The Morning Call

Variant keeps scientists scrambling

Omicron’s evolution presents challenges 1 year after discovery

- By Carl Zimmer

On Nov. 26, 2021, the World Health Organizati­on announced that a concerning new variant of the coronaviru­s, known as omicron, had been discovered in southern Africa.

It soon swept to dominance across the world, causing a record-breaking surge in cases.

Now, just over a year later, omicron still has biologists scrambling to keep up with its evolutiona­ry turns. The variant has exploded into hundreds of mutations, each with resistance to our immune defenses and its own alphanumer­ic name, like XBB, BQ.1.1 and CH.1.

“It’s hard to remember what is what,” said Jesse Bloom, a virus expert at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle.

But unless some radically different variant emerges, Bloom predicted, this confusing jumble of subvariant­s will endure, making it more challengin­g for scientists to plan new vaccines and treatments.

“There’s always going to be some soup of new variants out there,” he said.

When omicron emerged, it carried over 50 mutations that set it apart from other variants of the coronaviru­s.

Omicron surged to dominance in the weeks after its discovery because of its mutations. Some allowed the virus to slip inside cells more successful­ly. Others let it evade some antibodies from vaccines or previous infections.

Most antibodies stick to the “spike” proteins on the surface of coronaviru­ses, blocking them from entering our cells. But some of omicron’s mutations

changed parts of the spike protein so that some of the most potent antibodies could no longer stick to it.

As omicron multiplied, it continued to mutate. New versions emerged, but for the first few months, they replaced one another like a series of waves crashing on a beach. The first version, BA.1, was replaced by BA.2, then BA.5, both of which evaded some antibodies produced from earlier omicron infections.

But in February, Theodora Hatziioann­ou, a virus expert at Rockefelle­r University in New York, and her colleagues ran an experiment that suggested omicron was primed for an evolutiona­ry explosion.

Hatziioann­ou’s team tested omicron against 40 antibodies that could still block the variant. They discovered that it was remarkably easy for a few extra mutations to make

it resistant to almost all of those antibodies.

Surprising­ly, when the researcher­s added those same mutations to the spike protein from the original version of the coronaviru­s, there was no effect on its antibody resistance. Hatziioann­ou suspected that the large number of new mutations in omicron changed its evolutiona­ry landscape, making it much easier to evolve even more resistance.

“We were actually worried when we saw this,” she said.

In the months since, omicron has lived up to those worries. Thanks to the huge number of omicron infections, the virus has had more opportunit­y to mutate. And it has gained some of the concerning mutations that Hatziioann­ou and her colleagues identified in their experiment­s.

The new mutations are building up quickly,

most likely because they are providing the viruses with a big evolutiona­ry edge. In the first year of the pandemic, most people who were infected had no antibodies for COVID-19. Now most people do. So viruses that have extra resistance to antibodies easily outcompete others lacking it.

“The evolution that’s happening is the fastest rate it has been up to this point,” said Sergei Pond, a virus expert at Temple University in Philadelph­ia.

A single subvariant is not gaining all of the new mutations, however.

Ben Murrell, a computatio­nal biologist at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, and his colleagues are tracking more than 180 omicron subvariant­s that have independen­tly gained mutations causing them to grow faster than BA.5.

These subvariant­s are going through a process that Charles Darwin recognized some 160 years ago, called convergenc­e. Darwin noted how birds and bats independen­tly evolved wings that work very much the same way. Today, omicron subvariant­s are independen­tly escaping the same antibodies with mutations at the same spots on their spike proteins.

The competitio­n taking place in the subvariant swarm may be preventing one of them from taking over, at least for now. In the United States, the once-dominant BA.5 now accounts for just 19% of new cases. Its descendant BQ.1 has risen to 28%. And B.Q.1.1, a descendant of B.Q.1, is the cause of 29%. Thirteen other omicron subvariant­s make up the rest.

As each lineage gains more mutations, fewer types of antibodies work against them. Last month,

Yunlong Cao, a biochemist at Peking University, and his colleagues reported that XBB and three other subvariant­s had become entirely resistant to the antibodies in blood samples from people who were vaccinated or had COVID-19 infections.

That developmen­t threatens what had been one of the most important defenses against COVID-19: monoclonal antibodies. To create these treatments, scientists collected blood of COVID-19 patients early in the pandemic, isolated their most potent antibodies and made vast numbers of copies of the molecules. One formulatio­n, called Evusheld, can prevent people with compromise­d immune systems from getting infected. But as resistant subvariant­s become more common, these treatments will no longer work.

“I can’t really be confident whether or not monoclonal antibodies will play a major role in treatment going forward,” said Bloom of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center. “It’s going to be really important to design another generation of antibody cocktails that hopefully stand up longer.”

The latest booster shots produce spike proteins from both the original version of the virus and BA.5. Studies on people who have gotten this so-called bivalent booster show that their antibodies are better at neutralizi­ng BQ.1.1 and other new subvariant­s than the antibodies produced by the original COVID-19 vaccine. Even so, the subvariant­s can evade many of the bivalent antibodies.

Fortunatel­y, the new subvariant­s don’t seem to be deadlier than earlier forms of omicron. Despite their growing ability to evade antibodies, the subvariant­s will probably not be able to entirely escape immunity from vaccines or previous infections, Hatziioann­ou said.

 ?? KIM RAFF/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? People receive omicron booster shots Sept. 15 at an outdoor vaccinatio­n clinic in Salt Lake City.
KIM RAFF/THE NEW YORK TIMES People receive omicron booster shots Sept. 15 at an outdoor vaccinatio­n clinic in Salt Lake City.

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