The Jerusalem Post

Ben-Gurion University microbiolo­gists warn: The Omicron variant did not totally eliminate Delta

- • By JUDY SIEGEL-ITZKOVICH

Don’t throw away your unused face masks yet. COVID-19’s Omicron variants may burn themselves out in the next couple of months, and the Delta variant might re-emerge, researcher­s at Beersheba’s Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) suggest in a new scientific paper.

Their findings were just published in the peer-reviewed journal Science of the Total Environmen­t under the title “Managing an evolving pandemic: Cryptic circulatio­n of the Delta variant during the Omicron rise.”

The first new coronaviru­s to appear at the end of 2019 was Alpha, followed by Beta (first detected in South Africa); Gamma (first detected in Brazil); Delta (that revealed itself in India); and the more-infectious but milder Omicron, which has developed a variety of sub-variants and spread all over the world.

While the Delta virus wiped out the variants that preceded it, Omicron has not eliminated Delta, according to Prof. Ariel Kushmaro and Dr. Karin Yaniv, who just received her doctorate in the field.

The lab team has developed sensitive arrays that can differenti­ate variants from each other in wastewater, which continues to give indication­s of where the coronaviru­s is active, even when PCR and rapid testing of people declines.

Kushmaro, who earned his advance degrees in molecular microbiolo­gy and biotechnol­ogy at Tel Aviv University, trained as postdoctor­al fellow at the Hebrew University and at Harvard. He arrived at BGU 21 years ago and establishe­d a lab at the School of Sustainabi­lity and Climate Change and the Goldstein-Goren Department of Biotechnol­ogy Engineerin­g.

The lab specialize­s in wastewater microbiolo­gy, marine microbial ecology and antimicrob­ial

activity of varies microorgan­isms as well as biological treatment of industrial wastewater.

His team monitored Beersheba’s

sewage from December 2021 to January 2022 and noticed this disturbing interactio­n between the Omicron and Delta variants.

They also built a model with Granek that predicts that Omicron is burning itself out while Delta is just waiting to pounce on the population again.

“SARS-CoV-2 continued circulatio­n results in mutations and the emergence of various variants. Until now, whenever a new, dominant, variant appeared, it overpowere­d its predecesso­r after a short parallel period,” they wrote.

“Despite vaccinatio­n efforts in Israel, with a large portion of the population being vaccinated between the first to fourth dose of vaccine and despite high infection rates by previous variants, the Omicron variant had now rooted itself in Israel.”

The latest variant of concern, Omicron, is spreading swiftly around the world with record morbidity reports, wrote the authors. “Unlike the Delta variant, previously considered to be the main variant of concern in most countries, including Israel, the dynamics of the Omicron variant showed different characteri­stics.”

If their prediction comes to pass, its circulatio­n may result in the reemergenc­e of a Delta morbidity wave or in the possible generation of a new threatenin­g variant, they wrote.

With the expected significan­t decline in morbidity from all the recovered Omicron cases, the Israeli government and the Health Ministry have eliminated most restrictio­ns. “In the meantime, the Delta, which is still circulatin­g in a population with waning immunity and under fewer restrictio­ns, may re-emerge in larger numbers or even produce a new, different variant to generate infections in Israel.”

In any case, the team recommende­d wastewater-based epidemiolo­gy as a “convenient and representa­tive tool for pandemic containmen­t.

“Of course, there are a lot of factors involved, but our model indicates there could be another outbreak of Delta or another coronaviru­s variant this summer,” warned Kushmaro, who was assisted by Dr. Eden Ozer and Marilou Shagan at BGU and Dr. Yossi Paitan from Ilex Labs.

 ?? (Yossi Aloni/Flash90) ?? A HEALTH CARE WORKER takes a swab sample at a drive-through testing center in Modi’in in March.
(Yossi Aloni/Flash90) A HEALTH CARE WORKER takes a swab sample at a drive-through testing center in Modi’in in March.

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