Document
Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus neutralising serum antibodies in dromedary camels : a comparative serological study.
Identifier
DOI: 10.1016/S1473-3099(13)70164-6
Contributors
Haagmans, Bart L., Author
Müller, Marcel A., Author
Gutierrez, Carlos., Author
Godeke, Gert-Jan., Author
Meyer, Benjamin., Author
Muth, Doreen., Author
Raj, V Stalin., Author
Vries, Laura Smits-De., Author
Corman, Victor M., Author
Drexler, Jan-Felix., Author
Smits, Saskia L., Author
El-Tahir, Yasmin E., Author
De Sousa, Rita., Author
Beek, Janko van., Author
Nowotny, Norbert., Author
Maanen, Kees van., Author
Hidalgo-Hermoso, Ezequiel., Author
Bosch, Berend-Jan., Author
Rottier, Peter., Author
Osterhaus, Albert., Author
Gortázar-Schmidt, Christian., Author
Drosten, Christian., Author
Koopmans, Marion P. G., Author
Publisher
Elsevier B. V.
Gregorian
2013-10
Language
English
Subject
English abstract
Background: A new betacoronavirus-Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV)-has been identified in patients with severe acute respiratory infection. Although related viruses infect bats, molecular clock analyses have been unable to identify direct ancestors of MERS-CoV. Anecdotal exposure histories suggest that patients had been in contact with dromedary camels or goats. We investigated possible animal reservoirs of MERS-CoV by assessing specific serum antibodies in livestock. Methods: We took sera from animals in the Middle East (Oman) and from elsewhere (Spain, Netherlands, Chile). Cattle (n=80), sheep (n=40), goats (n=40), dromedary camels (n=155), and various other camelid species (n=34) were tested for specific serum IgG by protein microarray using the receptor-binding S1 subunits of spike proteins of MERS-CoV, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus, and human coronavirus OC43. Results were confirmed by virus neutralisation tests for MERS-CoV and bovine coronavirus. Findings: 50 of 50 (100%) sera from Omani camels and 15 of 105 (14%) from Spanish camels had protein-specific antibodies against MERS-CoV spike. Sera from European sheep, goats, cattle, and other camelids had no such antibodies. MERS-CoV neutralising antibody titres varied between 1/320 and 1/2560 for the Omani camel sera and between 1/20 and 1/320 for the Spanish camel sera. There was no evidence for cross-neutralisation by bovine coronavirus antibodies. Interpretation: MERS-CoV or a related virus has infected camel populations. Both titres and seroprevalences in sera from different locations in Oman suggest widespread infection. Funding: European Union, European Centre For Disease Prevention and Control, Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft.
Member of
ISSN
1473-3099
Resource URL
Category
Journal articles