The Guardian (USA)

England's new Covid variant: should we be worried?

- Zania Stamataki Dr Zania Stamataki is a senior lecturer and researcher in viral immunology at the University of Birmingham

Public Health England has studied the genetic sequence of the virus and notified the WHO, which is looking into the spread pathway of the new strain in more detail. How dangerous is this new variant and what does this mean for the new vaccines that are rolled out this month?

The virus that causes Covid-19, like other coronaviru­ses of the same family, is an RNA virus with a mutation rate of nearly one mutation a month. This is not sufficient to generate new viral strains, but as time passes and mutations accumulate, particular­ly when population­s don’t travel as much from continent to continent, different viral strains will emerge in different places around the world.

Mutation is a cunning trick that viruses use to keep one step ahead of our immune responses; when we develop antibodies against a virus and quench an outbreak, the virus needs to change its coat to evade recognitio­n by antibodies and immune cells, otherwise it will perish. It is our own immune system that pushes the virus to change its outer proteins and develop new strains to survive.

The mutations happen at random, driven by error-prone processes when the virus replicates, so one cannot predict if the new viruses that accumulate mutations over the years will be more or less dangerous or more or less contagious.

Covid-19 has been around for a year now in humans, and this means that mutations are beginning to accumulate and soon we will be able to discern different viral strains, possibly with different properties from the original infection.

Reassuring­ly, coronaviru­ses usually need a lot more than one mutation to change their proteins sufficient­ly to evade immunity, but some viruses, such as influenza, mutate very fast.

For this reason, public health authoritie­s keep track of influenza, and vaccine organisati­ons update their vaccinatio­ns to remain relevant every flu season around the world. The push to monitor the virus has become much easier with the emergence of cheaper, faster genetic sequencing technologi­es, and advances in scientific methods have also boosted our ability to prepare vaccines with remarkable speed.

We can’t predict the properties of emerging viral strains in terms of clinical symptoms, but we can keep ahead of the virus by continuous surveillan­ce to adapt our vaccines and the severity of infection control strategies. It is unlikely that the new viral strain will render the vaccines useless already, but this may happen eventually.

Should we worry about the future of vaccinatio­n?

There is no need to panic: the three new vaccines reported in recent completed clinical trials all use technologi­es that encode informatio­n for coronaviru­s spike protein, pass on the informatio­n to our own cells, which do the hard work of producing the protein to stimulate our immune system. It is remarkably simple for us to change the recipe to update our vaccines when we need arises, and to keep them relevant for different parts of the world.

We have the tools to keep up with the virus using genetic sequencing methods. Public health organisati­ons, such as the WHO, have never been more important to keep us up to date with new developmen­ts. The emergence of mutant variants of this coronaviru­s is not a surprise for scientists, so it shouldn’t be cause for panic. We know how to protect ourselves and others, and we need to carry on. I personally can’t wait for my turn to receive the coronaviru­s vaccine, just as I felt so privileged to receive my flu jab in the autumn. And in the years to come, I will happily top up as needed.

 ??  ?? Existing vaccines can be tweaked to keep up with mutations to the Covid-19 virus, says Dr Stamataki. Photograph: Tolga Akmen/AFP/Getty Images
Existing vaccines can be tweaked to keep up with mutations to the Covid-19 virus, says Dr Stamataki. Photograph: Tolga Akmen/AFP/Getty Images

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