What is a coronavirus? - Elizabeth Cox

1,892,417 views ・ 2020-05-14

TED-Ed


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

00:07
For almost a decade, scientists chased the source of a deadly new virus
0
7828
4698
00:12
through China’s tallest mountains and most isolated caverns.
1
12526
4000
00:16
They finally found it here: in the bats of Shitou Cave.
2
16526
4730
00:21
The virus in question was a coronavirus
3
21256
2230
00:23
that caused an epidemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome,
4
23486
4003
00:27
or SARS, in 2003.
5
27489
3250
00:30
Coronaviruses are a group of viruses
6
30739
2150
00:32
covered in little protein spikes that look like a crown—
7
32889
3544
00:36
or "corona" in Latin.
8
36433
1800
00:38
There are hundreds of known coronaviruses.
9
38233
2980
00:41
Seven of them infect humans, and can cause disease.
10
41213
4107
00:45
The coronavirus SARS-CoV causes SARS, MERS-CoV causes MERS,
11
45320
6546
00:51
and SARS-CoV-2 causes the disease COVID-19.
12
51866
4993
00:56
Of the seven human coronaviruses, four cause colds,
13
56859
4370
01:01
mild, highly contagious infections of the nose and throat.
14
61229
4094
01:05
Two infect the lungs, and cause much more severe illnesses.
15
65323
4758
01:10
The seventh, which causes COVID-19, has features of each:
16
70081
4490
01:14
it spreads easily, but can severely impact the lungs.
17
74571
4358
01:18
When an infected person coughs, droplets containing the virus spray out.
18
78929
4732
01:23
The virus can infect a new person when the droplets enter their nose or mouth.
19
83661
4835
01:28
Coronaviruses transmit best in enclosed spaces,
20
88496
3290
01:31
where people are close together.
21
91786
1670
01:33
Cold weather keeps their delicate casing from drying out,
22
93456
3410
01:36
enabling the virus to survive for longer between hosts,
23
96866
3290
01:40
while UV exposure from sunlight may damage it.
24
100156
3588
01:43
These seasonal variations matter more for established viruses.
25
103744
3740
01:47
But because no one is yet immune to a new virus,
26
107484
2910
01:50
it has so many potential hosts that it doesn’t need ideal conditions to spread.
27
110394
4999
01:55
In the body, the protein spikes embed in the host’s cells and fuse with them—
28
115393
4633
02:00
enabling the virus to hijack the host cell’s machinery
29
120026
2870
02:02
to replicate its own genes.
30
122896
2640
02:05
Coronaviruses store their genes on RNA.
31
125536
3080
02:08
All viruses are either RNA viruses or DNA viruses.
32
128616
4067
02:12
RNA viruses tend to be smaller, with fewer genes,
33
132683
3021
02:15
meaning they infect many hosts and replicate quickly in those hosts.
34
135704
4555
02:20
In general, RNA viruses don’t have a proofreading mechanism,
35
140259
4201
02:24
whereas DNA viruses do.
36
144460
2600
02:27
So when an RNA virus replicates,
37
147060
2300
02:29
it’s much more likely to have mistakes called mutations.
38
149360
4045
02:33
Many of these mutations are useless or even harmful.
39
153405
3932
02:37
But some make the virus better suited for certain environments—
40
157337
3130
02:40
like a new host species.
41
160467
2490
02:42
Epidemics often occur when a virus jumps from animals to humans.
42
162957
4472
02:47
This is true of the RNA viruses that caused
43
167429
2544
02:49
the Ebola, Zika, and SARS epidemics, and the COVID-19 pandemic.
44
169973
5903
02:55
Once in humans, the virus still mutates—
45
175876
2860
02:58
usually not enough to create a new virus,
46
178736
2260
03:00
but enough to create variations, or strains, of the original one.
47
180996
4325
03:05
Coronaviruses have a few key differences from most RNA viruses.
48
185321
4654
03:09
They’re some of the largest, meaning they have the most genes.
49
189975
3358
03:13
That creates more opportunity for harmful mutations.
50
193333
3598
03:16
To counteract this risk, coronaviruses have a unique feature:
51
196931
4136
03:21
an enzyme that checks for replication errors and corrects mistakes.
52
201067
4000
03:25
This makes coronaviruses much more stable,
53
205067
2690
03:27
with a slower mutation rate, than other RNA viruses.
54
207757
3610
03:31
While this may sound formidable,
55
211367
2270
03:33
the slow mutation rate is actually a promising sign
56
213637
2980
03:36
when it comes to disarming them.
57
216617
2240
03:38
After an infection, our immune systems can recognize germs
58
218857
3360
03:42
and destroy them more quickly if they infect us again
59
222217
3090
03:45
so they don’t make us sick.
60
225307
2090
03:47
But mutations can make a virus less recognizable to our immune systems—
61
227397
3740
03:51
and therefore more difficult to fight off.
62
231137
2580
03:53
They can also make antiviral drugs and vaccines less effective,
63
233717
3900
03:57
because they’re tailored very specifically to a virus.
64
237617
3860
04:01
That’s why we need a new flu vaccine every year—
65
241477
2940
04:04
the influenza virus mutates so quickly that new strains pop up constantly.
66
244417
4831
04:09
The slower mutation rate of coronaviruses means
67
249248
2690
04:11
our immune systems, drugs, and vaccines
68
251938
2740
04:14
might be able to recognize them for longer after infection,
69
254678
3488
04:18
and therefore protect us better.
70
258166
2860
04:21
Still, we don’t know how long our bodies remain immune to different coronaviruses.
71
261026
4684
04:25
There’s never been an approved treatment or vaccine for a coronavirus.
72
265710
3901
04:29
We haven’t focused on treating the ones that cause colds,
73
269611
2720
04:32
and though scientists began developing treatments for SARS and MERS,
74
272331
3760
04:36
the epidemics ended before those treatments completed clinical trials.
75
276091
4276
04:40
As we continue to encroach on other animals’ habitats,
76
280367
3120
04:43
some scientists say a new coronavirus jumping to humans is inevitable—
77
283487
5133
04:48
but if we investigate these unknowns, it doesn’t have to be devastating.
78
288620
4928
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7