Abstract

Diverse coronavirus (CoV) strains can infect both humans and animals and produce various diseases. CoVs have caused three epidemics and pandemics in the last two decades, and caused a severe impact on public health and the global economy. Therefore, it is of utmost importance to understand the emergence and evolution of endemic and emerging CoV diversity in humans and animals. For diverse bird species, the Infectious Bronchitis Virus is a significant one, whereas feline enteric and canine coronavirus, recombined to produce feline infectious peritonitis virus, infects wild cats. Bovine and canine CoVs have ancestral relationships, while porcine CoVs, especially SADS-CoV, can cross species barriers. Bats are considered as the natural host of diverse strains of alpha and beta coronaviruses. Though MERS-CoV is significant for both camels and humans, humans are nonetheless affected more severely. MERS-CoV cases have been reported mainly in the Arabic peninsula since 2012. To date, seven CoV strains have infected humans, all descended from animals. The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronaviruses (SARS-CoV and SARS-CoV-2) are presumed to be originated in Rhinolopoid bats that severely infect humans with spillover to multiple domestic and wild animals. Emerging alpha and delta variants of SARS-CoV-2 were detected in pets and wild animals. Still, the intermediate hosts and all susceptible animal species remain unknown. SARS-CoV-2 might not be the last CoV to cross the species barrier. Hence, we recommend developing a universal CoV vaccine for humans so that any future outbreak can be prevented effectively. Furthermore, a One Health approach coronavirus surveillance should be implemented at human-animal interfaces to detect novel coronaviruses before emerging to humans and to prevent future epidemics and pandemics.

Highlights

  • This article is an open access articleThe current novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) was first identified as a cluster of pneumonia cases in China in December 2019 [1]

  • The virus had a long history from the year 1950 to 2019

  • The viruses were identified among bats and mice as natural hosts

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Summary

Introduction

The current novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) was first identified as a cluster of pneumonia cases in China in December 2019 [1]. By March 2020, the disease had spread throughout the world; the World Health Organization (WHO) declared this virus as pandemic on 11 March 2020 [2]. The existence of the coronavirus was highlighted in 1950 when scientists identified the taxonomy of the virus [3]. The coronavirus is under distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons. The Coronaviridae family, which comprises of the Orthocoronavirinae and Torovirinae subfamilies [4]. The four generic categories of the coronavirus are alpha-coronavirus (α-CoV), beta-coronavirus (β-CoV), gamma-coronavirus (γ-CoV), and delta coronavirus (δ-CoV), which are under Orthocoronavirinae [4]. Α- and β-CoV infect mammals, γ-CoV infects avian species, and δ-CoV infect both avian and mammalian species [5]

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