AI Article Synopsis

  • * Understanding the viral diversity in wildlife is crucial for figuring out how CoVs can jump from animals to humans.
  • * This study focuses on the Northeast U.S. and identifies new alphacoronaviruses in both wild and domestic species, examining their possible effects on virus transmission based on specific regions of the Spike gene.

Article Abstract

Several coronaviruses (CoVs) have been detected in domesticated, farmed, and wild meso-carnivores, causing a wide range of diseases and infecting diverse species, highlighting their important but understudied role in the epidemiology of these viruses. Assessing the viral diversity hosted in wildlife species is essential to understand their significance in the cross-species transmission of CoVs. Our focus here was on CoV discovery in meso-carnivores in the Northeast United States as a potential "hotspot" area with high density of humans and urban wildlife. This study identifies novel alphacoronaviruses circulating in multiple free-ranging wild and domestic species in this area and explores their potential epidemiological importance based on regions of the Spike gene, which are relevant for virus-host interactions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10688340PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jvi.00829-23DOI Listing

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