus subtypes, it can be concluded that the immunogenicity of the s protein of sars-cov- is closer to that of sars-cov [ ] . it is known that sars-cov enters target cells by binding the s protein to the ace receptor on the cell surface, which is triggered by the cell serine protease tmprss [ ] . in view of the % amino acid similarity between sars-cov- and sars-cov [ ] , we can speculate that the novel coronavirus may have a similar function to sars-cov, which has been preliminary proved in bioinformatics prediction methods as well as in vitro tests [ ] . previous studies have shown that of the key amino acids of the s protein on the surface of sars-cov- that binds to angiotensin-converting enzyme (ace ) receptor on the target cells have changed. it was suspected it may affect the affinity of the s protein to ace receptor, and in turn affect the spread of the virus among the public [ ] . however, through calculation methods of molecular structure simulation, the interaction between the s protein of sars-cov and the ace receptor has perfectly maintained in a holistic manner [ ] . at present, it has been proved that the binding affinity between the extracellular domain of the s protein of sars-cov- and ace receptors is about - times higher than that of sars-cov, which may facilitate human-to-human transmission of sars-cov- [ ] . covid- is a respiratory syndrome caused by sars-cov- infection. in general, covid- is an acute resolved disease, and the most common symptoms at onset are fever, dry cough, and fatigue, partly with nausea, diarrhea, or other gastrointestinal symptoms. compared with sars and mers, covid- has milder clinical symptoms and lower fatality [ , ] , but it can also be fatal. severe patients may develop diffuse alveolar injury, progressive respiratory failure, and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards) and so on. similar to sars-cov, the receptor binding domain (rbd) of s protein on the surface of sars-cov- binds to the ace receptor on the cell surface to facilitate the virus entering the host cell; then the virus exposes its rna, translates its rna replicase, and forms an rna replicase-transcriptase complex. through transcription and replication, the complex forms rna negative strands that will be translated for the structural proteins of the virus later. then the structural proteins and rna in the cytoplasm assemble into new viral particles, which are released from infected cells by exocytosis to infect other cells (fig. ). each infected cell produces thousands of novel viral particles that spread to bronchi, eventually reach the alveoli, and extrapulmonary organs, causing pneumonia and targeted organic infections. however, the ace receptor is not only expressed in the respiratory organs. it has been reported that, by using the rna-seq method to express ace receptors in human tissues, the number of ace receptors expressed in the gastrointestinal tract (high in esophagus, small intestine, and colon, but low in stomach), kidneys, and testes is nearly times higher than that in the lung [ ] , suggesting that these tissues may also be the target organs for sars-cov- invasion. it may explain why some patients with covid- developed other system injuries clinically besides respiratory system injuries. furthermore, it have been found that sars-cov- nucleic acid detection is positive in the feces of some patients, indicating that there may be live virus in the feces, and the digestive system may be a potential route for covid- [ ] . in covid- , in addition to the direct damages caused by the virus, the indirect immune injuries caused by the injured tissues also attract great concern, which may be related to the severity and fatality of the disease. previous studies have shown that pulmonary inflammation and extensive lung injury in patients with sars are associated with an increase in proinflammatory cytokines (such as il- β, il- , il- , ifn-γ, ip- , and mcp- ) in serum [ ] . and it has been reported that the mers-cov infection induced elevated proinflammatory cytokine concentrations (such as ifn-γ, tnf-α, il- , and il- ) in serum [ ] . we note that patients with covid- also have high levels of il- β, ifn-γ, ip- , and mcp- in their serum, leading to activation of the th cell responses. furthermore, the concentrations of gcsf, ip- , mcp- , mip- a, and tnf-α in icu patients were higher than those in non-icu patients, indicating that cytokine storms were associated with disease severity. apart from this, sars-cov- infection also activates the secretion of cytokines (such as il- and il- ) in th cell responses that suppress inflammation, which is different from sars-cov infection [ ] . further researches are needed to investigate the responses of th and th in sars-cov- infection to elucidate the pathogenesis of currently, the pathogenesis of covid- is unclear. the first pathologic autopsy of a patient with covid- demonstrated that the lungs of the patient reviews diffuse alveolar injury and pulmonary hyaline membrane formation, consistent with ards. the overall pathological manifestations of the lungs were similar to sars and mers. flow cytometry signified that the number of cd + and cd + t lymphocytes in peripheral blood was greatly reduced, but their state was overactivated. other than this, ccr + and ccr + th lymphocytes with highly proinflammatory effects increased in cd + t lymphocytes; cd + t lymphocytes had a high concentration of cytotoxic granules, of which . % were perforin positive, . % were particle lysin positive, and . % were both particle lysin and perforin positive. it manifests that the severe immune injury in this patient may be closely linked to the overactivation of t lymphocytes characterized by the increase of th lymphocytes and the high cytotoxicity of cd + t lymphocytes [ ] . we presume that the failure to develop a full adaptive immune response to covid- could be due to: the progression of pneumonia was too rapid to allow the available establishment of adaptive immune responses. likewise, the counts of peripheral cd + and cd + t lymphocytes were substantially reduced, leading to insufficient immune defenses. furthermore, peripheral t lymphocytes are in an over-activated state, manifested by increase of th and high cytotoxicity of cd + t lymphocytes, accounting for to a certain degree of immune injury in patients. this over activation not only failed to establish an immune response, but also caused tissue injuries, mostly manifested as severe injury in the lungs, and some patients died of multiple organ failure. this situation further accelerates the deterioration and shortens the course of the disease, hampering the establishment of fully adaptive immune response. the immunopathological injuries caused by the over activation also provides us with an idea for treating covid- , for example, we can probably apply the il- inhibitor (secukinwmab) directed against th cell activation, but it still need more exploration. also, vaccines are also one of the solutions to make up for the lack of adaptive immune response. the latest study terms that the changes of viral nucleic acid in patients with covid- is similar to that in patients with influenza, but different from those with sars. viral load can be detected not only in symptomatic patients but also in asymptomatic patients, pointing out the potential for virus transmission in asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic patients. these findings are coherent with reports evidencing that the virus transmission may have occurred early in infectious processes, illustrating that case detection and isolation may require a different strategy from that required to control sars-cov [ ] . remdesivir (gs- ) is a nucleoside analogues drug (fig. b ) with extensive antiviral activity and effective treatment of lethal ebola and nipah virus infections in nonhuman primates [ ] . as an rna-dependent rna polymerase (rdrp) inhibitor, it can inhibit the replication of multiple coronaviruses in respiratory epithelial cells. a recent study reported that remdesivir competes with natural counterpart atp. once remdesivir added into the growing chain (i position), it cannot cause an immediate stop. on the contrary, it will continue to extend three more nucleotides down to stop the strand at (i + ) position (fig. ) [ ] . in the ces c (−/−) mouse sars model, the preventive treatment trial of remdesivir achieved satisfactory results. administering day after the onset of the disease, lung virus titers decreased significantly, fig. . sars-cov- invasion process and how remdesivir works sars-cov- enters target cells by binding the s protein to the ace receptor on the cell surface; remdeivir, the nucleotide analogues, act as rdrp inhibitors, can provide a scheme for blocking rna replication; once remdesivir added into the growing chain (i position), is cannot cause an immediate stop. on the contrary, it will continue to extend three more nucleotides down to stop the strand at (i + ) position; remdesivir triphosphate cannot be removed by nsp -exon. the original structure of the drug is derived from drugbank (https://www.drugbank.ca, accessed feb ). with improvements on pulmonary function. administering days after the onset, the pulmonary virus titer can be obviously reduced, but the survival rate of mice is still relatively low. this study implied that when the pulmonary injuries reach the maximum, simply reducing the virus titer can no longer suppress the strong immune responses in mice, also showing that administering before the peak of virus replication can significantly improve symptoms of the infected mice [ ] . in a rhesus monkey model infected with mers-cov, treating with remdesivir h before infection can completely prevent symptoms caused by mers-cov, strongly inhibit viral replications in the respiratory tract, and prevent the formation of pulmonary lesions. administering remdesivir h after infection provides clear clinical benefits, reducing clinical symptoms, lung virus replication, and lung lesions [ ] . pharmacokinetic experiments in cynomolgus monkeys showed the first-pass effect of oral remdesivir resulted in a low bioavailability of the drug. intramuscular injection of mg/kg had a % survival rate compared with the control group. administering intravenously at a dose of mg/kg, remdesivir rapidly decomposed into the original drug (nucleoside phosphate) in rhesus monkeys. within h, remdesivir quickly distributed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pbmcs), and soon afterwards activated to nucleoside triphosphate to reach a peak, with a survival rate of % [ ] . as for pharmacokinetic studies in vivo, after the intravenous infusion of the remdesivir solution formulation at a single dose of - mg for h, it showed dose-linear pharmacokinetics. intravenous infusion of mg of a remdesivir solution repeated h per day showed a linear pharmacokinetics over a period of days. after intravenously injecting and mg of remdesivir solution formulations over h, the pharmacokinetic profile was similar to that of a lyophilized formulation. intravenous infusion of mg of drug over min provides similar levels of parent drug exposure to the same dose over h (table ) . after the intravenous infusion, remdesivir will enter the cellular metabolism to form active gs- (fig. c) , but the frequencies of pbmcs exposure of gs- is higher than those of intravenous infusion of remdesivir mg within h. studies in pbmcs show that the half-life of gs- is more than h [ ] . in the case of daily administration, the active substance of the drug gs- will accumulate in vivo. as a result, in large-scale clinical trials, after the first dose of mg is administered, the subsequent dose is adjusted to mg to ensure the proper blood concentration in vivo [ ] . intravenous infusions in previously phase i clinical trials have good safety and pharmacokinetic properties. also, no cytotoxicity, hepatorenal toxicity, or no serious adverse reactions related to metering have been observed in climbing experiments. subjects were tolerant in studies that repeated mg intravenously daily for - days. remdesivir did not show any renal injuries in a multi-dose study [ ] . phase ii clinical trials were conducted in ebola virus-infected patients. in clinical trials of anti-ebola drugs, the fatality rate of patients in the experimental group using remdesivir was %, and the efficacy was significantly worse than that of the two monoclonal antibodies mab (fatality rate %) and regn-eb (fatality rate %) [ ] . the % fatality rate was not significantly different from the average % fatality rate of ebola virus infection, and as a result, phase ii clinical trials were stopped. nevertheless, in consideration of ebola's high lethality and monoclonal antibodies with more obvious therapeutic effects, when there are merely patients injected remdesivir, we cannot assume remdesivir of no avail. the small sample size is not enough to deny the effect of remdesivir. moreover, receptors of ebola virus are widely distributed in vivo, not only to the respiratory tract, but also to the digestive tract, urinary tract, and blood system, etc., causing mortally hemorrhagic fever; in addition, ebola virus persists in the eyes and central nervous system for long [ ] . once remdesivir entering body, it will be quickly distributed to the testis, epididymis, eyes, and brain, but relatively less in eyes and brain [ ] . all these indicate that the wide range of spread of ebola virus in the high lethality tissues make remdesivir control ebola ineffectively. the wuhan virus research institute conducted in vitro experiments on covid- of remdesivir and found that remdesivir was the fastest-acting and most powerful antiviral agent. in the primary culture of human airway epithelial cells in vitro, sars-cov's ic = . μm, mers-cov's ic = . μm, and the dose-dependent effect on virus inhibition [ ] , which is speculatively related to the fact that remdesivir triphosphate cannot be removed by nsp -exon [ ] . it has been conjectured the loss of function of exonuclease may be involved with the three additional nucleotides added after the incorporation of remdesivir into the extended strand [ ] . in vitro and animal models, remdesivir has demonstrated activity against both sars and mers that also belong to coronaviruses, and theoretically provides support its effectiveness in treating covid- . presently, there have been successful cases of remdesivir in the treating covid- . the new england journal of medicine reported the entire course of rehabilitation of the first patient with covid- in the united states. the patient once visited wuhan but was neither directly exposed to wuhan seafood market nor had direct contact with the diagnosed patients. he returned to washington on january , . on january, due to cough and fever for four days, he went to the hospital for emergency treatment, and was then diagnosed with covid- . his condition was stable from the second to the fifth day of admission (the sixth to ninth day of onset). on the evening of the fifth day of admission, the blood oxygen saturation decreased to %. the condition continued to worsen, and chest radiographs on the sixth day of admission (tenth day of onset) showed typical characteristics of covid- . in view of the continuous aggravation of the patient's clinical symptoms, the physicians gave a chartered medication (compassionate use) to remdesivir on the evening of the th day of admission, and began to give intravenous to the patient on the evening of the seventh day of admission (the eleventh day of onset), without adverse reactions. vancomycin was discontinued that night and cefepime was discontinued the following day. on the eighth day of admission (the twelfth day of onset), the patient's clinical symptoms were improved, and the oxygen saturation increased to %. although the patient was still hospitalized as of january , , all symptoms had been resolved except for cough and occasional running nose [ ] . it is worth noting that from the data in the article, it can be found the viral load of patients has decreased before remdesivir injection (table ) , which is not described in detail in the original report. it's known that the viral infection is self-limiting, and the patient is a mild to moderate infectious case with a controlled fever in time, thus it is possible that his recovery is related to the role of self-defense mechanisms and supportive treatment as well. it cannot be inferred that table drug concentrations in plasma and the concentration of pharmacologically active substances in pbmc in healthy people. the improvement of patients' condition after taking the drug is definitely connected to remdesivir. whether there is a link between the improvement of the symptoms and the drug is worth further consideration. clinical symptoms, especially respiratory symptoms, have been improved significantly within h, bringing hope for the treatment of patients with severe covid- . for covid- no specific medication is available, remdesivir is expected to be a "specific drug". however, for the acute infectious diseases, reducing the number of viral copies in the body is the key point. also, the efficacy of the drug should be focused on the pharmacokinetics and kinetics data of covid- in the ongoing phase iii clinical trials. the outbreak of sars-cov- in wuhan constituted an epidemic threat in china. the world health organization announced it a public health emergency of international concern on january , . during the outbreak, the number of confirmed cases in china showed an exponential growth. the people and the government of the country tried their best to fight the epidemic with soaring combat mood. the nation's enthusiasm to fight the epidemic provides the trials on covid- a favorable environment. at the same time, article of china's new drug administration law, which came into effect on december , , has enabled the "compassionate use" to develop adaptively in china. two clinical trials on remdesivir have passed the most stringent ethical review of the projects. on february , the trial has officially launched with experimental drugs provided by gilead sciences for free in china by professor chen wang, an academician of chinese academy of engineering, an internationally renowned respiratory expert who successfully suggested chinese government building "fang cang" hospitals to cure more than thousand mild or prepatent covid- patients [ ] . due to the large number of confirmed cases of covid- in china with no effective drugs, it is easy to collect clinical samples for trials theoretically. however, the rigor of the included samples hindered recruitment. as public attach more attention on prevention and treatment, fewer patients meet stringent inclusion criteria, resulting in a slow recruitment process. another reason is that there are plenty of drugs in the clinical trials, speeding up the patients' leaving hospital. nevertheless, it has been reported that more severe patients have been recruited, which provides favorable conditions for the trial of the severe group, and as a result, at least, it can be rapidly applied to the clinical treatment of severe patients in the near future. the need of treatment on covid- is urgent, so if the results of clinical trials prove it has the potential to benefit the treatment, according to china's "compassionate use", remdesivir will be more immediately used in patients with severe illness. meanwhile, the opening of green channels under special circumstances to speed up the review and approval process of the drug approval center will undoubtedly help save the lives of critical patients and promote the developing of "specific drugs". in the absence of clinical trial results, it is still difficult to put remdesivir into large scale clinical use [ ] . with the political support, the rapid development of clinical trials on remdesivir is imperative. a drug, gs- (compound a, fig. a ) for treating feline infectious peritonitis (fip) caused by coronavirus infection in cats has been tested in cats. its safety and effectiveness in treating fip have been proven [ ] , with fda's approval. it can be seen from the structure that remdesivir is phosphorylated from gs- , with identical target rdrp (fig. ) . it is noteworthy that though coronavirus reproduces more than generations in gs- yields resistance, the resistant virus is still sensitive to high concentrations of remdesivir and the fitness of the resistant virus has reduced to the same level as wild-type mers-cov [ ] , which avoids resistant mutant coronaviruses from producing resistant supervirus. at the beginning of developing remdesivir, gilead science selected a large number of nucleosides or their prodrugs to conduct in vitro growth inhibition experiments on ebola-infected human microvascular endothelial cells in the laboratory and found compound a showed inhibitory activity (ec = . μm), and the compound a was gs- . thereafter, on the basis of compound a, after examining the activity and toxicity of compounds surrounding compound a, modifying the prodrug, and optimizing amino acids and acyl groups, the cynomolgus monkey performs a pharmacokinetic test to select a structure such as gs- (fig. b) [ ] . although in phase ii it was not as effective as competitive drugs and clinical trials were terminated, remdesivir showed good safety and pharmacokinetics in both phases i and ii clinical trials. covid- has once again brought remdesivir to the stage of clinical trials. whether the results of phase iii clinical trial will make its comeback to the stage is worthy of expectation. phase ii clinical trials have demonstrated human tolerance to remdesivir. of the patients in the phase ii clinical trial administering remdesivir, were reported to have serious adverse reactions, of whom were considered not related to drugs, and with severe hypotension was thought to be drug-related, but still not confirmed [ ] . the gs- , a drug used to treat fip, has shown a high degree of safety in feline trials as well. the focal injection site reactions only showed in immediate pain with vocalization, occasional growling, and postural changes lasting for - s. these initial reactions were relieved after the owners became more adept at administering the injection. except for a cat with a slight increase in urea nitrogen and sdma of the third round of treatment, no other symptoms of systemic poisoning were observed [ ] . relevant research signified that through a large number of synthesis and structure-activity analysis, the toxicity was greatly reduced after gs- was synthesized into gs- (remdesivir) [ ] . the safety of remdesivir in human is further speculated. coronaviruses must replicate nucleic acids to generate new progeny virus after entering human cells. sars-cov- is known to be single stranded rna virus, so rdrp must be used to replicate nucleic acids. remdesivir, a nucleotide analogues, act as rdrp inhibitor, can provide a scheme for blocking rna replication. related studies have found that it plays a role in the final stage of entering the cell, which is consistent with its expected mode of action. wuhan virus research institute carried out a vitro inhibition test and found that remdesivir can block virus infection at very low micromolar concentration of vero e cells infected with virus, and the cell selectivity is high (ec = . μm, cc > μm, si > . ) [ ] . in an anti-ebola infection experiment on cynomolgus monkeys, intravenous injection of mg/kg of remdesivir, the drug can exist in the blood for a long time and can inhibit to ebola virus with a percentage of [ ] . wuhan virus research institute's research that applied remdesivir to vero e cells with an ec = . μΜ, lower than that of the monkey model, draw to a speculation that it could also play a role in sars-cov- infected monkeys. based on the effectiveness in previous researches, although there are many unknowns and limits of remdesivir, the phase iii clinical trials on sars-cov- are not only a fight against this epidemic, but also of strategic importance to reserve more effective antiviral drugs for the future. strategic reservation for antiviral drugs will avoid the difficulty of medicine unavailable when an outbreak comes again. remdesivir's situational and political superiority, as well as its previous research results and application effects make it imperative to carry out the clinical trials focusing on the sars-cov- . given that sars-cov- is an rna virus that is easy to mutate, the rapid starting of clinical trials is undoubtedly a right choice to prevent the resistance mutation due to blind medication. it has been covered in the world health organization (who) director-general's opening remarks at the media briefing on covid- on february , that the two clinical trials on remdesivir of therapeutics prioritized by the who r&d blueprint are y.-c. cao, et al. travel medicine and infectious disease xxx (xxxx) xxxx expected preliminary results in three weeks. on february , the who cast a vote of confidence for gilead sciences' experimental antiviral drug, remdesivir, indicating that remdesivir has great potential and may be the best candidate for the treatment of covid- . whatever the progress of the clinical trials is, we are expecting that the clinical trials of remdesivir, a starring drug, would bring outstanding breakthroughs to the treatment of covid- , or more promisingly, other virus infection in the future. all authors contributed to the conception of the review. yc cao and qx deng reviewed the literature and drafted the manuscript. sx dai critically reviewed the manuscript. all authors contributed to the revision of the manuscript. the authors report no conflicts. learning from the 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compound remdesivir potently inhibits rnadependent rna polymerase from middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus comparative therapeutic efficacy of remdesivir and combination lopinavir, ritonavir, and interferon beta against mers-cov prophylactic and therapeutic remdesivir (gs- ) treatment in the rhesus macaque model of mers-cov infection nucleotide prodrug gs- is a broad-spectrum filovirus inhibitor that provides complete therapeutic protection against the development of ebola virus disease (evd) in infected non-human primates summaries of evidence from selected experimental therapeutics a randomized, controlled trial of ebola virus disease therapeutics the pathogenesis of ebola virus disease therapeutic efficacy of the small molecule gs- against ebola virus in rhesus monkeys nucleosides for the treatment of respiratory rna virus infections the first case of novel coronavirus pneumonia imported into korea from wuhan, china: implication for infection prevention and control measures covid- control in china during mass population movements at new year remdesivir as a possible therapeutic option for the covid- efficacy and safety of the nucleoside analog gs- for treatment of cats with naturally occurring feline infectious peritonitis coronavirus susceptibility to the antiviral remdesivir (gs- ) is mediated by the viral polymerase and the proofreading exoribonuclease synthesis and antiviral activity of a series of '-substituted -aza- , -dideazaadenosine c-nucleosides travel medicine and infectious disease xxx (xxxx) xxxx key: cord- -kkhuzf p authors: sharif-yakan, ahmad; kanj, souha s. title: emergence of mers-cov in the middle east: origins, transmission, treatment, and perspectives date: - - journal: plos pathog doi: . /journal.ppat. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: kkhuzf p nan two years have passed since the initial description of the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov), yet the epidemic is far from being controlled. the high case fatality rate, the recent steep increase in reported cases, and the potential to cause a global pandemic during the upcoming hajj season are serious concerns. although a wealth of information about the pathophysiology, proposed animal reservoir, and intermediate host has been revealed, many questions remain unanswered. we herein review mers-cov, covering its proposed origins, route of transmission, treatment options, and future perspectives. first reported in [ ] , middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) is a novel coronavirus and the first lineage c betacoronavirus known to infect humans [ ] . with a case fatality rate of %, an urgent response is needed to prevent a global pandemic [ ] . prior to , coronaviruses were not considered serious human pathogens since they only caused mild upper respiratory tract infections (urtis) [ ] . the first zoonotic introduction of a coronavirus into the human population occurred with the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov) in . sars-cov caused a global pandemic, with , recorded cases and deaths [ ] . mers-cov marks the second known zoonotic introduction of a highly pathogenic coronavirus, probably originating from bats. three lines of evidence currently support this theory: ( ) the very close phylogenetic similarity with the bat betacoronaviruses: btcov-hku and btcov-hku [ ] ; ( ) closely related coronavirus sequences have been recovered from bats in africa, asia, the americas, and eurasia; and ( ) mers-cov uses the evolutionary conserved dipeptidyl peptidase- (dpp ) protein in pipistrellus pipistrellus bats for cell entry [ ] . since human-bat contact is limited, camels have been implicated as probable intermediate hosts. mers-cov appears to have been circulating in dromedary camels for over years [ ] . mers-cov uses the dpp (cd ) receptor to gain entry and effectively replicate in camel cell lines [ ] . neutralizing antibodies for mers-cov have been detected in dromedary camels from oman, canary islands, egypt, jordan, united arab emirates, and saudi arabia [ , ] . the exact mode of transmission from camels to humans remains to be confirmed [ ] . camel milk was investigated as a possible route of transmission, given the common practice of consuming camel milk in the arabian peninsula. the first reported case of mers-cov in yemen occurred in a yemeni pilot who consumed raw camel milk [ ] , and reusken et al. reported the finding of mers-cov in camel milk in qatar [ ] . however, respiratory transmission is currently considered as the most likely route of transmission [ ] . mers-cov has been detected by reverse transcription pcr (rt-pcr) from the nasal swabs of three camels in qatar and was linked to two confirmed human cases with high similarity upon sequencing, suggesting a possible respiratory mode of transmission [ ] . several clusters of mers-cov cases have been reported, mainly among household members and health care workers (hcws), suggesting that transmission is through close contact. the largest cluster reported so far has been in hcws in a hospital in al hasa, kingdom of saudi arabia (ksa), while the largest family cluster has been in three infected brothers from riyadh, ksa [ , ] . the basic reproductive rate for mers-cov has still not been determined with certainty [ ] . using two transmission scenarios, breban et al. reported an r of . and . [ ] . cauchemez et al. reported a similar r at . , but warned that in the absence of infection control measures, r may range from . - . and could lead to a self-sustaining transmission [ ] . propensity for the mers-cov to replicate in the lower respiratory tract may account for the observed limited transmission [ ] . the united states centers for disease control and prevention (cdc) recommends standard contact and airborne precautions with the use of an n- mask when caring for an infected patient [ ] . the cdc defines a laboratory-confirmed case of mers-cov as a patient with a positive pcr from a respiratory sample, and a probable case as a patient who had close contact with a confirmed case but inconclusive laboratory evidence [ ] . the incubation period for the presentation of mers-cov symptoms is - days and it remains unknown whether patients are infectious during the incubation period [ ] . the average age of presentation is years, with a male predominance [ ] . clinically, mers-cov causes symptoms of upper and lower rtis [ ] . the severity of symptoms varies widely. most asymptomatic cases have been discovered through screening after contact with a known case [ ] . presenting signs and symptoms may include highgrade fever, non-productive cough, dyspnea, headache, myalgia, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea that may precede the respiratory symptoms [ , ] . renal failure has been frequently reported, yet no conclusive evidence of a direct viral invasion of renal tissues exists [ , , ] . notably, most patients who developed complications had coexisting medical co-morbidities [ ] . laboratory findings on admission may include leukopenia, lymphopenia, thrombocytopenia, and elevated lactate dehydrogenase levels [ ] . mers-cov can also cause severe pneumonia with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards), requiring mechanical ventilation and intensive care admission [ ] . to date, there is still a lack of surgical and pathological information from patients infected with mers-cov, which hampers full understanding of the pathogenesis. lastly, coinfection with other respiratory viruses and with community-acquired bacteria has been also reported in mers-cov patients [ , , ] . as of june , , who officially reported affected patients in countries in three continents. two-hundred and fifty-two patients have died of mers-cov, setting the case fatality rate at % [ ] . the cases so far have been acquired either directly through a probable zoonotic source, or as a result of human-human transmission via close contact. retrospective analysis tracked the first outbreak to a hospital in the city of al-zarqa in jordan in april [ ] . an unexplained observation has been the seasonal variation in reported numbers, with a peak between april and june of each year. the number of cases reported during april alone was alarming, because it was greater than the cumulative number of cases reported since the outbreak began [ ] . the recent increase in the number of infected patients may arguably be attributed to better case detection and active surveillance programs. yet other factors may have contributed to the observed surge, including suboptimal infection control practices in affected hospitals in saudi arabia, as documented in a recent report of the who mission to jeddah [ ] . another explanation for the seasonal variation may be that it coincides with camel birthing season, and younger camels seem to be more often infected than their older counterparts [ ] . the distribution of the total reported cases by country is as follows: . % in the ksa, . % in the united arab emirates, . % in jordan, and % in qatar [ ] . cases have also been reported in kuwait, yemen, oman, iran, lebanon, tunisia, algeria, bangladesh, malaysia, france, italy, germany, the netherlands, united kingdom, greece, italy, and the united states [ ] . furthermore, seropositive camels for mers-cov were detected in egypt, kenya, nigeria, tunisia, and ethiopia, suggesting that there may be mers-cov cases that are undetected in africa [ , , ] . in , , , muslims from countries gathered in mecca to perform the annual hajj, the largest gathering of muslims in the world. the identification of mers-cov in saudi arabia has generated international concern of a global pandemic. as a response, the saudi government requested that elderly and chronically ill muslims avoid hajj in and restricted the number of pilgrims to , , . consequently, no cases were reported during the pilgrimage of that year [ ] . nasopharyngeal specimens collected from , pilgrims revealed no cases of mers-cov nasal carriage [ ] . a prospective cohort study of french pilgrims did not reveal any mers-cov cases [ ] . nevertheless, the potential for spreading of mers-cov during the hajj season (october - ) remains possible, especially since documented transmission occurred this year in patients from iran and malaysia after their return from umrah in mecca. it is worth noting that the two most frequently visited cities during the hajj, mecca and medina, have so far reported and cases respectively [ ] . mers-cov binds to the dpp (cd ) surface receptor using the spike (s) surface protein with subsequent cell entry [ ] . the exact mechanism of entry after receptor binding is still unknown. the s surface protein is composed of a core subdomain that shares similarity with that of sars-cov and a receptor binding subdomain (rbsd) that exhibits significant variation from the sars-cov rbsd. the development of vaccines targeting the rbsd of mers-cov is currently under investigation because they are thought to be safer and more effective than vaccines based on inactivated virus, dna, or viral vectors [ ] . another potential therapeutic approach is the inhibition of the papain-like and/or c-like protease of mers-cov [ ] . to date, no effective therapy or prophylaxis for mers-cov exists. supportive therapy remains the cornerstone of management. current treatment is based on previous experience with the sars-cov, in-vitro studies, and case series. various agents have been tried, including those that block virus entry, inhibit viral replication, or interfere with host immune response [ ] . the international severe acute respiratory and emerging infection consortium (isaric) suggested therapeutic options for treatment of mers-cov infection with various agents alongside continuous evaluation of efficacy, and in the setting of clinical trials [ ] . based on experience with sars-cov, the use of convalescent plasma, hyper-immune globulin, or human monoclonal antibodies that contain neutralizing antibodies may be efficacious and is recommended as first-line treatment when available [ ] . ribavirin and interferon alpha- b both showed promising results, especially when used in combination, both in vitro and in animal studies using rhesus macaques monkeys [ ] . however, these positive results did not translate clinically in an observational study in five patients, all of whom succumbed to the infection [ , ] . repurposing of currently available agents may be an efficient approach. dyall et al. screened various agents with potential therapeutic efficacy [ ] . cyclosporin a, mycophenolic acid, interferon-beta, homoharringtonine, cycloheximide, anisomycin, and emetine dihydrochloride hydrate were found to have the most potent in vitro activity against mers-cov. despite the progress in our understanding of mers-cov, many questions remain unanswered. the definitive origin, exact mechanism of transmission, and the reason behind seasonal variability are still unclear. although most cases have been described in countries of the arabian peninsula, the increasing travel to the region and the hajj season in ksa pose a threat of a potential global pandemic. extensive efforts are required to speed up the development of an effective therapy and vaccine. repurposing of currently available pharmaceutical agents is highly desirable for a more rapid drug development. meanwhile, hcws who encounter patients with respiratory symptoms who have lived or traveled to areas with mers-cov should have a low threshold to consider a diagnosis of mers-cov, with testing and immediate implementation of proper infection control practices to prevent further spread. finally, given the important role that camels may play in transmission of the virus, the common practices in the arabian peninsula of herding and consuming unpasteurized camels' milk should be discouraged until conclusive evidence is obtained that such practices do not contribute to infection. isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia mers: emergence of a novel human coronavirus middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) summary and literature update as of identification of a novel coronavirus in patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome consensus document on the epidemiology of severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) genomic characterization of a 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investigation hospital outbreak of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus interhuman transmissibility of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: estimation of pandemic risk middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: quantification of the extent of the epidemic, surveillance biases, and transmissibility middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) causes transient lower respiratory tract infection in rhesus macaques interim infection control and prevention recommendations for hospitalized patients with mers-cov mers case definition mers clinical update from the idsa center for disease control and prevention cdc epidemiological, demographic, and clinical characteristics of cases of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus disease from saudi arabia: a descriptive study clinical features and viral diagnosis of two cases of infection with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: a report of nosocomial transmission family cluster of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections a patient with severe respiratory failure caused by novel human coronavirus a family cluster of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections related to a likely unrecognized asymptomatic or mild case clinical features and virological analysis of a case of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection epidemiological findings from a retrospective investigation who concludes mers-cov mission in saudi arabia mers-cov enigma deepens as reported cases surge geographic distribution of mers coronavirus among dromedary camels mers coronaviruses in dromedary camels middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) summary and literature update as of prevalence of mers-cov nasal carriage and compliance with the saudi health recommendations among pilgrims attending the hajj lack of mers coronavirus but prevalence of influenza virus in french pilgrims after hajj the receptor binding domain of mers-cov: the dawn of vaccine and treatment development proteolytic processing, deubiquitinase and interferon antagonist activities of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus papain-like protease what are our pharmacotherapeutic options for mers-cov? international severe acute respiratory & emerging infection consortium (isaric)-clinical decision making tool for treatment of mers-cov v. . an animal model of mers produced by infection of rhesus macaques with mers coronavirus ribavirin and interferon therapy in patients infected with the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: an observational study repurposing of clinically developed drugs for treatment of middle east respiratory coronavirus infection the authors would like to acknowledge sima l. sharara for editing the manuscript. key: cord- - pvqvhqs authors: gastañaduy, paul a. title: update: severe respiratory illness associated with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) — worldwide, – date: - - journal: mmwr morb mortal wkly rep doi: nan sha: doc_id: cord_uid: pvqvhqs cdc continues to work in consultation with the world health organization (who) and other partners to better understand the public health risk posed by the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov), formerly known as novel coronavirus, which was first reported to cause human infection in september . the continued reporting of new cases indicates that there is an ongoing risk for transmission to humans in the area of the arabian peninsula. new reports of cases outside the region raise concerns about importation to other geographic areas. nosocomial outbreaks with transmission to health-care personnel highlight the importance of infection control procedures. recent data suggest that mild respiratory illness might be part of the clinical spectrum of mers-cov infection, and presentations might not initially include respiratory symptoms. in addition, patients with comorbidities or immunosuppression might be at increased risk for infection, severe disease, or both. importantly, the incubation period might be longer than previously estimated. finally, lower respiratory tract specimens (e.g., sputum, bronchoalveolar lavage, bronchial wash, or tracheal aspirate) should be collected in addition to nasopharyngeal sampling for evaluation of patients under investigation. an emergency use authorization (eua) was recently issued by the food and drug administration (fda) to allow for expanded availability of diagnostic testing in the united states. on june , , this report was posted as an mmwr early release on the mmwr website (http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr). cdc continues to work in consultation with the world health organization (who) and other partners to better understand the public health risk posed by the middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov), formerly known as novel coronavirus, which was first reported to cause human infection in september ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . the continued reporting of new cases indicates that there is an ongoing risk for transmission to humans in the area of the arabian peninsula. new reports of cases outside the region raise concerns about importation to other geographic areas. nosocomial outbreaks with transmission to health-care personnel highlight the importance of infection control procedures. recent data suggest that mild respiratory illness might be part of the clinical spectrum of mers-cov infection, and presentations might not initially include respiratory symptoms. in addition, patients with comorbidities or immunosuppression might be at increased risk for infection, severe disease, or both. importantly, the incubation period might be longer than previously estimated. finally, lower respiratory tract specimens (e.g., sputum, bronchoalveolar lavage, bronchial wash, or tracheal aspirate) should be collected in addition to nasopharyngeal sampling for evaluation of patients under investigation. an emergency use authorization (eua) was recently issued by the food and drug administration (fda) to allow for expanded availability of diagnostic testing in the united states. as of june , , a total of laboratory-confirmed cases have been reported to who. illness onsets have occurred during april through may , ( figure ). all reported cases were directly or indirectly linked to one of four countries: saudi arabia, qatar, jordan, and the united arab emirates ( figure ). most cases ( ) were reported by saudi arabia. four countries, the united kingdom (uk), italy, france, and tunisia, have reported cases in returning travelers and their close contacts ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . ill patients from qatar and the united arab emirates have been transferred to hospitals in the uk and germany. to date, no cases have been reported in the united states. who and cdc have not issued any travel advisories at this time; updated information for travelers to the arabian peninsula is available at http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/notices/ watch/coronavirus-arabian-peninsula. the median age of patients is years (range: - years), with a male-to-female ratio of . to . . all patients were aged ≥ years, except for two children, one aged years and one aged years. all patients had respiratory symptoms during their illness, with the majority experiencing severe acute respiratory disease requiring hospitalization. thirty-one of the patients are reported to have died (case-fatality rate: %) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . two cases in tunisia, in siblings whose father's illness was a probable case, and a case from the uk, were in persons with mild respiratory illnesses who were not hospitalized ( , ) . information was not available for all cases; however, several patients had accompanying gastrointestinal symptoms, including abdominal pain and diarrhea, and many cases occurred among persons with chronic underlying medical conditions or immunosuppression, as reported to who ( , ) . the original source(s), route(s) of transmission to humans, and the mode(s) of human-to-human transmission have not been determined. eight clusters ( cases) have been reported by six countries (france, italy, jordan, saudi arabia, tunisia, and the uk) ( ) among close contacts or in health-care settings and provide clear evidence of human-to-human transmission of mers-cov. the first documented patient-to-patient nosocomial transmission in europe was confirmed recently in france ( ). the first french patient, a man aged years with a history of renal transplantation, became ill on april , , within week after returning from dubai. he presented with fever and diarrhea. pneumonia was diagnosed incidentally on radiographic imaging, and he subsequently died with severe respiratory disease. the secondary case is in a man aged years on long-term corticosteroids who shared a room with the index patient during april - and who remains hospitalized on life support. the incubation period for the secondary case was estimated to be - days; this is longer than the previously estimated - days ( ). a larger cluster, consisting of cases including deaths, ongoing since april in the region of al-ahsa in eastern saudi arabia, also has included cases linked to a health-care facility ( ) . cases have included health-care personnel and family contacts. an additional five cases, not linked to the cluster in al-ahsa, were reported recently in another region of eastern saudi arabia ( ). thus far, no evidence of sustained community transmission beyond the clusters has been reported in any country. in some instances, sampling with nasopharyngeal swabs did not detect mers-cov by polymerase chain reaction (pcr); however, mers-cov was detected by pcr in lower respiratory tract specimens from these same patients. in the two patients reported by france, nasopharyngeal specimens were weakly positive or inconclusive, whereas bronchoalveolar lavage and induced sputum were positive ( ). in consultation with who, the period for considering evaluation for mers-cov infection in persons who develop severe acute lower respiratory illness days after traveling from the arabian peninsula or neighboring countries* has been extended from within days to within days of travel. persons who develop severe acute lower respiratory illness within days after traveling from the arabian peninsula or neighboring countries should be evaluated according to current guidelines (available at http://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/mers/case-def. html). persons whose respiratory illness remains unexplained and who meet criteria for "patient under investigation" should be reported immediately to cdc through state and local health departments. persons who develop severe acute lower respiratory illness who are close contacts † of a symptomatic traveler who developed fever and acute respiratory illness within days of traveling from the arabian peninsula or neighboring countries may be considered for evaluation for mers-cov. in addition, cdc recommends that clusters of severe acute respiratory illness be investigated and, if no obvious etiology is identified, local public health officials be notified and testing for mers-cov conducted, if indicated. to increase the likelihood of detecting mers-cov, cdc recommends collection of specimens from different sites (e.g., a nasopharyngeal swab and a lower respiratory tract specimen, such as sputum, bronchoalveolar lavage, bronchial wash, or tracheal aspirate). specimens should be collected at different times after symptom onset, if possible. lower respiratory tract specimens should be a priority for collection and pcr testing; stool specimens also may be collected. specimens should be collected with appropriate infection control precautions (available at http://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/mers/case-def.html). testing of specimens for mers-cov currently is being conducted at cdc. fda issued an eua on june , , to authorize use of cdc's novel coronavirus real-time reverse transcription-pcr assay (ncv- - rrt-pcr assay) to test for mers-cov in clinical respiratory, blood, and stool specimens. this eua is needed because, at this time, there are no fda-approved tests that identify mers-cov in clinical specimens. this assay will be deployed to laboratory response * countries considered to be on or neighboring the arabian peninsula include bahrain, iraq, iran, israel, jordan, kuwait, lebanon, oman, palestinian territories, qatar, saudi arabia, syria, the united arab emirates, and yemen. † close contacts are defined as ) persons who provided care for the patient, including health-care personnel and family members, or who had other similarly close physical contact, or ) persons who stayed at the same place (e.g., lived with or visited) as the patient while the patient was ill. network (lrn) laboratories in all states over the coming weeks. updated information about laboratories with the capacity to conduct mers testing with the ncv- - rrt-pcr assay will be provided on cdc's mers website (http://www. cdc.gov/coronavirus/mers/case-def.html). in consultation with who, the definition of a probable case of mers-cov infection has been updated to also include persons with severe acute respiratory illness with no known etiology with an epidemiologic link to a confirmed case of mers-cov infection. until the transmission characteristics of mers-cov are better understood, patients under investigation and probable and confirmed cases should be managed in health-care facilities using standard, contact, and airborne precautions. as information becomes available, these recommendations will be reevaluated and updated as needed. recommendations and guidance on case definitions, infection control (including use of personal protective equipment), case investigation, and specimen collection and testing, are available at the cdc mers website (http://www.cdc.gov/ coronavirus/mers/index.html). the mers website contains the most current information and guidance, which is subject to change. state and local health departments with questions should contact the cdc emergency operations center ( - - ). cases associated with a cluster cases reported in al-ahsa governorate cases not associated with a cluster travel history associated with cases occuring outside of arabian peninsula and neighboring countries * dots representing the cases are not geographically representative of the exact location of the residence of the patient. severe respiratory illness associated with a novel coronavirus-saudi arabia and qatar novel coronavirus associated with severe respiratory disease: case definition and public health measures isolation of a novel coronavirus from a man with pneumonia in saudi arabia middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov); announcement of the coronavirus study group global alert and response (gar): novel coronavirus infection -update (middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus) updated rapid risk assessment: severe respiratory disease associated with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) european centre for disease prevention and control. epidemiological update: additional confirmed cases of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (novel coronavirus) in france, saudi arabia, and tunisia world health organization. global alert and response (gar): novel coronavirus summary and literature update family cluster of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infections clinical features and viral diagnosis of two cases of infection with middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus: a report of nosocomial transmission key: cord- -mfl iagr authors: chefer, svetlana; thomasson, david; seidel, jurgen; reba, richard c.; bohannon, j. kyle; lackemeyer, mathew g.; bartos, chris; sayre, philip j.; bollinger, laura; hensley, lisa e.; jahrling, peter b.; johnson, reed f. title: modeling [( )f]-fdg lymphoid tissue kinetics to characterize nonhuman primate immune response to middle east respiratory syndrome-coronavirus aerosol challenge date: - - journal: ejnmmi res doi: . /s - - -x sha: doc_id: cord_uid: mfl iagr background: the pathogenesis and immune response to middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) caused by a recently discovered coronavirus, mers-cov, have not been fully characterized because a suitable animal model is currently not available. ( )f-fluorodeoxyglucose ([( )f]-fdg)-positron emission tomography/computed tomography (pet/ct) as a longitudinal noninvasive approach can be beneficial in providing biomarkers for host immune response. [( )f]-fdg uptake is increased in activated immune cells in response to virus entry and can be localized by pet imaging. we used [( )f]-fdg-pet/ct to investigate the host response developing in nonhuman primates after mers-cov exposure and applied kinetic modeling to monitor the influx rate constant (k(i)) in responsive lymphoid tissue. methods: multiple [( )f]-fdg-pet and ct images were acquired on a pet/ct clinical scanner modified to operate in a biosafety level environment prior to and up to days after mers-cov aerosol exposure. time activity curves of various lymphoid tissues were reconstructed to follow the [( )f]-fdg uptake for approximately min ( , s). image-derived input function was used to calculate k(i) for lymphoid tissues by patlak plot. results: two-way repeated measures analysis of variance revealed alterations in k(i) that was associated with the time point (p < . ) after virus exposure and the location of lymphoid tissue (p = . ). as revealed by a statistically significant interaction (p < . ) between these two factors, the pattern of k(i) changes over time differed between three locations but not between subjects. a distinguished pattern of statistically significant elevation in k(i) was observed in mediastinal lymph nodes (lns) that correlated to k(i) changes in axillary lns. changes in lns k(i) were concurrent with elevations of monocytes in peripheral blood. conclusions: [( )f]-fdg-pet is able to detect subtle changes in host immune response to contain a subclinical virus infection. full quantitative analysis is the preferred approach rather than semiquantitative analysis using standardized uptake value for detection of the immune response to the virus. electronic supplementary material: the online version of this article (doi: . /s - - -x) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. the pathogenesis and immune response to middle east respiratory syndrome (mers) caused by a recently discovered coronavirus, mers-cov, has not been fully characterized, in part, because a suitable animal model that mimics human mers is currently not available. nonhuman primates (nhps), such as rhesus monkeys (macaca mulatta) or common marmosets (callithrix jacchus) inoculated with mers-cov via combined intratracheal, intranasal, oral, and ocular routes, develop transient respiratory disease with little or no viremia although lethal disease was observed in a small number of marmosets [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . f-fluorodeoxyglucose ([ f]-fdg) pet/ct as a real-time noninvasive approach can be beneficial in providing biomarkers for host immune response and disease progression. [ f]-fdg-pet/ct has been used to track host immune response during monkeypox virus and human immunodeficiency virus- infections [ ] [ ] [ ] . as [ f]-fdg uptake is increased in activated macrophages, lymphocytes, and granulocytes during inflammation, the immune response can be localized by pet imaging [ ] . tracking the host response noninvasively is especially useful when animal species studied is limited and/or expensive to obtain or when animals do not develop overt clinical signs of disease. we applied [ f]-fdg-pet/ct imaging to monitor infection development in rhesus macaques after mers-cov inhalation. compared to standardized uptake value (suv), we increased the accuracy of measurement of [ f]-fdg uptake by applying kinetic modeling and patlak graphical analysis. we assessed the net [ f]-fdg uptake rate constant (k i ) in primary lymphoid tissues engaged in the host response to mers-cov exposure. this study is the first application of the methodology to an acute infectious disease process. rhesus macaques were housed in a biosafety level containment facility accredited by the association for assessment and accreditation of laboratory animal care international. experimental procedures were approved by the national institute of allergy and infectious diseases (niaid), division of clinical research (dcr), animal care and use committee and were in compliance with the animal welfare act regulations, public health service policy, and the guide for the care and use of laboratory animals recommendations. for aerosol inhalation, mers-cov-hu/jordan-n / strain (genbank accession no. kc . ) [ ] was grown in eagle's minimum essential medium (lonza, md, usa) on vero e cells. prior to aerosol challenge, four rhesus macaques, two males and two females, - years old, weighing - kg each, were anesthetized by intramuscular ketamine ( - mg/kg) injection. head-out plethysmography (buxco-data sciences international, mn, usa) was used to calculate an average respiratory minute volume (ml/min) by multiplying the respiration rate by the tidal volume. aerosol concentrations derived from a skc biosampler (skc inc., pa, usa) were used to calculate the presented dose [ ] . within a negative-pressure (− . pa), head-only aerosol exposure chamber, macaques were exposed to a small-particle ( . - μm aerodynamic diameter targeting lung alveoli) aerosol challenge (inhaled dose = log - . plaque-forming units). imaging data were acquired with gemini pet/ct clinical scanner (philips healthcare, andover, ma, usa) [ , ] . with an axial field-of-view (fov) of mm of the pet scanner, the entire nhp thorax is imaged in a single bed position. use of the scanner's brain protocol resulted in a transverse field of view of mm and led to cubic mm-wide voxels in the reconstructed images. low-dose ct images of the thorax for pet attenuation purposes were acquired at kvp, -mm slice thickness, and . -mm spacing. no contrast was given, and the subjects were freely breathing during the scan. pet image acquisition was initiated immediately after the low-dose ct scans and min prior to intravenous injection of [ f]-fdg ( - mbq/kg) into the saphenous vein and continued for up to min ( s). nine imaging sessions per animal were conducted on pre-inoculation days − or − and − or − and post-inoculation days + or + , + or + , + or + , + or + , + or + , + or + , and + or + with mers-cov. suv pet images were reconstructed iteratively using the manufacturer supplied d line-of-response (lor)-based row-action maximum-likelihood algorithm [ ] . methods for scatter, decay, random, and attenuation correction were applied during the image reconstruction process. both scatter and attenuation corrections [ ] were based on the low-dose ct images acquired prior to the pet scans. the list mode data were sorted into dynamic frames during creation of the histograms. to extract the early tracer dynamic distribution in the arterial blood, the initial data set (up to s or min) was comprised of frames with the following time sequence: frames × s, frames × s, frames × s, frames × s, frames × s, and frames × s. this sequence was followed by frames × s and frames × s to capture the late slow phase of dynamic distribution of the tracer in both the blood and the tissues. pet images were reconstructed iteratively using d ordered-subset expectationmaximization algorithm with two iterations and nine subsets followed by iterations of maximum a posteriori reconstruction [ ] . maximum a posteriori parameters were adjusted to provide a uniform spatial resolution of . mm (full-width half-maximum = . mm) in all three directions. methods for scatter, decay, random, and attenuation correction were applied during the process of pet image reconstruction. reconstructed suv pet images were analyzed without any post-reconstruction smoothing using pmod version . (pmod technologies, zurich, ch). to extract an image-derived input function (idif), voi ( -mm spheres) were placed on the left ventricles and arch of the aorta using frames over the first min ( s) after [ f]-fdg injection (fig. a, b) . averaged data from two vois were used to generate the idif (fig. c, d) . two-ml spheres were placed on axillary and mediastinal lns and lumbar spine bone marrow as described previously [ ] , and -mm spheres were placed on right and left sides of the lungs to obtain the tissue time activity curves (tacs). the last time point of the tacs was used to generate the suv data. using the standard two-tissue compartment kinetic model with irreversible tracer metabolism (k = , fig. e ), the [ ] . the blood volume fraction (v b ) was included in the modeling. patlak linear regression method was applied for parameter estimation utilizing the idif, [ f]-fdg tissue tacs [ ] , and pmod version . (pmod technologies). tissue tacs were fitted to the models by use of the nonlinear least-squares method with the levenberg-marquardt algorithm, which minimizes the weighted sum of squared errors between pet measurement and model solutions. a plot of the ratio c tis (t)/c bl (t) against the ratio of cumulative to instantaneous blood activity concentration ("normalized time") became linear in the late phase after the tracer injection when the concentration of free (i.e., unmetabolized) [ f]-fdg in the blood had equilibrated with that of free tracer in extravascular volume of distribution. this linear part of the plot was fitted by eq. ( ) to identify the k i as a slope of a regression line: in which c tis (t) and c bl (t) represent the radioactivity concentration in the region of interest and the arterial blood assessed from the pet images at different time points after an [ f]-fdg injection, respectively, and v dist is an initial distribution volume. a criterion for maximum error was set to % to derive the model parameter values. for the [ f]-fdg model described in fig. , the slope equals k × k ÷ (k + k ). complete blood cell counts were determined on pet-scan days [ ] . body temperature or body weight were monitored once daily or once every other day, respectively. two-way repeated measures analysis of variance (anova) with post hoc bonferroni multiple comparison test used k i obtained pre-inoculation and post-inoculation with mers-cov and voi location as independent variables to characterize the host immune response. for two-way repeated measures anova, we used k i at different time points pre-inoculation with mers-cov and voi location as within and between two factors, respectively. the correlations between k i values in mediastinal and axillary lns and bone marrow and between monocyte fraction in the blood and mediastinal and axillary lns were calculated using the pearson product moment correlation coefficient (r). the d'agostino and pearson test [ ] was applied to confirm that the data followed a gaussian distribution. graphpad prizm . (graphpad software inc., la jolla, ca, usa) was used for all statistical analyses. analysis of lung data revealed no pathology on ct images and no changes in [ f]-fdg uptake up to day after mers-cov inhalation (data not shown). no changes in body temperature, body weight, and blood glucose concentrations ( . ± . mg/dl prior to exposure and . ± . mg/dl after exposure) were observed. however, [ f]-fdg uptake as indicated by suv increases in mediastinal and axillary lns post-inhalation (fig. , additional file : movie s ). analysis of complete blood cell counts revealed a slight increase (within normal range) in circulating monocytes only that peaked on day or post-inhalation and remained elevated through the remainder of the study (fig. a) . images of the first time frames comprised of - s each caught the fast kinetics of [ f]-fdg distribution in the arterial blood (fig. c, d) . the rest of six time frames, - min in duration, covered the slow distribution and accumulation of [ f]-fdg in the tissues at later time points ( - min, slow phase) (additional file : movie s , fig. ). suv tacs for axillary lns plateaued min ( s) after fdg injection and were similar throughout the study duration of . months (fig. b) . analogously, bone marrow suv tacs did not show significant variation during the study. however, compared with the axillary lns, the tacs for bone marrow continued to rise at min ( , s) after [ f]-fdg injection (fig. b, c) suggesting a longer time after [ f]-fdg injection for the tissue with high cell glycolytic activity to reach a steady state. in mediastinal lns, tacs rise was pronounced on days - post-inhalation only, as indicated by tacs (fig. a) . representative patlak plots for bone marrow and mediastinal and axillary lns are shown in fig. . k i obtained days prior to virus exposure remained unchanged for each lymphoid tissue (fig. a, b) . the mean baseline k i prior to mers-cov exposure was similar in axillary and mediastinal lns ( . ± . sd and . ± . sd, respectively). greater elevation in mean k i values (up to almost six-fold increase from pre-exposure scan) in mediastinal lns was observed within the first week after mers-cov exposure compared to mean k i values (