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Natural Transmission of Bat-like Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 Without Proline-Arginine-Arginine-Alanine Variants in Coronavirus Disease 2019 Patients

Yik Chun Wong, Siu Ying Lau, Kelvin Kai‐Wang To, Bobo Wing-Yee Mok, Xin Li, Pui Wang, Shaofeng Deng, Kin Fai Woo, Zhenglong Du, Cun Li, Jie Zhou, Jasper Fuk‐Woo Chan, Kwok‐Yung Yuen, Honglin Chen, Zhiwei Chen

2020Clinical Infectious Diseases67 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) contains the furin cleavage Proline-Arginine-Arginine-Alanine (PRRA) motif in the S1/S2 region, which enhances viral pathogenicity but is absent in closely related bat and pangolin coronaviruses. Whether bat-like coronaviral variants without PRRA (∆PRRA) can establish natural infections in humans is unknown. METHODS: Here, we developed a duplex digital polymerase chain reaction assay to examine ∆PRRA variants in Vero-E6-propagated isolates, human organoids, experimentally infected hamsters, and coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients. RESULTS: We found that SARS-CoV-2, as currently transmitting in humans, contained a quasispecies of wild-type, ∆PRRA variants and variants that have mutations upstream of the PRRA motif. Moreover, the ∆PRRA variants were readily detected despite being at a low intra-host frequency in transmitted founder viruses in hamsters and in COVID-19 patients, including in acute cases and a family cluster, with a prevalence rate of 52.9%. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings demonstrate that bat-like SARS-CoV-2ΔPRRA not only naturally exists but remains transmissible in COVID-19 patients, which has significant implications regarding the zoonotic origin and natural evolution of SARS-CoV-2.

Topics & Concepts

ArginineMedicineAlanineCoronavirusTransmission (telecommunications)Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirusCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)VirologyRespiratory diseaseDiseaseAmino acidImmunologyInternal medicineBiologyBiochemistryInfectious disease (medical specialty)LungEngineeringElectrical engineeringSARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 ResearchAnimal Virus Infections StudiesVirus-based gene therapy research