Rousettus bat coronavirus HKU9

Rousettus bat coronavirus HKU9 (HKU9-1) is an enveloped, positive-sense, single-stranded RNA mammalian Group 2 Betacoronavirus discovered in Rousettus bats in China in 2011. This strain of coronavirus is closely related to the EMC/2012 strain found in London which is related to the Middle East respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus (MERS-CoV). The MERS-CoV species is responsible for the 2012 Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus outbreak in Saudi Arabia, Jordan, United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom, France, and Italy.[1][2][3]

Rousettus bat coronavirus HKU9
Virus classification
(unranked): Virus
Realm: Riboviria
Kingdom: Orthornavirae
Phylum: Pisuviricota
Class: Pisoniviricetes
Order: Nidovirales
Family: Coronaviridae
Genus: Betacoronavirus
Subgenus: Nobecovirus
Species:
Rousettus bat coronavirus HKU9

Transmission

The exact means of transmission to humans is not yet well known. However, it has been demonstrated that betaCoV's including HKU4 have the propensity to recombine and cause interspecies transmission. However, this is not seen in Group C betaCov's to which MERS-CoV is most closely related.[4]

gollark: I think CUDA is a bit faster generally, but only works on Nvidia cards.
gollark: Also probably not. The GPU's processor cores would be implemented in actual silicon directly, instead of whatever reprogrammable stuff FPGAs use.
gollark: I don't think a FPGA would actually be faster than a GPU, if you're just putting some general-purpose processors on it.
gollark: But most remotely modern and decent GPUs will massively outperform integrated GPUs.
gollark: I have a GT 710 which is worse than the iGPU in my laptop.

See also

References

  1. Susanna K. P. Lau, Rosana W. S. Poon1, Beatrice H. L. Wong, et al. Coexistence of Different Genotypes in the Same Bat and Serological Characterization of Rousettus Bat Coronavirus HKU9 Belonging to a Novel Betacoronavirus Subgroup. J. Virol. November 2010 vol. 84 no. 21 11385-11394.
  2. Li Yang1, Zhiqiang Wu1, Xianwen Ren1, et al. Novel SARS-like Betacoronaviruses in Bats, China, 2011. Dispatch.Volume 19, Number 6—June 2013.
  3. Augustina Annan, Heather J. Baldwin1, et al. Human Betacoronavirus 2c EMC/2012–related Viruses in Bats, Ghana and Europe. Dispatch. Volume 19, Number 3—March 2013.
  4. Patrick C. Y. Woo, Yi Huang,4,† Susanna K. P. Lau, et al.Coronavirus Genomics and Bioinformatics Analysis. Viruses. 2010 August; 2(8): 1804–1820. Published online 2010 August 24.
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