What we can and cannot learn from SARS-CoV-2 and animals in metagenomic samples from the Huanan market

被引:2
|
作者
Debarre, Florence [1 ]
机构
[1] Sorbonne Univ, Inst Ecol & Environm Sci, CNRS UMR 7618, UPEC,IRD,INRAE, Paris, France
关键词
COVID-19; origin; Wuhan; zoonosis; forensic metagenomics;
D O I
10.1093/ve/vead077
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
While the exact context of the emergence of SARS-CoV-2 remains uncertain, data accumulated since 2020 have provided an increasingly more precise picture of Wuhan's Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market, to which the earliest clusters of human cases of Covid-19 were linked. After the market closed on January 1st 2020, teams from the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention collected environmental samples, and sequenced them. Metagenomic sequencing data from these samples were shared in early 2023. These data confirmed that non-human animals susceptible to SARS-CoV-2 were present in the market before it closed, but also that these animals were located in the side of the market with most human cases, and in a corner with comparatively more SARS-CoV-2-positive environmental samples. The environmental samples were however collected after abundant human-to-human transmission had taken place in the market, precluding any identification of a non-human animal host. Jesse Bloom recently investigated associations between SARS-CoV-2 and non-human animals, concluding that the data failed to indicate whether non-human animals were infected by SARS-CoV-2, despite this being an already acknowledged limitation of the data. Here I explain why a correlation analysis could not confidently conclude which hosts(s) may have shed SARS-CoV-2 in the market, and I rebut the suggestion that such analyses had been encouraged. I show that Bloom's investigation ignores the temporal and spatial structure of the data, which led to incorrect interpretations. Finally, I show that criteria put forward by Bloom to identify the host(s) that shed environmental SARS-CoV-2 would also exclude humans. Progress on the topic of SARS-CoV-2's origin requires a clear distinction between scientific studies and news articles (mis)interpreting them.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] The evidence that places the origin of SARS-CoV-2 in the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market, Wuhan
    Angel, Juana
    Franco, Manuel
    REVISTA DE LA ACADEMIA COLOMBIANA DE CIENCIAS EXACTAS FISICAS Y NATURALES, 2022, 46 (180): : 811 - 814
  • [22] What Can We Learn from a Metagenomic Analysis of a Georgian Bacteriophage Cocktail?
    Zschach, Henrike
    Joensen, Katrine G.
    Lindhard, Barbara
    Lund, Ole
    Goderdzishvili, Marina
    Chkonia, Irina
    Jgenti, Guliko
    Kvatadze, Nino
    Alavidze, Zemphira
    Kutter, Elizabeth M.
    Hasman, Henrik
    Larsen, Mette V.
    VIRUSES-BASEL, 2015, 7 (12): : 6570 - 6589
  • [23] Personalizing ocrelizumab treatment in Multiple Sclerosis: What can we learn from Sars-Cov2 pandemic?
    Tazza, F.
    Lapucci, C.
    Cellerino, M.
    Boffa, G.
    Novi, G.
    Poire, I
    Mancuso, E.
    Bruschi, N.
    Sbragia, E.
    Laroni, A.
    Capello, E.
    Inglese, M.
    JOURNAL OF THE NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2021, 427
  • [24] Magma chambers: what we can, and cannot, learn from volcano geodesy
    Segall, Paul
    PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY A-MATHEMATICAL PHYSICAL AND ENGINEERING SCIENCES, 2019, 377 (2139):
  • [25] Caenorhabditis elegans: What We Can and Cannot Learn from Aging Worms
    Gruber, Jan
    Chen, Ce-Belle
    Fong, Sheng
    Ng, Li Fang
    Teo, Emelyne
    Halliwell, Barry
    ANTIOXIDANTS & REDOX SIGNALING, 2015, 23 (03) : 256 - 279
  • [26] What can we learn from osteoarthritis pain in companion animals?
    Brown, D. Cimino
    CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RHEUMATOLOGY, 2017, 35 (05) : S53 - S58
  • [27] Critical View on the Importance of Host Defense Strategies on Virus Distribution of Bee Viruses: What Can We Learn from SARS-CoV-2 Variants?
    Piot, Niels
    Smagghe, Guy
    VIRUSES-BASEL, 2022, 14 (03):
  • [28] SARS-CoV-2 in animals: what about the cat?
    Teixeira, Ana Izabel Passarella
    VETERINARY QUARTERLY, 2021, 41 (01) : 226 - 227
  • [29] Animal Coronaviruses and SARS-COV-2 in Animals, What Do We Actually Know?
    Bonilauri, Paolo
    Rugna, Gianluca
    LIFE-BASEL, 2021, 11 (02): : 1 - 17
  • [30] On what we cannot learn from proximity data
    Storms, G
    Dirikx, T
    Saerens, J
    Verstraeten, S
    De Deyn, PP
    NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 2003, 17 (02) : 323 - 329