The SARS virus is capable of changing rapidly and unpredictably, which could present serious challenges for managing the disease and developing drugs and vaccines to combat it, research at the University of Michigan suggests.
Ever since the SARS virus suddenly appeared in humans, scientists have been speculating about its origins and relationships to other, similar viruses. Using evolutionary analysis of protein sequences, the U-M researchers concluded that the SARS virus represents a different and previously little known lineage that has undergone some recombination, a process that can shuffle genes or gene regions among different viral lineages. This shuffling process provides genetic variation, which can help viruses survive and adapt in new hosts. The results appear in the September issue of the journal Infection, Genetics and Evolution.
The virus associated with SARS (known as SARS-CoV) is a type of coronavirus, so named because of the crown of spikes on its surface. Coronaviruses are divided into three categories: group one has been found in primates, carnivores and the group of animals that includes cattle, pigs and deer; group two occurs in that same group of animals as well as in rodents, birds and animals in the group that includes horses, tapirs and rhinos; group three has been found only in birds. Previous evolutionary analyses have suggested that the SARS virus is equally, but distantly, related to the three coronavirus groups.
“Our results do not mean that human infection by SARS-CoV is linked to the particular recombination event for which we found evidence,” said Mindell. “But demonstration of recombination in the SARS-CoV lineages does indicate its potential for rapid, unpredictable evolutionary change, and this is a potentially important challenge for public health management and for drug and vaccine development.”
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