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Author Correction: Ecology, evolution and spillover of coronaviruses from bats

Authors :
Ruiz-Aravena, Manuel
McKee, Clifton
Gamble, Amandine
Lunn, Tamika
Morris, Aaron
Snedden, Celine E.
Yinda, Claude Kwe
Port, Julia R.
Buchholz, David W.
Yeo, Yao Yu
Faust, Christina
Jax, Elinor
Dee, Lauren
Jones, Devin N.
Kessler, Maureen K.
Falvo, Caylee
Crowley, Daniel
Bharti, Nita
Brook, Cara E.
Aguilar, Hector C.
Peel, Alison J.
Restif, Olivier
Schountz, Tony
Parrish, Colin R.
Gurley, Emily S.
Lloyd-Smith, James O.
Hudson, Peter J.
Munster, Vincent J.
Plowright, Raina K.
Source :
Nature Reviews. Microbiology
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

In the past two decades, three coronaviruses with ancestral origins in bats have emerged and caused widespread outbreaks in humans, including severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Since the first SARS epidemic in 2002-2003, the appreciation of bats as key hosts of zoonotic coronaviruses has advanced rapidly. More than 4,000 coronavirus sequences from 14 bat families have been identified, yet the true diversity of bat coronaviruses is probably much greater. Given that bats are the likely evolutionary source for several human coronaviruses, including strains that cause mild upper respiratory tract disease, their role in historic and future pandemics requires ongoing investigation. We review and integrate information on bat-coronavirus interactions at the molecular, tissue, host and population levels. We identify critical gaps in knowledge of bat coronaviruses, which relate to spillover and pandemic risk, including the pathways to zoonotic spillover, the infection dynamics within bat reservoir hosts, the role of prior adaptation in intermediate hosts for zoonotic transmission and the viral genotypes or traits that predict zoonotic capacity and pandemic potential. Filling these knowledge gaps may help prevent the next pandemic.

Details

ISSN :
17401534 and 17401526
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Reviews Microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2e85e33d32205bc360fe2ef6a9c6bdd3