Italia e Estero

Team cinese scopre nuovo coronavirus trasmissibile all'uomo

epa08199492 A staffer works in the pop-up Huoyan Laboratory specialized in the nucleic acid test on the novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) in Wuhan, Hubei province, China, 06 February 2020 (issued 07 February 2020). The P2-level biosafety lab was built in five days, designed to perform 10,000 coronavirus tests per day to cope with the outbreak. The virus, which originated in the Chinese city of Wuhan, has so far killed at least 638 people and infected over 31,000 others, mostly in China. EPA/SHEPHERD ZHOU CHINA OUT
epa08199492 A staffer works in the pop-up Huoyan Laboratory specialized in the nucleic acid test on the novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) in Wuhan, Hubei province, China, 06 February 2020 (issued 07 February 2020). The P2-level biosafety lab was built in five days, designed to perform 10,000 coronavirus tests per day to cope with the outbreak. The virus, which originated in the Chinese city of Wuhan, has so far killed at least 638 people and infected over 31,000 others, mostly in China. EPA/SHEPHERD ZHOU CHINA OUT
AA

PECHINO, 21 FEB - Un team cinese ha scoperto un nuovo coronavirus dei pipistrelli che comporta il rischio di trasmissione da animale a uomo perché utilizza lo stesso recettore umano del virus che causa il Covid-19. Lo studio, riporta il South China Morning Post, è stato guidato da Shi Zhengli, la virologa di spicco nota come la 'batwoman' per la sua vasta ricerca sui coronavirus dei pipistrelli, presso il Guangzhou Laboratory insieme a ricercatori della Guangzhou Academy of Sciences, della Wuhan University e del Wuhan Institute of Virology. Shi lavorava presso l'istituto di Wuhan, al centro della controversia sulle origini del Covid.

Riproduzione riservata © Giornale di Brescia

Condividi l'articolo

Iscriviti al canale WhatsApp del GdB e resta aggiornato

Argomenti