The Science Suggests
a Wuhan Lab Leak
By Steven Quay and
Richard Muller
Wall Street
Journal, June 6, 2021
The Covid-19 pathogen
has a genetic footprint that has never been observed in a natural coronavirus.
he possibility that the pandemic began with an escape from
the Wuhan Institute of Virology is attracting fresh attention. President Biden
has asked the national intelligence community to redouble efforts to investigate.
Much of the public discussion has focused on circumstantial
evidence: mysterious illnesses in late 2019; the lab’s work intentionally
supercharging viruses to increase lethality (known as “gain of function”
research). The Chinese Communist Party has been reluctant to release relevant
information. Reports based on U.S. intelligence have suggested the lab
collaborated on projects with the Chinese military.
But the most compelling reason to favor the lab leak
hypothesis is firmly based in science. In particular, consider the genetic
fingerprint of CoV-2, the novel coronavirus responsible for the disease
Covid-19.
In gain-of-function research, a microbiologist can increase
the lethality of a coronavirus enormously by splicing a special sequence into
its genome at a prime location. Doing this leaves no trace of manipulation. But
it alters the virus spike protein, rendering it easier for the virus to inject
genetic material into the victim cell. Since 1992 there have been at least 11
separate experiments adding a special sequence to the same location. The end
result has always been supercharged viruses.
A genome is a blueprint for the factory of a cell to make
proteins. The language is made up of three-letter “words,” 64 in total, that
represent the 20 different amino acids. For example, there are six different
words for the amino acid arginine, the one that is often used in supercharging
viruses. Every cell has a different preference for which word it likes to use
most.
In the case of the gain-of-function supercharge, other
sequences could have been spliced into this same site. Instead of a CGG-CGG
(known as “double CGG”) that tells the protein factory to make two arginine
amino acids in a row, you’ll obtain equal lethality by
splicing any one of 35 of the other two-word combinations for double arginine.
If the insertion takes place naturally, say through recombination, then one of
those 35 other sequences is far more likely to appear; CGG is rarely used in
the class of coronaviruses that can recombine with CoV-2.
In fact, in the entire class of coronaviruses that includes
CoV-2, the CGG-CGG combination has never been found naturally. That means the
common method of viruses picking up new skills, called recombination, cannot
operate here. A virus simply cannot pick up a sequence from another virus if that
sequence isn’t present in any other virus.
Although the double CGG is suppressed naturally, the
opposite is true in laboratory work. The insertion sequence of choice is the
double CGG. That’s because it is readily available and
convenient, and scientists have a great deal of experience inserting it. An
additional advantage of the double CGG sequence compared with the other 35
possible choices: It creates a useful beacon that permits the scientists to
track the insertion in the laboratory.
Now the damning fact. It was this exact sequence that
appears in CoV-2. Proponents of zoonotic origin must explain why the novel
coronavirus, when it mutated or recombined, happened to pick its least favorite
combination, the double CGG. Why did it replicate the choice the lab’s
gain-of-function researchers would have made?
Yes, it could have happened randomly, through mutations. But
do you believe that? At the minimum, this fact—that the coronavirus, with all
its random possibilities, took the rare and unnatural combination used by human
researchers—implies that the leading theory for the origin of the coronavirus
must be laboratory escape.
When the lab’s Shi Zhengli and
colleagues published a paper in February 2020 with the virus’s partial genome,
they omitted any mention of the special sequence that supercharges the virus or
the rare double CGG section. Yet the fingerprint is easily identified in the
data that accompanied the paper. Was it omitted in the hope that nobody would
notice this evidence of the gain-of-function origin?
But in a matter of weeks virologists Bruno Coutard and colleagues published their discovery of the
sequence in CoV-2 and its novel supercharged site. Double CGG is there; you
only have to look. They comment in their paper that the protein that held it
“may provide a gain-of-function” capability to the virus, “for efficient
spreading” to humans.
There is additional scientific evidence that points to
CoV-2’s gain-of-function origin. The most compelling is the dramatic
differences in the genetic diversity of CoV-2, compared with the coronaviruses
responsible for SARS and MERS.
Both of those were confirmed to have a natural origin; the
viruses evolved rapidly as they spread through the human population, until the
most contagious forms dominated. Covid-19 didn’t work
that way. It appeared in humans already adapted into an extremely contagious
version. No serious viral “improvement” took place until a minor variation
occurred many months later in England.
Such early optimization is unprecedented, and it suggests a
long period of adaptation that predated its public spread. Science knows of
only one way that could be achieved: simulated natural evolution, growing the
virus on human cells until the optimum is achieved. That is precisely what is
done in gain-of-function research. Mice that are genetically modified to have
the same coronavirus receptor as humans, called “humanized mice,” are
repeatedly exposed to the virus to encourage adaptation.
The presence of the double CGG sequence is strong evidence of
gene splicing, and the absence of diversity in the public outbreak suggests
gain-of-function acceleration. The scientific evidence points to the conclusion
that the virus was developed in a laboratory.
Dr. Quay is founder of Atossa
Therapeutics and author of “Stay Safe: A Physician’s Guide to Survive
Coronavirus.” Mr. Muller is an emeritus professor of physics at the University
of California Berkeley and a former senior scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory.