| Literature DB >> 29495250 |
Aasiyah Chafekar1, Burtram C Fielding2.
Abstract
Human coronaviruses cause both upper and lower respiratory tract infections in humans. In 2012, a sixth human coronavirus (hCoV) was isolated from a patient presenting with severe respiratory illness. The 60-year-old man died as a result of renal and respiratory failure after admission to a hospital in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. The aetiological agent was eventually identified as a coronavirus and designated Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV). MERS-CoV has now been reported in more than 27 countries across the Middle East, Europe, North Africa and Asia. As of July 2017, 2040 MERS-CoV laboratory confirmed cases, resulting in 712 deaths, were reported globally, with a majority of these cases from the Arabian Peninsula. This review summarises the current understanding of MERS-CoV, with special reference to the (i) genome structure; (ii) clinical features; (iii) diagnosis of infection; and (iv) treatment and vaccine development.Entities:
Keywords: MERS-CoV; clinical features; human coronavirus; lower respiratory tract infections; respiratory viruses; upper respiratory tract infections
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29495250 PMCID: PMC5850400 DOI: 10.3390/v10020093
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Figure 1Schematic organization of human coronavirus (α and β CoVs) genomes. HCoVs genomes are 26 kb to 32 kb in size. At the 5′-end, overlapping reading frames 1a and 1b (blue) make up two-thirds of the genome. The remaining one third of the genome (expanded region) encodes for the structural (white) and accessory proteins (grey).
Detection methods of MERS-CoV.
| Method Used for Detection | 1 Sensitivity/2 Specificity/3 Viral Target Gene | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| rtRT-PCR | 1 Sensitivity for upE is 3.4 copies per reaction (95% confidence interval (CI): 2.5–6.9 copies) or 291 copies/mL of sample. | [ |
| qRT-PCR # | 1 Sensitivity to widely used upE gene as well as a ORF1a&b was introduced | [ |
| RT-Sequence-Validated-LAMP Assays | 1 Could detect 0.02 to 0.2 plaque forming units (PFU) (5 to 50 PFU/mL) of MERS-CoV in infected cell culture supernatants. | [ |
| RT-LAMP | 1 Capable of detecting as few as 3.4 copies of MERS-CoV RNA; Assay exhibited sensitivity similar to that of MERS-CoV real-time RT-PCR. | [ |
| rt-RPA | 1 Highly sensitive, is able to detect 10 MERS-CoV RNA copies with a more rapid detection time than MERS-RT-PCR. | [ |
| mAb Test | 1 Rapid detection and cost effective ELISA | [ |
| Immuno-chromotagraphic tool | 1 Highly sensitive, | [ |
| Immunofluorescence Assay | 1 Highly sensitive, antigen based detection | [ |
| ppNT Assay | 1 Highly sensitive, more sensitive that MNT test | [ |
| MNT Test | 1 Highly sensitive; less so than ppNT assay | [ |
| Protein Microarray | 1 Highly sensitive assay using protein microarray technology to detect IgG and IgM antibodies | [ |
| One pot RT-LAMP | 1 Capable of detecting four viral copies MERS within 60 min | [ |
| RT-iiPCR assays | 1 Could detect 3.7 × 10−1 plaque forming units (PFU) of MERS-CoV in infected cell culture supernatants and sputum samples. | [ |
| Powerchek MERS Assay | 1 95% limits of detection of assay for the upE and ORF1a were 16.2 copies/μL and 8.2 copies/μL, respectively. | [ |
| acpcPNA-AgNP aggregation assay | 1 Probe designed for targets makes this assay highly specific. Limit of detection found to be 1.53 nM | [ |
| mCoV-MS | 1 Highly sensitive, multiplex PCR based to target specific genes in HcoVs | [ |
| Duplex-RT-PCR method | 1 Highly sensitive, simultaneous detection of MERS and SARS viruses. | [ |
rtRT-PCR: Real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction; LAMP: Loop-mediated isothermal amplification; qRT-PCR: Quantitative real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction; rtRPA: reverse transcription isothermal Recombinase Polymerase Amplification; mAb: monoclonal Antibody; ELISA: Enzyme linked immunoabsorbent assay; ppNT: pseudoparticle neutralisation; MNT: microneutralisation; RT-iiPCR: reverse transcription-insulated isothermal PCR; Powerchek: PowerChek MERS assay; Kogene Biotech, Korea; acpcPNA-AgNP: DNA detection based on pyrrolidinyl peptide nucleic acid induced silver nanoparticle (colorimetric assay); mCoV-MS: MassARRAY matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) system; N: Nucleocapsid; # FDA approved (RealStar MERS-CoV RT-PCR kit 1.0, Altona Diagnostics GmbH, Hamburg, Germany).
MERS-CoV vaccines developed (adapted from [135,148]).
| Vaccine Categories | Target Antigen | Immunization | Animal Model | Immunogenicity | Stage of Development | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anti-MERS-CoV monoclonal antibodies | Surface (S) glycoprotein | Passive | marmosets | Animals developed pneumonia, high viral titre detected in lungs | Preclinical: in vivo, efficacy stage | [ |
| Human polyclonal anti-MERS-CoV antibodies | Virus structural proteins | Passive | Ad5-hDPP4-transduced mouse | Nab developed to reduce viral titres post exposure | Preclinical: in vivo, efficacy stage | [ |
| Inactivated virion vaccines | MERS-CoV | Active | hDPP4-transgenic mice | Nab produced without adjuvant, T-cell response not done | Preclinical: in vivo, efficacy stage | [ |
| Live attenuated vaccines (deleted E protein; mutated in nsp14) | rMERS-CoV-∆E | Active | Not tested | Not indicated | Preclinical development: in vitro | [ |
| Recombinant viral vectors (MVA, Adenovirus, Parainfluenza virus, Measles, Rabies) | S and SolS proteins | Active | Ad/hDPP4-mice Camels | Nab in mice, antigen specific humoral and in some case T cell immune responses | Preclinical: in vitro, efficacy stage | [ |
| Replicon particles (e.g., Venezuelan (VRP-S) | S protein | Active | Ad/hDPP4-mice mice | Nab produced, mice developed progressive pneumonia with virus replication detected in airways | Preclinical: in vivo, efficacy stage | [ |
| Subunit vaccines RBDs rRBDs RBDs-Fc rNTDs | S/S1protein with various amino acid residues | Active | -hDPP4-transgenic-Ad5-hDPP4 mice Rabbit NHPs | High mucosal and humoral immune response, strong Nab in mice and rabbits. Good T-cell response in mice. Tg-Mice protected from MERS-CoV | Preclinical: in vitro, efficacy stage | [ |
| DNA vaccines | S protein | Active | NHP:Rhesus Macaques Camels Mice | Cellular immune response and Nab response in mice, NHPs and camels. | Phase 1 clinical trials | [ |
| DNA prime/Protein-boost Vaccines | S and S1 protein | Active | NHP:Rhesus Macaques Mice | Nab response seen in mice and NHPs | Preclinical: in vitro, efficacy stage | [ |
| VLPs | S, M, E | Active | NHP:Rhesus Macaques | Virus specific Nab and IgG antibody response against the RBD | Preclinical: in vivo, efficacy stage | [ |
| Nanoparticle vaccine | S protein | Active | Mice | Nab with the presence of adjuvant (M1 and Alum) | Preclinical: in vivo, efficacy stage | [ |
Ad: Adenovirus; Ad/hDPP4-mice: mice transduced with hDPP4 in an adenovirus vector; Alum: aluminum hydroxide (adjuvant); ∆E: truncated envelope protein, hDPP4: human dipeptidyl peptidase 4; M1: matrix protein 1 (adjuvant); MERS-CoV: Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus; M: membrane protein; MVA: modified vaccinia virus Ankara; N: nucleocapsid protein; Nab: neutralizing antibody; NHP: non-human primates; rMERS-CoV: recombinant Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus; rNTD: recombinant N-terminal domain; RBD: receptor-binding domain; rRBD: recombinant RBD; RBD-Fc: RBD fused to the human IgG antibody crytallizable fragment; S: spike protein; S1: S1 domain of the spike protein, SolS: spike protein lacking transmembrane domain; Tg-mice: transgenic mice; VRP: virus replicon particle; VLP’s: virus like particles.