After the surging cases of Omicron in many countries, there are reports of another likely variant popping up from China. Scientists in China have issue warnings about NeoCoV, a mutation relate to the Middle East respiratory syndrome MERS-CoV that is link to outbreaks in the Middle East in 2012 and 2015.
Found in a population of bats in South Africa and to date spread exclusively among these animals, the new warning comes on the back of a yet-to-be peer-review study publish in preprint on the bioRxiv website.
The study discover NeoCoV and its close relative, PDF-2180-CoV, can use some types of bat Angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) and human ACE2 for entry.
Scientists warn that the new coronavirus could bind to the ACE2 receptor in a different way than the COVID-19 pathogen does.
The virus could carry with itself a combine high mortality rate of MERS-CoV and the high transmission rate of the current SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus.
A report, on the Russian website Sputnik, claim that the high mortality rate of MERS could lead to “one in three infected people dying on average.”
The Paper Said :
Vector Russian State Research Centre of Virology and Biotechnology Said :
Till now there have been no cases of people being infect by NeoCoV and scientists are urging more research to establish if it can infect humans or not.
The World Health Organisation (WHO), which identifies and notifies mutations and new virus outbreaks, has not said anything about the reports.
The report spark panic as the world remains cautious about future outbreaks of coronavirus.
The Omicron outbreak notified by the WHO in November has led to a major jump in cases across the world with infections now reported on all continents.