Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Scientists capture first images of virus in an Indian patient

HOPE OF CURE Covid-19 has infected at least 540,000 people and killed close to 25,000 worldwide since it emerged in Wuhan, China

- Sanchita Sharma sanchita.sharma@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: The first images from India of the coronaviru­s causing the Covid-19 disease have been caught by scientists in Pune, using transmissi­on electron microscope imaging. They were published in the Indian Journal of Medical Research.

The images of Sars-cov-2, the virus that Causes Covid-19, are from the throat swab of the first laboratory-confirmed case in India on January 30, 2020. The woman, among three students studying medicine in Wuhan, was diagnosed with Covid-19 after returning home.

Covid-19 has infected at least 540,000 people and killed close to 25,000 since the first cases in December 2019.

The images of the virus from Covid-19 cases from Kerala show Sars-cov-2 virus closely resembles the Mers-cov virus that causes Middle East Respirator­y Syndrome coronaviru­s in 2012, and the 2002 Sars-cov virus that causes Severe Acute Respirator­y Syndrome (SARS) coronaviru­s.

“Coronaviru­ses have a crownlike appearance and these spikes on the surface give this virus family its name, as corona means crown in Latin. They have evolved to recognise a variety of receptors, including protein receptors and sugar receptors, and enter cells by first recognisin­g a host-cell-surface receptor for viral attachment, and then fusing viral and host membranes for entry,” said Dr Nirmal K Ganguly, former director general, Indian Council of Medical Research.

“These images will help study mutations in clinical samples and help identify the genetic origin and evolution of the virus, which will help us understand how the virus moved from animals to humans, how people-to-people transmissi­on started, and whether it is still mutating, which will inform work on developmen­t of drugs and vaccines,” said Dr Ganguly. Gene sequencing of the samples from Kerala done at NIV Pune found the virus was a 99.98% match with the virus in China’s Wuhan.

“One particular virus particle was very well preserved, showing features very typical of coronaviru­ses. This particle was 75 nm in size and showed patchy stain pooling on the surface and a distinct envelope projection ending in round peplomeric (glycoprote­in spike on the viral surface). These bind only to certain receptors on the host cell,” said Dr Atanu Basu, deputy director and head of electron microscopy and pathology at NIV Pune, which published the imaging.

To get the image, his group used centrifuga­tion to remove the debris from a 500 μl sample from the throat swab of the Kerala Covid-19 case confirmed using the highly sensitive, realtime, polymerase chain reaction.

The supernatan­t (clear liquid) was removed, filed at a final concentrat­ion of 1% glutaralde­hyde, and adsorbed on to a carboncoat­ed 200 mesh copper grid. Negative staining was done with sodium phosphotun­gstic acid, according to the study.

The grid was then examined under 100kv accelerati­ng voltage in a transmissi­on electron microscope and the image was captured using a low-dose mode by a sidemounte­d camera.

“Seven negative-stained virus particles that looked like coronaviru­s-like particles were imaged in the fields scanned. These included the round shape of the virus with an average size of 70-80 nm and a cobbled surface structure having envelope projection­s that averaged 15±2 nm in size,” said Dr Basu.

 ??  ?? Electron microscopy imaging of coronaviru­s that causes Covid-19.
INDIAN JOURNAL OF MEDICAL RESEARCH
Electron microscopy imaging of coronaviru­s that causes Covid-19. INDIAN JOURNAL OF MEDICAL RESEARCH

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