Emerging Infectious Diseases (Dec 2014)

Replication and Shedding of MERS-CoV in Upper Respiratory Tract of Inoculated Dromedary Camels

  • Danielle R. Adney,
  • Neeltje van Doremalen,
  • Vienna R. Brown,
  • Trenton Bushmaker,
  • Dana Scott,
  • Emmie de Wit,
  • Richard A. Bowen,
  • Vincent J. Munster

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2012.141280
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 12
pp. 1999 – 2005

Abstract

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In 2012, a novel coronavirus associated with severe respiratory disease in humans emerged in the Middle East. Epidemiologic investigations identified dromedary camels as the likely source of zoonotic transmission of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV). Here we provide experimental support for camels as a reservoir for MERS-CoV. We inoculated 3 adult camels with a human isolate of MERS-CoV and a transient, primarily upper respiratory tract infection developed in each of the 3 animals. Clinical signs of the MERS-CoV infection were benign, but each of the camels shed large quantities of virus from the upper respiratory tract. We detected infectious virus in nasal secretions through 7 days postinoculation, and viral RNA up to 35 days postinoculation. The pattern of shedding and propensity for the upper respiratory tract infection in dromedary camels may help explain the lack of systemic illness among naturally infected camels and the means of efficient camel-to-camel and camel-to-human transmission.

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