“New coronavirus variants seem to be cropping up
everywhere. There's one from the U.K., which is more contagious and already
circulating in the United States. There's one from South Africa, which is
forcing Moderna and Pfizer to reformulate their COVID-19 vaccines and create ‘booster’
shots, just to make sure the vaccines maintain their efficacies.
“But
for some scientists, the most worrying variant might be the newest one. A
variant called P.1, which emerged in early December in Manaus, Brazil, and by
mid-January had already caused a massive resurgence in cases across the city of
2 million people.
“On
Monday [Jan. 25], officials detected the
first confirmed case of P.1 in the U.S., specifically in Minnesota. The state
Department of Health picked up the case by randomly sequencing 50 nasal swabs
from positive patients each week. The person infected with P.1. had previously
traveled to Brazil.
“‘If you were to ask me right now, what's most concerning
of all the things that I've heard so far, it's the fact that they are reporting
a sudden increase in cases in Manaus, Brazil,’ virus expert Jeremy Luban at the
University of Massachusetts told NPR two weeks ago before the variant arrived
in the United States. ‘Manaus already had 75% of people infected [in the spring
of last year].’
“The
concern with P.1 is twofold: Scientists don't understand why the variant has
spread so explosively in Brazil, and the variant carries a particularly
dangerous set of mutations. While the variant from the U.K. took about three
months to dominate the outbreak in England, P.1 took only about a month to
dominate the outbreak in Manaus.
“In addition, Manaus had already been hit extremely
hard by the virus in April. One study estimated that the population should have
reached herd immunity and the virus shouldn't be able to spread easily in the
community. So why would the city see an even bigger surge 10 months later?
Could P.1 be evading the antibodies made against the previous version of the
virus, making reinfections easier? Could it just be significantly more
contagious? Could both be true?
“‘While we don't know exactly why this variant has
been so apparently successful in Brazil, none of the explanations on the table
are good,’ epidemiologist Bill Hanage at Harvard University wrote on
Twitter.
“Reinfections
are a serious concern for several reasons. First off, like the variant from
South Africa, P.1 carries a cluster of mutations along the surface of the virus
where antibodies — especially the potent antibodies — like to bind. ‘They are
kind of the major targets of the immune system,’ said virus expert Penny Moore at
the National Institute for Communicable Diseases in South Africa and the
University of KwaZulu-Natal. ‘So when we see a whole lot of mutations in [those
surfaces], it raises the possibility that the mutations might be conferring
immune escape.’ That is, the mutations are helping the virus evade antibodies
or escape recognition by them. In essence, the mutations are providing the
virus with a type of invisibility cloak.
“To
test out this hypothesis, Moore and her colleagues took blood serum from 44
people infected with the previous version of the virus and checked to see if
the antibodies in that serum still worked against the new variant from South
Africa. Or did the antibodies lose their sensitivity?
“‘Indeed
that's what we saw,’ she said. ‘In fact, it was really quite a dramatic
drop-off in sensitivity. We saw that in half of the serum, the antibodies were
significantly less effective against the new variant [from South Africa].’ So
far, scientists haven't tested out P.1 in similar neutralization experiments,
but P.1 has two mutations that scientists have already shown reduce
antibody binding.
“And
thus, now we have a game of ‘cat and mouse,’ said virus expert Ravi Gupta,
between the virus and the vaccine. The virus finds ways around the vaccine (and
our immune system), said Gupta, and so the manufacturers have to reformulate
the vaccines (or else we run the risk of getting infected twice). ‘We've been
here before with the flu. We're having to live with influenza and figure out a
way of staying ahead of the virus by making vaccines on a yearly basis,’ said
Gupta at the University of Cambridge. ‘So, I can imagine that we'll be doing
something similar with [the] coronavirus. Eventually we'll need to design
different vaccines that are targeting different parts of the virus — ones that
the virus finds harder to change.’
“This process is going to cost the world a great
deal of money — and take time, Gupta added, ‘I don't think there's going to be
a single solution that just comes along in 2021 that says, 'That's it, we're
done. The coronavirus is going to cause a long-term disruption’” Michaeleen
Doucleff, NPR).
Why Scientists Are
Very Worried About the Variant from Brazil (NPR).
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