| Literature DB >> 32654267 |
Ranjan K Mohapatra1, Lucia Pintilie2, Venkataramana Kandi3, Ashish K Sarangi4, Debadutta Das5, Raghaba Sahu6, Lina Perekhoda7.
Abstract
COVID-19 is highly contagious pathogenic viral infection initiated from Wuhan seafood wholesale market of China on December 2019 and spread rapidly around the whole world due to onward transmission. This recent outbreak of novel coronavirus (CoV) was believed to be originated from bats and causing respiratory infections such as common cold, dry cough, fever, headache, dyspnea, pneumonia, and finally Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) in humans. For this widespread zoonotic virus, human-to-human transmission has resulted in nearly 83 lakh cases in 213 countries and territories with 4,50,686 deaths as on 19 June 2020. This review presents a report on the origin, transmission, symptoms, diagnosis, possible vaccines, animal models, and immunotherapy for this novel virus and will provide ample references for the researchers toward the ongoing development of therapeutic agents and vaccines and also preventing the spread of this disease.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19 pneumonia; animal models and immunotherapy; diagnosis; entry mechanism; possible vaccines; symptoms; transmission
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32654267 PMCID: PMC7405220 DOI: 10.1111/cbdd.13761
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Biol Drug Des ISSN: 1747-0277 Impact factor: 2.873
Comparative analysis for seven human coronaviruses
| Name | Type | Year of finding | Key hosts | Cellular receptor | Symptoms | CT imaging |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Alpha | 1966 | Bats | Human aminopeptidase N (CD13) | Common cold, running nose, fever, headache, malaise, bronchiolitis, pneumonia (in neonates) | Bibasilar pleural effusions and diffuse consolidations plus GGOs |
|
| Alpha | 2004 | Bats, Palm Civets | ACE2 | Common cold, bronchiolitis/croup in children, fever, malaise, sore throat, cough and rhinitis | Acute upper respiratory tract infections |
|
| Beta | 1967 | Cattle | 9‐O‐Acetylated sialic acid | Common cold, running nose, fever, headache, malaise, bronchiolitis, pneumonia (in neonates) | Acute upper respiratory tract infections |
|
| Beta | 2005 | Mice | 9‐O‐Acetylated sialic acid | Common cold, dyspnea, chronic respiratory disease | Acute upper respiratory tract infections |
|
| Beta | 2002 | Bat, palm civets, raccoon dogs | ACE2 | Fever, headache, diarrhea, shivering, cough, dyspnea, pneumonia | Subpleural GGO and consolidation, interlobular septal and intralobular septal thickening |
|
| Beta | 2012 | Bat, camel | DPP4 | Fever, dry cough, sore throat, dyspnea, pneumonia | Extensive GGO and occasional septal thickening and pleural effusions, basilar, bilateral, and subpleural airspace |
|
| Beta | 2019 | Bat, Pangolin (anteater) | ACE2 | Fever, dry cough, sore throat, short of breath, headache, myalgia, anosmia, rarely pneumonia | Multifocal patchy GGOs with subpleural distribution, Diffuse heterogeneous consolidation with GGO |
FIGURE 1Structure of coronavirus virion. The genome RNA is complexed with nucleocapsid protein (N) within the viral membrane; (Reproduced from Finlay & Hancock, 2004, Nature reviews: Microbiology ©Springer Nature)
Comparison between SARS‐CoV, MERS‐CoV, and SARS‐CoV‐2
| Name | Origin | Number of infected | Number of deaths | Number of countries | R0
| Mortality (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Guangdong, southern China | 8,098 | 778 | 29 | 2–4 | 10 |
|
| Jeddah, Saudi Arabia | 2,434 | 876 | 27 | 1 | 35.9 |
|
| Hubei, central China | 8,385,440 | 4,50,686 | 213 | 1.4–5.5 | ~9 (from the closed cases, till date) |
R0, Basic Reproduction Number.
FIGURE 2Genome organization for human betacoronaviruses (SARS‐CoV, MERS‐CoV, and SARS‐CoV‐2), (Adapted with Permission from Shereen et al., 2020, Journal of Advanced Research, © Elsevier BV.)
FIGURE 3Entry mechanism of human coronaviruses (Reproduced from Du et al., 2009, Nature reviews: Microbiology ©Springer Nature)
FIGURE 4Transmission mechanism of human coronavirus
FIGURE 5The possible drugs used against COVID‐19 pneumonia
Some existing drugs for the possible use against COVID‐19
| Sl. No. | Name of the drug | Possible mechanism | Disease | Trials, clinical studies, outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Lopinavir | May inhibit the viral proteases | HIV infection | No benefit, In combination Lopinavir and Ritonavir not found to improve COVID‐19 patients |
| 2 | Ritonavir | May increase the levels of other protease inhibitors | ||
| 3 | Darunavir | Act as a antiretroviral protease inhibitor | HIV infection | In vitro study revealed no benefit |
| 4 | Remdesivir | May block viral nucleotide synthesis to stop viral replication | Ebola infection | Potential benefit found in preliminary results |
| 5 | Galidesivir | May leads to the structural change in the viral enzyme and results premature termination of the elongating RNA | Ebola, hepatitis C, Marburg virus | In vitro experiments suggest benefits |
| 6 | Ribavirin | May inhibits viral mRNA polymerase and leading to a decrease in viral replication (or production of defective virions) | Hepatitis C, RSV infection | Results awaited |
| 7 | Chloroquine | May elevate endosomal pH and interfere with ACE2 glycosylation | Malarial infection | Potential benefit |
| 8 | Nitazoxanide | May inhibit viral protein expression | Helminthic and protozoal infection | Potential benefit |
| 9 | Arbidol (Umifenovir) | May prevent viral entry to the target cell | influenza infection | No benefit |
| 10 | Ivermectin | Viral Protease | Anti‐parasitic agent, anti‐HIV | Results awaited |
| 11 | Hydroxychloroquine | Blocking Virus–Cell Membrane Fusion | Antimalarial and antiautoimmune Agent | Mixed, No benefit |
| 12 | Tocilizumab | IL‐6 inhibition | Inflammation, cytokine release syndrome (CRS) | Potential benefit |
| 13 | Glucocorticosteroids | Downregulation of inflammatory cytokines | Allergy, hypersensitivity, autoimmune diseases | No benefit |
| 14 | Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) | Pleiotropic immunomodulation | anti‐inflammatory and cytoprotective | Potential benefit |