Skip to Main Content

Paper Details

A SARS-like cluster of circulating bat coronaviruses shows potential for human emergence.
Nat Med
567
2015
ACE2, CoV, Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS, Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS)-CoV, SARS, SARS receptor, SARS-, SARS-CoV, SARS-like, SARS-like virus, SHC014, SHC014 spike, SHC014-CoV, bat, bat coronavirus, bat populations, horseshoe bat, human, human angiotensin converting enzyme II, humans, mouse, mouse-adapted SARS, primary human, primary human airway cells, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus, spike
Author NameAffiliation
Vineet D MenacheryUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Boyd L YountUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Sudhakar AgnihothramNational Center for Toxicological Research
Lisa E GralinskiUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Lisa E GralinskiUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Jessica A PlanteUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Rachel L GrahamUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Eric F DonaldsonUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Scott H RandellUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Scott H RandellMarsico Lung Institute, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Ralph S BaricUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Ralph S BaricUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Ralph S BaricUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Ralph S BaricUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
  • 1 - 14

Datasets