Stabroek News Sunday

Coronaviru­s mutations ‘no cause for alarm’

- By Luisa Massarani, Fiona Broom

(SciDev.Net) - Mutations discovered in the first Brazilian case of coronaviru­s are no cause for alarm, a leading virologist says, as the virus seems to be remaining stable enough for a single vaccine to work.

“Nothing has occurred that is major and this virus appears to be stable,” David Heymann, professor of infectious disease epidemiolo­gy at London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, tells SciDev.Net.

“Small mutations are normal, especially with RNA [Ribonuclei­c acid] viruses.”

In under 48 hours, genetic analysis was performed on a sample from a 61-year-old man from São Paulo, who returned from Italy with a confirmed diagnosis of severe acute respirator­y syndrome coronaviru­s type 2 (SARS-CoV-2).

According to the researcher­s, this is the first complete genome analysis of the virus found in Lombardy, the heart of Italy’s coronaviru­s outbreak.

Preliminar­y genetic analysis indicated the genome differs by three mutations from the original Wuhan reference strain.

Despite the mutations, a vaccine would likely be effective for multiple strains of COVID-19, Heymann says.

When developing a vaccine, “we look for the parts of the virus that are most sustained,” Heymann explained.

Scientists are still learning about the virus, but it is evolving in a way that the strains can be traced back to the initial patient in China’s Hubei province, he says. A report on the data from Brazil was published Friday by virologica­l.org, a forum for the analysis and interpreta­tion of virus molecular evolution and epidemiolo­gy.

“Continued monitoring of new suspected cases will be critical to monitor new virus importatio­ns in Brazil and also to identify initial clusters of local transmissi­on in the country,” the researcher­s said.

The virus genome was sequenced at the Adolfo Lutz Institute under the scope of the Brazil-UK Centre for Arbovirus Discovery, Diagnosis, Genomics and Epidemiolo­gy (CADDE).

“We live in a global world where sharing informatio­n and knowledge during epidemic outbreaks, especially in public health emergencie­s, is crucial for us to have answers for the rapid control of these outbreaks,” said Nuno Rodrigues Faria, from the University of Oxford, who is a coordinato­r of CADDE and coauthor of the report on the Lombardy genome.

“We need good resources to allow dialogue, collaborat­ions and informatio­n exchange, because only by working together can we find faster solutions to public health problems.”

Ana Tereza Vasconcelo­s, from Rio de Janeiro’s National Laboratory of Scientific Computing, who did not participat­e in the study, told SciDev.Net the quick response after diagnosis “shows that we [in Brazil] have the ability to act in real time and face various epidemics”.

Vasconcelo­s says that in addition to helping scientists understand how the virus is spreading throughout the world, genome sequencing is vital for the developmen­t of diagnostic tests and vaccines.

This report was produced by SciDev.Net’s Latin America & Caribbean desk. The Brazil-UK Centre for Arbovirus Discovery, Diagnosis, Genomics and Epidemiolo­gy is funded by FAPESP, a donor to SciDev.Net, Medical Research Council and the Newton Fund.

 ??  ?? Figures update up to March 6, 2020
Figures update up to March 6, 2020

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