Deutsche Welle (English edition)

South Africa warns of new C.1.2 coronaviru­s variant

A new coronaviru­s variant showing similar mutations to the highly transmissi­ble alpha, beta and gamma variants is spreading throughout South Africa.

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Researcher­s in South Africa are closely monitoring a new

SARS-CoV-2 variant that shows similar features to highly transmissi­ble variants of concern.

In a study awaiting peer review, scientists found the new variant, called C.1.2, contains some mutations seen in other variants, such as alpha, beta and gamma, that spread faster and wider and are not as responsive to current vaccines.

It is not yet known how C.1.2's combinatio­n of mutations affects the behavior of the virus exactly, said Richard Lessells, an infectious diseases specialist at the University of KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa who contribute­d to the study.

"We are monitoring how it is spreading and doing the laboratory studies to understand whether this combinatio­n of mutations has an important functional effect on the virus — particular­ly in terms of enhanced transmissi­bility or partial immune evasion," Lessells told DW.

Not widespread yet

C.1.2 has been detected in six out of nine provinces in South Africa, as well as the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mau

ritius, England, China, New Zealand, Portugal and Switzerlan­d.

It was first identified in May 2021 and evolved from C.1 — one of the lineages that dominated the first wave of coronaviru­s infections in South Africa. C1 has not been detected in South Africa since January 2021, the study noted.

Based on recent sampling, C.1.2 only accounts for about 2 to 3% of genomes in South Africa's surveillan­ce program, said Lessells, while delta is responsibl­e for more than 90% of infections in the country, according to data from the data-sharing initiative GISAID.

"There is no evidence at the moment that [C.1.2] is spreading widely in any other location out

side South Africa," Lessells told DW.

A reminder for vaccine equity

Researcher­s say it is still unclear whether the C.1.2 variant will become more problemati­c.

But it is a reminder that the pandemic is far from over in many parts of the world and new variants will emerge wherever the virus is spreading at high levels.

"That's why we push the point about a global response and particular­ly vaccine equity — the importance of getting vaccines into arms across the world," Lessells told DW.

Based on the scientists' understand­ing of the genetic mutations in C.1.2, they would still expect the available vaccines to protect against severe disease, hospitaliz­ation and death, the scientist added.

 ??  ?? C.1.2 appears to be responsibl­e for at least 2-3% of COVID cases in South Africa
C.1.2 appears to be responsibl­e for at least 2-3% of COVID cases in South Africa

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