1 00:00:07,828 --> 00:00:12,526 For almost a decade, scientists chased the source of a deadly new virus 2 00:00:12,526 --> 00:00:16,526 through China’s tallest mountains and most isolated caverns. 3 00:00:16,526 --> 00:00:21,256 They finally found it here: in the bats of Shitou Cave. 4 00:00:21,256 --> 00:00:23,486 The virus in question was a coronavirus 5 00:00:23,486 --> 00:00:30,739 that caused an epidemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, in 2003. 6 00:00:30,739 --> 00:00:32,889 Coronaviruses are a group of viruses 7 00:00:32,889 --> 00:00:38,233 covered in little protein spikes that look like a crown—or corona in Latin. 8 00:00:38,233 --> 00:00:41,213 There are hundreds of known coronaviruses. 9 00:00:41,213 --> 00:00:45,320 Seven of them infect humans, and can cause disease. 10 00:00:45,320 --> 00:00:51,866 The coronavirus SARS-CoV causes SARS, MERS-CoV causes MERS, 11 00:00:51,866 --> 00:00:56,859 and SARS-CoV-2 causes the disease COVID-19. 12 00:00:56,859 --> 00:01:01,229 Of the seven human coronaviruses, four cause colds, 13 00:01:01,229 --> 00:01:05,323 mild, highly contagious infections of the nose and throat. 14 00:01:05,323 --> 00:01:10,081 Two infect the lungs, and cause much more severe illnesses. 15 00:01:10,081 --> 00:01:14,571 The seventh, which causes COVID-19, has features of each: 16 00:01:14,571 --> 00:01:18,929 it spreads easily, but can severely impact the lungs. 17 00:01:18,929 --> 00:01:23,661 When an infected person coughs, droplets containing the virus spray out. 18 00:01:23,661 --> 00:01:28,496 The virus can infect a new person when the droplets enter their nose or mouth. 19 00:01:28,496 --> 00:01:31,786 Coronaviruses transmit best in enclosed spaces, 20 00:01:31,786 --> 00:01:33,456 where people are close together. 21 00:01:33,456 --> 00:01:36,866 Cold weather keeps their delicate casing from drying out, 22 00:01:36,866 --> 00:01:40,156 enabling the virus to survive for longer between hosts, 23 00:01:40,156 --> 00:01:43,744 while UV exposure from sunlight may damage it. 24 00:01:43,744 --> 00:01:47,484 These seasonal variations matter more for established viruses. 25 00:01:47,484 --> 00:01:50,394 But because no one is yet immune to a new virus, 26 00:01:50,394 --> 00:01:55,393 it has so many potential hosts that it doesn’t need ideal conditions to spread. 27 00:01:55,393 --> 00:02:00,026 In the body, the protein spikes embed in the host’s cells and fuse with them— 28 00:02:00,026 --> 00:02:02,896 enabling the virus to hijack the host cell’s machinery 29 00:02:02,896 --> 00:02:05,536 to replicate its own genes. 30 00:02:05,536 --> 00:02:08,616 Coronaviruses store their genes on RNA. 31 00:02:08,616 --> 00:02:12,683 All viruses are either RNA viruses or DNA viruses. 32 00:02:12,683 --> 00:02:15,704 RNA viruses tend to be smaller, with fewer genes, 33 00:02:15,704 --> 00:02:20,259 meaning they infect many hosts and replicate quickly in those hosts. 34 00:02:20,259 --> 00:02:24,460 In general, RNA viruses don’t have a proofreading mechanism, 35 00:02:24,460 --> 00:02:27,060 whereas DNA viruses do. 36 00:02:27,060 --> 00:02:29,360 So when an RNA virus replicates, 37 00:02:29,360 --> 00:02:33,405 it’s much more likely to have mistakes called mutations. 38 00:02:33,405 --> 00:02:37,337 Many of these mutations are useless or even harmful. 39 00:02:37,337 --> 00:02:40,467 But some make the virus better suited for certain environments— 40 00:02:40,467 --> 00:02:42,957 like a new host species. 41 00:02:42,957 --> 00:02:47,429 Epidemics often occur when a virus jumps from animals to humans. 42 00:02:47,429 --> 00:02:51,583 This is true of the RNA viruses that caused the Ebola, zika, 43 00:02:51,583 --> 00:02:55,876 and SARS epidemics and the COVID-19 pandemic. 44 00:02:55,876 --> 00:02:58,736 Once in humans, the virus still mutates— 45 00:02:58,736 --> 00:03:00,996 usually not enough to create a new virus, 46 00:03:00,996 --> 00:03:05,321 but enough to create variations, or strains, of the original one. 47 00:03:05,321 --> 00:03:09,975 Coronaviruses have a few key differences from most RNA viruses. 48 00:03:09,975 --> 00:03:13,333 They’re some of the largest, meaning they have the most genes. 49 00:03:13,333 --> 00:03:16,931 That creates more opportunity for harmful mutations. 50 00:03:16,931 --> 00:03:21,067 To counteract this risk, coronaviruses have a unique feature: 51 00:03:21,067 --> 00:03:25,067 an enzyme that checks for replication errors and corrects mistakes. 52 00:03:25,067 --> 00:03:27,757 This makes coronaviruses much more stable, 53 00:03:27,757 --> 00:03:31,367 with a slower mutation rate, than other RNA viruses. 54 00:03:31,367 --> 00:03:33,637 While this may sound formidable, 55 00:03:33,637 --> 00:03:36,617 the slow mutation rate is actually a promising sign 56 00:03:36,617 --> 00:03:38,857 when it comes to disarming them. 57 00:03:38,857 --> 00:03:42,217 After an infection, our immune systems can recognize germs 58 00:03:42,217 --> 00:03:45,307 and destroy them more quickly if they infect us again 59 00:03:45,307 --> 00:03:47,397 so they don’t make us sick. 60 00:03:47,397 --> 00:03:51,137 But mutations can make a virus less recognizable to our immune systems— 61 00:03:51,137 --> 00:03:53,717 and therefore more difficult to fight off. 62 00:03:53,717 --> 00:03:57,617 They can also make antiviral drugs and vaccines less effective, 63 00:03:57,617 --> 00:04:01,477 because they’re tailored very specifically to a virus. 64 00:04:01,477 --> 00:04:04,417 That’s why we need a new flu vaccine every year— 65 00:04:04,417 --> 00:04:09,248 the influenza virus mutates so quickly that new strains pop up constantly. 66 00:04:09,248 --> 00:04:13,248 The slower mutation rate of coronaviruses means our immune systems, 67 00:04:13,248 --> 00:04:18,166 drugs, and vaccines might be able to recognize them for longer after infection, 68 00:04:18,166 --> 00:04:21,026 and therefore protect us better. 69 00:04:21,026 --> 00:04:25,710 Still, we don’t know how long our bodies remain immune to different coronaviruses. 70 00:04:25,710 --> 00:04:29,611 There’s never been an approved treatment or vaccine for a coronavirus. 71 00:04:29,611 --> 00:04:32,331 We haven’t focused on treating the ones that cause colds, 72 00:04:32,331 --> 00:04:36,091 and though scientists began developing treatments for SARS and MERS, 73 00:04:36,091 --> 00:04:40,367 the epidemics ended before those treatments completed clinical trials. 74 00:04:40,367 --> 00:04:43,487 As we continue to encroach on other animals’ habitats, 75 00:04:43,487 --> 00:04:48,620 some scientists say a new coronavirus jumping to humans is inevitable— 76 00:04:48,620 --> 00:04:53,748 but if we investigate these unknowns, it doesn’t have to be devastating.