New clues about how coronavirus formed as US severs ties with WHO

Scientists claim to have unearthed more clues about how the
new coronavirus could have spread from bats through pangolins and into humans
as the number of infections worldwide neared six million.
Writing in the journal Covid-19 Science Advances,
researchers said that an examination of the closest relative of the virus found
that it was circulating in bats but lacked the protein needed to bind to human
cells.
The US-based scientists said this ability could have been
acquired from a virus found in pangolins – a scaly mammal that is one of the
most illegally trafficked animals on the planet.
Dr Elena Giorgi, one of the study’s lead authors, of Los
Alamos national laboratory, said people had already looked at the pangolin link
but scientists were still divided about their role in the evolution of
Sars-Cov-2, the virus that causes Covid-19.
“In our study, we demonstrated that indeed Sars-Cov-2 has a
rich evolutionary history that included a reshuffling of genetic material
between bat and pangolin coronavirus before it acquired its ability to jump to
humans,” she said, adding that “close proximity of animals of different species
in a wet market setting may increase the potential for cross-species spillover
infections”.
The study still doesn’t confirm the pangolin as the animal
that passed the virus to humans, but it adds weight to previous studies that
have suggested it may have been involved.
However, Prof Edward Holmes, an evolutionary biologist at
the University of Sydney in Australia, said more work on the subject was
needed. “There is a clear evolutionary gap between Sars-Cov-2 and its closest
relatives found to date in bat and pangolins,” he said. “The only way this gap
will be filled is through more wildlife sampling.”
The findings came as Donald Trump announced that the US was
severing its ties with the World Health Organisation because it had “failed to
reform”.
In a speech at the White House devoted mainly to attacking
China for its alleged shortcomings in tackling the initial outbreak of
coronavirus, Trump said: “We will be today terminating our relationship with
the World Health Organization and redirecting those funds to other worldwide
and deserving urgent global public health needs.”
The US is the biggest funder of the global health body,
paying about $450m in membership dues and voluntary contributions for specific
programmes.
It comes as deaths in the US climbed to more than 102,000
with 1,747,000 infections, by far the biggest total in the world.
It emerged on Friday that one person who attended the
controversial mass pool parties in the Ozarks last weekend had tested positive
for the virus. Authorities said they wanted to inform other people who were
also at the gatherings of the risk.
There was another large spike in deaths in Brazil, where
more than 27,000 people have died from the disease and which has the world’s
second highest number of cases on 465,000.
There were also big surges in reported deaths in Russia and
Iran on Friday. The former suffered its biggest daily increase in deaths – 232
in 24 hours – bringing the nationwide total to 4,374 while the latter
identified more coronavirus cases in a day than in any time since early April;
2,819 more people tested positive on Friday.
Egypt registered 1,289 new cases and 34 deaths, the health
ministry has said, marking another record of daily increases on both counts
despite stricter curfew rules.