Science & technology | The origins of covid-19

Scientists dispute a suggestion that SARS-CoV-2 was engineered

Thesis. Antithesis. Synthesis?

Illustration of a coronavirus particle attacked by antibodies (immunoglobulin). Coronaviruses cause several diseases in humans, including covid-19, SARS and forms of the common cold.

A string of about 30,000 genetic letters was all it took to start the nightmare of covid-19, the death toll from which is likely to be more than 20m. Exactly how the story began is hotly contested. Some think the infection was a zoonosis—a spillover from wild animals. Its cause, sars-cov-2, resembles a group of coronaviruses found in bats. Others, though, have pointed to the enthusiastic coronavirus engineering going on in laboratories around the world, especially in Wuhan, the Chinese city where the virus was first identified.

This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline “Thesis. Antithesis. Synthesis?”

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