Hindustan Times (Delhi)

1,886 Sars-cov-2 genomes sequenced

- Anonna Dutt letters@hindustant­imes.com

THE DOMINANT STRAIN IN INDIA IS THE SAME AS THE STRAIN DOMINANT ACROSS THE WORLD, MEANING ANY DRUG OR VACCINE DEVELOPED IN OTHER PARTS OF THE WORLD SHOULD WORK HERE, SAY EXPERTS

nNEW DELHI: Indian researcher­s have sequenced over 1,800 genomes of the Sars-cov-2 virus that causes the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19), which will help them monitor mutations of the virus and trace the spread of the infection. “So far, 1,886 genomes have been sequenced by various laboratori­es across the country. Of these, 833 are of very good quality and give us a lot of data. What we have learnt so far is that A2A is the dominant strain in India – the same as the globally prevalent strain – meaning that any drug or vaccine developed in other parts of the world should theoretica­lly work here (factoring in the difference is response of people, of course),” Dr Rakesh Mishra, director of the Hyderabad-based Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology, said.

“We have also seen that the virus is very slow to mutate. We have seen over 2,700 mutations even in the A2A strain but it doesn’t make it very different and certainly doesn’t change the clinical findings,” he said at a media briefing through video link. “The mutations act like a bar-coding system where we can trace the path of the spread of the virus.”

Union minister of health and family welfare, and science and technology Dr Harsh Vardhan said interpreta­tion of the findings and correlatin­g them to global findings will help Indian researcher­s understand the behaviour of the virus, which surfaced at the end of 2019 in the central Chinese city of Wuhan and spread rapidly across the world. “The samples from parts of the country have been collected and the genome sequencing has been done – there are areas in the country that have resemblanc­e to the virus from Wuhan, then there are areas where the virus resembles that from Italy,” he said.

The most interestin­g finding was the A3i or A4 strain that was unique to India – once accounting for 40% of the Covid-19 cases – has now started declining and constitute­s only about 5% of cases.

“The A4 strain – also referred to as the A3i strain -- has almost disappeare­d in India. This was a big cluster of cases that came in from an East Asian countries such as Brunei and spread across India in a cluster of cases. And, although the A2A strain is better adapted to infect humans binding more easily to the ACE2 receptor, I think the A4 strain died out because of aggressive contact tracing and quarantine,” said one of the scientists involved in the project, requesting anonymity.

The path traced using the mutations of the strain imply that it travelled with members of the Islamic missionary group Tablighi Jamaat, who gathered in Delhi for a religious congregati­on in March, the scientist said. “Although the strain has almost died out in southern India, there are still some cases of the strain in Delhi,” the scientist said.

“We get anonymised samples, but it is a possibilit­y. The strain is present only in South East Asia and seems to have travelled from Malaysia to Delhi and then Hyderabad, where we first detected the strain. From what we have learnt about the strain, however, is that it seems weaker. Of the A3i genomes we sequenced, none of the patients had died,” said Dr Mishra.

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