Could human coronavirus OC43 have co-evolved with early humans?

Título

Could human coronavirus OC43 have co-evolved with early humans?

Autor

Paulo Eduardo Brandão

Descripción

Abstract This paper reports on an investigation of the role of codon usage evolution on the suggested bovine-to-human spillover of Bovine coronavirus (BCoV), an enteric/respiratory virus of cattle, resulting in the emergence of the exclusively respiratory Human coronavirus OC43 (HCoV-OC43). Analyses based on full genomes of BCoV and HCoV-OC43 and on both human and bovine mRNAs sequences of cholecystokinin (CCK) and surfactant protein 1 A (SFTP1-A), representing the enteric and respiratory tract codon usage, respectively, have shown natural selection leading to optimization or deoptimization of viral codon usage to the human enteric and respiratory tracts depending on the virus genes under consideration. A higher correlation was found for the nucleotide distance at the 3rd nucleotide position of codons and codon usage optimization to the human respiratory tract when BCoV and HCoV-OC43 were compared. An MCC tree based on relative synonymous codon usage (RSCU) data integrating data from both viruses and hosts into a same analysis indicated three putative host/virus contact dates ranging from 1.54E8 to 2.44E5 years ago, suggesting that an ancestor coronavirus might have followed human evolution.

Fecha

2018

Materia

codon usage, coronavirus, spillover, coevolution

Identificador

DOI: 10.1590/1678-4685-gmb-2017-0192

Fuente

Genetics and Molecular Biology

Editor

Sociedade Brasileira de Genética

Cobertura

Genetics

Idioma

EN

Archivos

https://socictopen.socict.org/files/to_import/pdfs/article 2359.pdf

Colección

Citación

Paulo Eduardo Brandão, “Could human coronavirus OC43 have co-evolved with early humans?,” SOCICT Open, consulta 18 de abril de 2026, https://www.socictopen.socict.org/items/show/2301.

Formatos de Salida

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