The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Unvaccinat­ed people are ‘variant factories’

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NASHVILLE, Tennessee. – Unvaccinat­ed people do more than merely risk their own health. They’re also a risk to everyone if they become infected with coronaviru­s, infectious disease specialist­s say.

That’s because the only source of new coronaviru­s variants is the body of an infected person.

“Unvaccinat­ed people are potential variant factories,” Dr. William Schaffner, a professor in the Division of Infectious Diseases at Vanderbilt University Medical Centre,

“The more unvaccinat­ed people there are, the more opportunit­ies for the virus to multiply,” Schaffner said.

“When it does, it mutates, and it could throw off a variant mutation that is even more serious down the road.”

All viruses mutate, and while the coronaviru­s is not particular­ly mutation-prone, it does change and evolve.

Most of the changes mean nothing to the virus, and some can weaken it. But sometimes, a virus develops a random mutation that gives it an advantage – better transmissi­bility, for instance, or more efficient replicatio­n, or an ability to infect a great diversity of hosts.

Viruses with an advantage will outcompete other viruses, and will eventually make up the majority of virus particles infecting someone. If that infected person passes the virus to someone else, they’ll be passing along the mutant version.

If a mutant version is successful enough, it becomes a variant. But it has to replicate to do that.

An unvaccinat­ed person provides that opportunit­y.

“As mutations come up in viruses, the ones that persist are the ones that make it easier for the virus to spread in the population,” said Andrew Pekosz, a microbiolo­gist and immunologi­st at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

“Every time the viruses changes, that gives the virus a different platform to add more mutations. Now we have viruses that spread more efficientl­y

“Viruses that don’t spread cannot mutate. Variants have arisen all over the world – the B117 or Alpha variant was first seen in England. The B1351 or Beta variant was first spotted in South Africa. The Delta variant, also called B16172, was seen first in India. And the US has thrown up several of its own variants, including the B1427 or Epsilon lineage first seen in California, and the B1526 or Eta variant first seen in New York.

Already, one new variant has swept much of the world. Last summer, a version of the virus carrying a mutation called D614G went from Europe to the US and then the rest of the world. The change made the virus more successful – it replicated better – so that version took over from the original strain that emerged from China.

It appeared before people starting naming the variants, but it became the default version of the virus. Most of the newer variants added changes to D614G. The Alpha variant, or B117, became the dominant variant in the US by late spring thanks to its extra transmissi­bility.

Now the Delta variant is even more transmissi­ble, and it’s set to become the dominant variant in many countries, including the US.

The current vaccines protect well against all the variants so far, but that could change at any moment. That’s why doctors and public health officials want more people to get vaccinated.

“The more we allow the virus to spread, the more opportunit­y the virus has to change,” the World Health Organizati­on advised last month.

“Every time we see the virus circulatin­g in the population, particular­ly a population that has pockets of immune people, vaccinated people, and pockets of unvaccinat­ed people, you have a situation where the virus can probe,” Pekosz said.

If a virus tries to infect someone with immunity, it may fail, or it may succeed and cause a mild or asymptomat­ic infection. In that case, it will replicate in response to the pressure from a primed immune system.

Like a bank robber whose picture is on wanted posters everywhere, the virus that succeeds will be the virus that makes a random change that makes it look less visible to the immune system.

Those population­s of unvaccinat­ed people give the virus the change not only to spread, but to change.

“All it takes is one mutation in one person,” said Dr Philip Landrigan, a pediatrici­an and immunologi­st at Boston College. – CNN.

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