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US SCIENTISTS INVESTIGAT­E OREGON MUTATION OF UK COVID-19 VARIANT

▶ A strain discovered in the US state can, to an extent, evade the body’s vaccine response

- DANIEL BARDSLEY

Officials in the US state of Oregon have identified a new mutant form of the highly transmissi­ble coronaviru­s variant first found in the UK.

The new type has an important mutation in its spike protein that is thought to make the virus better able to evade the protection given by vaccines or previous infection.

Known as E484K, the mutation is also found in the previously identified South African and Brazilian coronaviru­s variants that some studies indicate are more difficult for vaccines to combat. It is also present in a New York variant.

US media are reporting that the new, mutated form of the UK variant was found among 13 samples collected from a Covid-19 outbreak in “a healthcare setting”.

Of the samples, 10 contained the UK variant – which has resulted in thousands of cases across the US – while one contained the new version.

Genetic analysis of the samples reportedly indicates that the new mutant was picked up from elsewhere in the community and did not evolve within the person the sample was taken from.

“We didn’t import this from elsewhere in the world – it occurred spontaneou­sly,” Dr Brian O’Roak, a professor at Oregon Health and Science University, told The New York Times.

Because the new mutant combines high transmissi­bility with an increased ability to evade the immune system after vaccinatio­n, it could outcompete the original form of the UK variant, known to scientists as B117, which is thought to have emerged in south-east England in September.

In a document on Sars-CoV-2 variants released last month, Public Health England wrote that E484K was “currently the mutation with most evidence of causing antigenic change”. Antigens are foreign substances recognised by the immune system.

“Several independen­t studies showing the impact of different antigenic variants have concluded E484K is among the single mutations with the greatest impact,” the document read.

It is “potentiall­y more concerning”, the document stated, when found with N501Y, a mutation found in the UK, Brazilian and South African variants.

Public Health England estimates that the UK variant is 30 to 50 per cent more transmissi­ble than original forms of the coronaviru­s, so the new mutation is likely to be similarly easy to pass on. It could become even more prevalent if vaccines are less effective at stopping it from being transmitte­d.

While new variants are concerning, Prof David Taylor, a professor emeritus of pharmaceut­ical and public health policy at University College London, said they were unlikely to scupper efforts to control the pandemic.

“Will the vaccines be tweakable? Yes. It will cost money and you will have to have another vaccinatio­n round, but it will be doable,” he said.

“We should be celebratin­g the vaccines. [Researcher­s have] a technical base for improving them if and when necessary.”

Vaccine makers have already developed updated versions of their vaccines to cope with emerging variants, especially those first identified in Brazil and South Africa.

New versions of the Moderna, Oxford-AstraZenec­a and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines, among others, could be released later this year.

Updated vaccines are likely to go through streamline­d testing procedures compared to those faced by the original vaccines, which were subject to extensive laboratory and clinical trials.

They could be given as booster shots to people already vaccinated, or combined with the existing vaccines as a bivalent vaccine, one that provides protection against two types of antigen.

While some shots have reduced efficacy against the new variants, developers of other vaccines, such as Russia’s Sputnik V, say tests indicate their products continue to perform well against them.

New variants arise because, when viruses replicate their genetic material as they reproduce, mistakes or mutations happen.

Mutations harmful to the virus are weeded out by natural selection, but those that make the pathogen better able to reproduce and spread tend to become more numerous within the virus population.

While several coronaviru­s variants have evolved, experts say the rate at which the pathogen mutates is actually quite low for viruses and slower than that of influenza, for example.

Just as amended vaccines are being formulated to cope with coronaviru­s variants, so new vaccines are typically introduced annually to cope with changes in influenza.

Known as E484K, the mutation is also found in the previously identified South African and Brazilian coronaviru­s variants

 ?? AP ?? A pharmacist last month gives a Covid-19 vaccine at a clinic in Portland, Oregon, where the new variant has been found
AP A pharmacist last month gives a Covid-19 vaccine at a clinic in Portland, Oregon, where the new variant has been found

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