A bat may be responsible for the potentially fatal coronavirus that is currently plaguing the Middle East, a new study claims

Middle East Respiratory Syndrome has killed 47 people worldwide, 39 of them in Saudi Arabia.
"There have been several reports of finding MERS-like viruses in animals. None were a genetic match," said Ian Lipkin, a co-author of the study and head of Columbia University's Center for Infection and Immunity.
"In this case we have a virus in an animal that is identical in sequence to the virus found in the first human case," he said in a statement. "Importantly, it's coming from the vicinity of that first case."
The findings of the study, which also involved researchers from the EcoHealth Alliance and Saudi Arabia's health ministry, were published online late Wednesday in the "Emerging Infectious Diseases" journal of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
MERS is considered a cousin of the SARS virus that erupted in Asia in 2003.
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Between October 2012 and April 2013, researchers collected more than a thousand samples from seven bat species in regions of Saudi Arabia where MERS cases were identified.
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But "there is no evidence of direct exposure to bats in the majority of human cases of MERS," said Ziad Memish, Saudi Arabia's deputy health minister and the study's lead author.
"Given that human-to-human transmission is inefficient, we speculate that an as-yet-to-be determined intermediate host plays a critical role in human disease."
Source-AFP