This article is significant in several ways: First of all, it gives the
evidence that shows the lab origin of the virus is unlikely (although not
ruled out). The main evidence is that if the virus had evolved
"consciously" - meaning if it had been produced by people - it would be
more efficient than it is. The article is also significant in what it
leaves out, which is the environment that is helping to create these many
new zoonotic diseases. In other words, wild habitat destruction and
industrial/factory farming. It's like a thorough explanation of the
dynamics of the droughts that seem to have become the norm here in
California, but an explanation that completely leaves out the underlying
cause, which is global climate disruption/global warming. Here is the
article:

By
Angela L. Rasmussen
 and
Stephen A. Goldstein

June 4, 2021 at 3:00 a.m. PDT

>From the moment the novel coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, emerged in Wuhan, China,
scientists and the broader public have sought answers to some fundamental
questions: Where did this virus come from? How did the pandemic start? From
the early days, experts have considered two possibilities. Either the virus
somehow escaped from a laboratory, perhaps the Wuhan Institute of Virology,
or, like countless viruses throughout history, it arrived through zoonotic
spillover, jumping from animals to humans.

More than a year later, we still don’t know exactly what happened. Though
governments and news organizations have focused more attention recently on
the notion that the virus leaked from a lab, it’s unclear that we’ll ever
identify a theory that satisfies everyone as to how SARS-CoV-2 emerged.
Ironically, given the recent prominence of the lab escape theory, the
questions the world wants answered about the virus — and the astonishingly
fast development of the vaccines that can quash the pandemic — depend
entirely on research conducted in labs like the Wuhan Institute of Virology
and across the world over the past several decades. This fundamental
research underpins our ability to prepare for and respond to pandemics. We
need to know what’s out there and what kind of viral threats we face. The
only way to do that is to go where the viruses are, with our colleagues who
are already there.

In March 2020, a group of renowned evolutionary virologists analyzed the
genome sequence of SARS-CoV-2 and found it was overwhelmingly likely that
this virus had never been manipulated in any laboratory. Like the earlier
coronaviruses SARS-CoV and MERS-CoV, they theorized, it “spilled over” from
its natural reservoir host (bats) to a new one (humans). Viruses jump
species frequently, with unpredictable consequences. Often a virus hits an
evolutionary dead end if it cannot adapt to the new host rapidly enough to
be transmitted again. Sometimes, however, it can. Clues that reveal this
scenario can be found by analyzing the sequence of the virus genome, and
that’s exactly what this study did.

The study carefully examined whether key elements of the virus,
particularly the spike protein on its surface, appeared engineered. They
did not. The spike didn’t optimally bind to its receptor, ACE-2, and the
interaction between the two proteins was unpredictable even using the most
advanced computer algorithms. Another key feature often cited as evidence
of laboratory origin is the furin cleavage site, where the spike protein is
cut in half to “activate” viral material for entry into cells. The viruses
most closely related to SARS-CoV-2 don’t have this site, but many others
do, including other human coronaviruses. The furin site of SARS-CoV-2 has
odd features that no human would design. Its sequence is suboptimal,
meaning its cleavage by the enzyme furin is relatively inefficient. Any
skilled virologist hoping to give a virus new properties this way would
insert a furin site known to be more efficient. The SARS-CoV-2 site has
more of the hallmarks of sloppy natural evolution than a human hand.
Indeed, a timely analysis last year showed convincingly that it is a
product of genetic recombination, a natural feature of coronavirus
replication and evolution.

Unfortunately, the pandemic has provided many opportunities to observe
SARS-CoV-2 evolution in humans as it unfolds — and confidence in its
natural origin has grown over time. The molecular handshake between
SARS-CoV-2 and ACE-2, seemingly unique in early 2020, turns out to be found
in several related viruses and has since evolved to be a better fit. Its
ability to infect human cells also turns out to be unremarkable. A related
virus discovered in pangolins infects human cells even more readily than
SARS-CoV-2. The virus behind the pandemic may be special in its impact on
our lives and the global economy, but the way it infects us isn’t unique at
all.

The evolutionary trajectory of SARS-CoV-2 further undermines claims that
the virus is obviously artificial and designed for human transmission.
Early in the pandemic, a mutation called D614G took hold and spread rapidly
around the world, showing that the virus was adapting to its host from the
very beginning. Since then, mutations in the region of the spike protein
that binds ACE-2, as well as near the furin cleavage site, show continued
adaptation. Several of these are found repeatedly in different variants of
concern and almost certainly contribute to increased transmissibility.
SARS-CoV-2 continues to evolve. It wasn’t perfectly tuned for humans when
it appeared, just good enough.

China could pay if nations come to believe the virus leaked from a lab

The epidemiological evidence in the World Health Organization’s origins
mission report from this spring further bolsters the natural-origin
hypothesis. Among early cases, 55 percent had had exposure to wildlife
markets, and the growth of the outbreak over time, both in cases and excess
deaths, clearly shows that the neighborhood surrounding the Huanan market
was the initial center of the epidemic in Wuhan. It’s true that 45 percent
of cases could not be linked to a market, but the silent spread of
SARS-CoV-2 that has made it so hard to control also makes it difficult to
rule out such connections. Yes, the WHO’s mission was imperfect and
hampered by political forces in China and elsewhere; even the
organization’s director general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, has nodded to
those limitations by calling for a more thorough examination of the
possibility of a lab escape. We don’t disagree about the benefits of doing
so, and perhaps the U.S. government’s 90-day intelligence review will turn
up compelling new information. We must consider every possibility — but our
priorities should be guided by what is most likely. There are still missing
pieces of data, including those unlinked cases and inadequate animal
sampling, but most of the data we do have points heavily toward natural
origin.

Some of the public consideration of a lab escape has focused on a kind of
research known as gain-of-function, and whether such experiments could have
given rise to SARS-CoV-2. This work is defined by the National Institutes
of Health as research on influenza, MERS-CoV or SARS coronaviruses with the
potential to enhance transmissibility by aerosol droplet or pathogenicity
in mammals. A subset of that research, done at the Wuhan Institute of
Virology and some labs in the United States, has involved constructing
“chimeric” coronaviruses, where the spike protein of one virus is inserted
into the genetic backbone of another, typically the original SARS-CoV or a
bat coronavirus called WIV1 used at the Wuhan lab. This allows scientists
to study the properties of the spike protein within the context of a
well-understood system and make direct comparisons about virulence with a
known virus.

China thinks the pandemic will make it the world’s new leader. It won’t.

These experiments carry some risk, as noted by researchers who have engaged
in them, and it’s appropriate to consider the balance between that risk and
their benefits.

Understandably then, some people have wondered whether these types of
experiments could have produced SARS-CoV-2. The answer is, in this case,
not really. In theory, if you had the right viruses in your catalogue,
sure. But there are no indications that anyone had ever seen this virus nor
any viruses similar enough to serve as its genetic building blocks before
SARS-CoV-2 emerged in the population.

The Wuhan institute’s most recent chimeric virus used a very different
coronavirus as its genetic backbone. Looking at the body of research
produced there, it’s clear that scientists were laser-focused on the bat
viruses related to SARS-CoV, which spurred research on coronaviruses
worldwide after it emerged in 2003 because of its pandemic potential.
There’s just no trace of SARS-CoV-2 in the lab, and if the SARS-CoV-2
progenitor or its building blocks weren’t in the lab before the pandemic,
the pandemic could not have started there — even accidentally. This
precludes the possibility that SARS-CoV-2 evolved via serial passage in
cell culture, or repeated rounds of infection of other cells in a lab, as
do other observations about the virus. In standard cell culture, features
like the furin cleavage site that are crucial for transmission and disease
in humans are rapidly lost as the virus begins adapting to the vervet
monkey kidney cells typically used to grow it. For the past 18 months,
virologists around the world have been studying SARS-CoV-2 in the
laboratory, and they have not seen any evidence that it becomes more
dangerous to humans in the lab. The opposite is true: The virus loses
features key to transmissibility and virulence, forcing researchers to
innovate new culture methods to allow the study of antivirals or vaccines.

It does seem like quite a coincidence that the pandemic started in Wuhan,
which has one of the world’s leading coronavirus research labs, and that’s
surely helped raise questions about a possible leak. But in addition to
being a coronavirus research center, Wuhan is a city of 11 million people,
home to a major transportation hub that is connected to every other part of
China, as well as wildlife markets supplied by farms throughout the
country. The presence of the lab in the city where the pandemic emerged is
simply not suspicious enough on its own to outweigh what we know about the
virus.

We agree that researchers should continue to study whether the virus could
have emerged from a lab, but this cannot come at the expense of the search
for animal hosts that could have transmitted SARS-CoV-2 to humans. Getting
better answers will take rigorous scientific work — and cooperation from
China. As frustrating as obfuscation by the Chinese government is, the
answers are there. If we make accusations and demands that aren’t firmly
grounded in evidence, we run the real risk of having no origins
investigations at all.

Lab leaks happen, and not just in China. We need to take them seriously.

The only reason we can evaluate the genomic and virological evidence in a
scientifically informed way, and the only reason we have vaccines so
quickly, is decades of research on coronaviruses. We’d be years behind the
curve without this fundamental knowledge, which resulted from
gain-of-function studies and surveys of coronaviruses in bats and other
wild animals. How many are there? Where are they? Can they infect us? How
might they compare with the original SARS-CoV, which caused a global
epidemic in 2003? An even bigger question looms now: Can we design vaccines
that might protect us against all related coronaviruses? Research is
progressing, but testing vaccine candidates will require finding out what
viruses are out there. Again, we have to work with colleagues in China,
where the viruses are, to do that.

As the vaccines start to bring the pandemic under control in the United
States, the fundamental truth about how to identify and fight dangerous
viruses hasn’t changed: Preparing for pandemics, global crises by
definition, demands a global response. We must approach this
collaboratively — and objectively recognize what the data shows. This virus
is more likely to be a product of nature than a product of a laboratory.
Letting politics lead us toward other conclusions won’t help keep anyone
safer.

-- 
*“Science and socialism go hand-in-hand.” *Felicity Dowling
Check out:https:http://oaklandsocialist.com also on Facebook


-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Groups.io Links: You receive all messages sent to this group.
View/Reply Online (#9024): https://groups.io/g/marxmail/message/9024
Mute This Topic: https://groups.io/mt/83347859/21656
-=-=-
POSTING RULES & NOTES
#1 YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
#2 This mail-list, like most, is publicly & permanently archived.
#3 Subscribe and post under an alias if #2 is a concern.
#4 Do not exceed five posts a day.
-=-=-
Group Owner: marxmail+ow...@groups.io
Unsubscribe: https://groups.io/g/marxmail/leave/8674936/21656/1316126222/xyzzy 
[arch...@mail-archive.com]
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-


Reply via email to