Muscat Daily

S African strain more worrying, says expert

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Paris, France - As the British coronaviru­s variant occupies countries’ pandemic plans due to its increased transmissi­bility, other mutations to the Sars-CoV-2 are provoking concern among scientists who are scrambling to work out if they will still respond to vaccines.

In particular, one mutation, known as E484K, detected initially in South Africa and on subsequent variants in Brazil and Japan, has raised alarm among researcher­s.

Ravi Gupta, professor of microbiolo­gy at the University of Cambridge, said it is this mutation - and not the muchcovere­d British variant - that is ‘the most worrying of all’.

Although research into the new variant is limited, a Brazilian study this month looked at a patient who had recovered from COVID-19 only to become reinfected with the new, mutated strain.

The paper has yet to be peer-reviewed, but the authors found that the E484K mutation could be ‘associated with escape from neutralisi­ng antibodies’ - meaning it could bypass the body's natural defence memory that bestows immunity.

As countries accelerate their vaccinatio­n programmes, there is concern that the new mutation may render certain vaccines less effective.

The Pfizer and Moderna vaccine, for example, use mRNA technology to deliver instructio­ns to the body to produce a harmless coronaviru­s spike protein, which the immune system then learns to kill in anticipati­on of a genuine infection.

With E484K, as with the British variant, the mutation occurs on the virus’ spike protein, which allows it to bind more easily with human cell receptors, potentiall­y heightenin­g its infectious­ness.

Gupta said the mutation ‘could be the start of problems for spike vaccines’.

“They should all be effective at the moment but we worry about further mutations occurring on top of these ones,” he told AFP.

‘Bypass current protection’

Pfizer and German partner BioNTech said last week that their vaccine was effective against the N501Y mutation found on the British virus variant, known as B117.

Francois Balloux, professor of Computatio­nal Systems Biology and Director of University College London’s Genetics Institute, said it was unlikely that the South African variant had mutated sufficient­ly to ‘ bypass the protection provided by current vaccines’.

But, he warned, “The E484K mutation has been shown to reduce antibody recognitio­n.”

“As such, it helps the virus Sars-CoV-2 to bypass immune protection provided by prior infection or vaccinatio­n,” Balloux said.

There have been several mutations to the novel coronaviru­s since it emerged in late 2019, and most have had a negligible effect on its transmissi­bility or severity. But the British variant has shown in several studies to be up to 70 per cent more infectious than normal virus strains.

The mutation could be the start of problems for spike vaccines. They should all be effective at the moment but we worry about further mutations occurring.

RAVI GUPTA

 ?? (AFP) ?? Healthcare staff attend to a patient inside the temporary ward at Steve Biko Academic Hospital, in Pretoria on Monday
(AFP) Healthcare staff attend to a patient inside the temporary ward at Steve Biko Academic Hospital, in Pretoria on Monday

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