|
|
|
|
|
by DiogenesKynikos
1062 days ago
|
|
> It's more like getting rabies from a raccoon. If rabies were a novel virus that had never infected humans before, you could make the comparison. SARS was a novel virus, which spilled over into humans in a very similar manner to SARS-CoV-2 (wild animal markets in a major Chinese city). > It's possible that the original SARS jumped 3 times total, based on the genetic evidence As the review I cited explains, the epidemiological and serological evidence makes clear that SARS independently jumped over to humans at many different locations, over the course of months. |
|
> It's more like getting rabies from a raccoon.
And only 3 potential cases of this:
> It's possible that the original SARS jumped 3 times total, based on the genetic evidence
You're saying animal -> human transmission of a human virus is equivalent to animal -> human transmission of a new virus. Those are two *extremely* different things. The palm civet SARS spike protein RBD did not gain the ability to bind human ACE2 many times. In fact, the evidence for that seems to only be a single time. The remaining two suggested origin events show mutation of the existing virus, followed be retransmission across species barriers.
Those are two completely different types of events.