What is a coronavirus? - Elizabeth Cox

1,919,737 views ・ 2020-05-14

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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For almost a decade, scientists chased the source of a deadly new virus
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through China’s tallest mountains and most isolated caverns.
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They finally found it here: in the bats of Shitou Cave.
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The virus in question was a coronavirus
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that caused an epidemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome,
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or SARS, in 2003.
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Coronaviruses are a group of viruses
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covered in little protein spikes that look like a crown—
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or "corona" in Latin.
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There are hundreds of known coronaviruses.
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Seven of them infect humans, and can cause disease.
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The coronavirus SARS-CoV causes SARS, MERS-CoV causes MERS,
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and SARS-CoV-2 causes the disease COVID-19.
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Of the seven human coronaviruses, four cause colds,
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mild, highly contagious infections of the nose and throat.
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Two infect the lungs, and cause much more severe illnesses.
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The seventh, which causes COVID-19, has features of each:
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it spreads easily, but can severely impact the lungs.
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When an infected person coughs, droplets containing the virus spray out.
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The virus can infect a new person when the droplets enter their nose or mouth.
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Coronaviruses transmit best in enclosed spaces,
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where people are close together.
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Cold weather keeps their delicate casing from drying out,
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enabling the virus to survive for longer between hosts,
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while UV exposure from sunlight may damage it.
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These seasonal variations matter more for established viruses.
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But because no one is yet immune to a new virus,
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it has so many potential hosts that it doesn’t need ideal conditions to spread.
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In the body, the protein spikes embed in the host’s cells and fuse with them—
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enabling the virus to hijack the host cell’s machinery
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to replicate its own genes.
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Coronaviruses store their genes on RNA.
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All viruses are either RNA viruses or DNA viruses.
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RNA viruses tend to be smaller, with fewer genes,
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meaning they infect many hosts and replicate quickly in those hosts.
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In general, RNA viruses don’t have a proofreading mechanism,
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whereas DNA viruses do.
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So when an RNA virus replicates,
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it’s much more likely to have mistakes called mutations.
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Many of these mutations are useless or even harmful.
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But some make the virus better suited for certain environments—
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like a new host species.
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Epidemics often occur when a virus jumps from animals to humans.
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This is true of the RNA viruses that caused
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the Ebola, Zika, and SARS epidemics, and the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Once in humans, the virus still mutates—
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usually not enough to create a new virus,
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but enough to create variations, or strains, of the original one.
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Coronaviruses have a few key differences from most RNA viruses.
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They’re some of the largest, meaning they have the most genes.
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That creates more opportunity for harmful mutations.
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To counteract this risk, coronaviruses have a unique feature:
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an enzyme that checks for replication errors and corrects mistakes.
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This makes coronaviruses much more stable,
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with a slower mutation rate, than other RNA viruses.
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While this may sound formidable,
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the slow mutation rate is actually a promising sign
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when it comes to disarming them.
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After an infection, our immune systems can recognize germs
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and destroy them more quickly if they infect us again
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so they don’t make us sick.
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But mutations can make a virus less recognizable to our immune systems—
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and therefore more difficult to fight off.
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They can also make antiviral drugs and vaccines less effective,
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because they’re tailored very specifically to a virus.
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That’s why we need a new flu vaccine every year—
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the influenza virus mutates so quickly that new strains pop up constantly.
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The slower mutation rate of coronaviruses means
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our immune systems, drugs, and vaccines
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might be able to recognize them for longer after infection,
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and therefore protect us better.
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Still, we don’t know how long our bodies remain immune to different coronaviruses.
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There’s never been an approved treatment or vaccine for a coronavirus.
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We haven’t focused on treating the ones that cause colds,
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and though scientists began developing treatments for SARS and MERS,
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the epidemics ended before those treatments completed clinical trials.
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As we continue to encroach on other animals’ habitats,
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some scientists say a new coronavirus jumping to humans is inevitable—
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but if we investigate these unknowns, it doesn’t have to be devastating.
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