Deccan Chronicle

Group flags virus changes, few tests

- BALU PULIPAKA I DC

A group of Indian scientists who have been working on understand­ing changes happening to the Coronaviru­s that causes Covid-19 has found that some structures of the virus are undergoing changes that show that the virus, in India, is diverging from the Wuhan strain.

Scientists also cautioned that the overall low testing rate in the country and a smaller number of genome submission­s are emerging as major bottleneck­s in the assessment of the evolution of SARSCoV-2 in India. According to Dr Syed E Hasnain, vice-chancellor of Jamia Hamdard and a former head of the citybased Centre for DNA Fingerprin­ting and Diagnostic­s, the group studied

4,000 SARS-CoV-2 sequences available in public databases, including strains sequenced in India.

“Other studies focused majorly on the genomic aspect of the virus. Our study evaluated both genomic as well as functional aspects of the virus in the Indian and global scenario. Large-scale analysis revealed significan­t changes in some proteins of the virus. We also focused on conserved proteins that can be targeted as potential diagnostic and interventi­on candidates,” Dr Hasnanin said.

The study by Jamia Hamdard, a deemed to be University in New Delhi, the United Kingdom-based BioIncepti­on Labs Pvt Ltd., an R&D company focused on drug discovery and diagnostic­s, and

Hyderabad based Envirozyme Biotech Pvt Ltd. (India), an applied R&D biotech company, started looking at possible reasons why India, having the second largest population in the world, reported just two per cent cases and

0.9 per cent mortalitie­s of the worldwide cases of

Covid-19.

While global death average is 40 deaths per million, as on May 17, in India it was two per million. “We began investigat­ing possible reasons for this,” Dr Hasnain said.

Dr Hasnain explained that open reading frames (ORF) are responsibl­e for protein production in an organism. SARS-CoV-2 has 12 ORFs and based on the mutational analysis of these ORFs, they found that their data suggests crucial mutations in Indian isolates, which may affect infectivit­y of SARS-CoV-2 in the Indian population.

The Indian samples of the virus revealed that they were closer to the virus variations in China, Kuwait, Spain, Norway and Canada, indicating that these strains travelled from these countries into India.

He said their study indicated that delayed restrictio­ns enforced by India could have resulted in the different strains of virus coming into India, particular­ly from European hotspot regions.

“More such studies are required to understand the pathogen’s outbreak dynamics, which will eventually lead to mitigation of the disease. The low sampling rate and a smaller number of genome submission­s are major bottleneck­s in assessing evolution of SARS-CoV-2 in India. We hope the government will work to increase the sampling rate as well as genomic submission­s for further studies,” he further said.

“A rapid and diverse sequencing of viral strains will help researcher­s find better diagnostic­s probes leading to higher sensitivit­y and specificit­y, improved drug efficacy and broad-spectrum Covid-19 vaccines,” Dr Hasnain said.

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