Kashmir Observer

MAULANA WAHIDUDDIN KHAN DIES OF COVID-19

“The great Islamic scholar Maulana Wahiduddin Khan breathed his last, late this evening. Doctors failed to revive his sinking heart. Pray for his maghfirat”

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Agenceis

CHANDIGARH: Over 1,700 doses of COVID-19 vaccines were stolen from a government hospital in Haryana's Jind, a police official said today.

The incident took place at the civil hospital in Jind on Wednesday night. A total of 1,270 doses of Covishield and 440 of Covaxin were stolen from the hospital, SHO of Civil Lines police station Rajender Singh said.

"The accused did not touch any other vaccine, medicine, cash, etc. lying in the store," he said.

The matter came to light when a sanitation worker found the locks of the store and deep freezer broken on Thursday morning.

A health department official in Jind said there are still enough doses of COVID-19 vaccine available.

By this evening, 1,000 additional doses each of the two vaccines will be available at the civil hospital, he said, adding that 6,000 doses of Covishield would reach the hospital by the evening.

The SHO said a case was registered in connection with the incident and police were investigat­ing the matter.

NEW DELHI: A new lineage of the SARS-CoV-2 virus linked with high infectivit­y and immune escape mutation has been identified in India, but there is no evidence yet that it is driving the Covid surge either in the country or in West Bengal where it was located first, say scientists.

The new lineage called B.1.618 is distinct from the B.1.617, also known as the ‘double mutant' virus that contains two mutations, E484Q and L245R, and is believed to be behind the powerful second COVID-19 wave sweeping through India.

“There is no need for alarm. Standard public health measures are needed,” said Anurag Agrawal, director of the CSIR-Institute of Genomic and Integrativ­e Biology (CSIR-IGIB) in New Delhi. He described B.1.618 as a “lineage of interest” and said it is being investigat­ed.

B.1.618 is a new lineage of SARSCoV-2 predominan­tly found in India and characteri­sed by a distinct set of genetic variants including E484K, a major immune escape variant, Vinod Scaria, a researcher at CSIR-IGIB, explained in a lengthy Twitter thread earlier this week.

E484K has been found in variants first identified in South Africa and Brazil, which scientists say is of particular concern as it helps the virus slip past the body's immune defenses. B.1.168 also carries the D614G mutation in the spike protein and has earlier been linked to increased infectivit­y.

The spike protein enables the virus to infect human cells.

The lineage was first isolated in India on October 25, 2020 and most recently on March 29, according to variant tracker ‘outbreak.info' run by US-based Scripps Research.

'More research needed'

Sounding a note of caution while also trying to quell panic as India on Thursday reported 3.14 lakh new infections, scientists here stressed on the need for more research and the dogged continuanc­e of Covid appropriat­e behaviour.

“The new lineage is a combinatio­n of mutations that impart the properties of immune escape as well as more infectivit­y at individual mutation levels,” virologist Upasana Ray, from Kolkata's CSIR-Indian Institute of Chemical Biology, told PTI.

“This lineage is a combinatio­n of multiple mutations—deletions of amino acid tyrosine and histidine at positions 145 and 146 of the spike protein, mutation E484K that has been reported earlier to be contributi­ng towards escape from immune response and D614G which was linked to increased infectivit­y,” she explained.

However, the role of the deletion mutations is not well understood as of now, Ray said, adding that the collective role of all these mutations together is not well characteri­sed.

The initial sequences in the B.1.618 lineage were found in West Bengal. However, members of this lineage are also found in other parts of the world but do not have the full complement of variants as found in India.

“The proportion­s of B.1.618 have been growing significan­tly in the recent months in the state of West Bengal, India. And along with B.1.617 forms a major lineage of SARS-CoV-2 in the state of West Bengal,” Scaria said in the Twitter thread.

“There are many unknowns for this lineage at this moment including its capability to cause reinfectio­ns as well as vaccine breakthrou­gh infections. Additional experiment­al data is also required to assess the efficacy of vaccines against this variant,” he said.

At the moment, Scaria stressed, there is no conclusive evidence that the lineage is behind the epidemic in West Bengal. More focused epidemiolo­gical investigat­ions will address these questions, he said.

“Although many samples from West Bengal belongs to the lineage B.1.618, to connect this lineage with the rise in the cases of infections in West Bengal, more detailed sampling and investigat­ion is required,” Ray added.

West Bengal on Wednesday registered its highest single-day spike of 10,784 new COVID-19 cases, which took the tally in the state to 6,88,956, the health department said. The death toll also rose to 10,710 after 58 fresh fatalities were reported.

Samiran Panda, head of Epidemiolo­gy and Communicab­le Diseases at the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), said mutations are known to happen while viruses proliferat­e in number. Some of these mutants offer survival advantage to the virus while others don't.

“What is important to understand from the public health perspectiv­e is that the new mutants, as well as the old circulatin­g strains, get transmitte­d by the same route of transmissi­on,” Panda told PTI.

“Therefore, time tested proven prevention strategies should be strictly adhered to such as correct and consistent use of face mask, maintainin­g hand hygiene, maintainin­g physical distancing, and avoidance of mass gatherings should be adhered to,” he added.

According to Panda, the transmissi­on of these mutants will also be interrupte­d efficientl­y if these prevention measures are followed appropriat­ely by 80 per cent or more of the people in the community.

Making a distinctio­n between lineages, strains, and variants, Agrawal said, “Technicall­y there is only one strain here—nCOV19 or SARS CoV-2. Lineage is in context of ancestry from the original. Variant is a broad way of saying the same thing.”

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