Journal of Infection and Public Health (Oct 2020)

Evolving sequence mutations in the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV)

  • Mohammed Ali AlBalwi,
  • Anis Khan,
  • Mohammed AlDrees,
  • Udayaraja GK,
  • Balavenkatesh Manie,
  • Yaseen Arabi,
  • Ibrahim Alabdulkareem,
  • Sameera AlJohani,
  • Majed Alghoribi,
  • Ahmed AlAskar,
  • Abdulaziz AlAjlan,
  • Ali Hajeer

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 10
pp. 1544 – 1550

Abstract

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Background: Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) has continued to cause sporadic outbreaks of severe respiratory tract infection over the last 8 years. Methods: Complete genome sequencing using next-generation sequencing was performed for MERS-CoV isolates from cases that occurred in Riyadh between 2015 and 2019. Phylogenetic analysis and molecular mutational analysis were carried out to investigate disease severity. Results: A total of eight MERS-CoV isolates were subjected to complete genome sequencing. Phylogenetic analysis resulted in the assembly of 7/8 sequences within lineage 3 and one sequence within lineage 4 showing complex genomic recombination. The isolates contained a variety of unique amino acid substitutions in ORF1ab (41), the N protein (10), the S protein (9) and ORF4b (5). Conclusion: Our study shows that MERS-CoV is evolving. The emergence of new variants carries the potential for increased virulence and could impose a challenge to the global health system. We recommend the sequencing every new MERS-CoV isolate to observe the changes in the virus and relate them to clinical outcomes.

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