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109


Variant-specific introduction and dispersal dynamics of SARS-CoV-2 in New York City-from Alpha to Omicron

Dellicour, Simon; Hong, Samuel L; Hill, Verity; Dimartino, Dacia; Marier, Christian; Zappile, Paul; Harkins, Gordon W; Lemey, Philippe; Baele, Guy; Duerr, Ralf; Heguy, Adriana
Since the latter part of 2020, SARS-CoV-2 evolution has been characterised by the emergence of viral variants associated with distinct biological characteristics. While the main research focus has centred on the ability of new variants to increase in frequency and impact the effective reproductive number of the virus, less attention has been placed on their relative ability to establish transmission chains and to spread through a geographic area. Here, we describe a phylogeographic approach to estimate and compare the introduction and dispersal dynamics of the main SARS-CoV-2 variants-Alpha, Iota, Delta, and Omicron-that circulated in the New York City area between 2020 and 2022. Notably, our results indicate that Delta had a lower ability to establish sustained transmission chains in the NYC area and that Omicron (BA.1) was the variant fastest to disseminate across the study area. The analytical approach presented here complements non-spatially-explicit analytical approaches that seek a better understanding of the epidemiological differences that exist among successive SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern.
PMID: 37071654
ISSN: 1553-7374
CID: 5466082

Delta-Omicron recombinant escapes therapeutic antibody neutralization

Duerr, Ralf; Zhou, Hao; Tada, Takuya; Dimartino, Dacia; Marier, Christian; Zappile, Paul; Wang, Guiqing; Plitnick, Jonathan; Griesemer, Sara B.; Girardin, Roxanne; Machowski, Jessica; Bialosuknia, Sean; Lasek-Nesselquist, Erica; Hong, Samuel L.; Baele, Guy; Dittmann, Meike; Ortigoza, Mila B.; Prasad, Prithiv J.; McDonough, Kathleen; Landau, Nathaniel R.; St George, Kirsten; Heguy, Adriana
The emergence of recombinant viruses is a threat to public health, as recombination may integrate variant-specific features that together result in escape from treatment or immunity. The selective advantages of recombinant SARS-CoV-2 isolates over their parental lineages remain unknown. We identified a Delta-Omicron (AY.45-BA.1) recombinant in an immunosuppressed transplant recipient treated with monoclonal antibody Sotrovimab. The single recombination breakpoint is located in the spike N-terminal domain adjacent to the Sotrovimab binding site. While Delta and BA.1 are sensitive to Sotrovimab neutralization, the Delta-Omicron recombinant is highly resistant. To our knowledge, this is the first described instance of recombination between circulating SARS-CoV-2 variants as a functional mechanism of resistance to treatment and immune escape.
SCOPUS:85148349152
ISSN: 2589-0042
CID: 5425942

Identification of the First SARS-CoV-2 Lineage B.1.1.529 Virus Detected in Europe

Vanmechelen, Bert; Logist, Anne-Sophie; Wawina-Bokalanga, Tony; Verlinden, Jens; Martí-Carreras, Joan; Geenen, Caspar; Slechten, Bram; Cuypers, Lize; André, Emmanuel; Baele, Guy; Maes, Piet
We report the complete genome sequence of a severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) Omicron variant (lineage B.1.1.529) from a Belgian patient with a history of recent travel to Egypt. At the time of writing, this genome constituted the first confirmed case of an infection with the Omicron variant in Europe.
PMCID:8812313
PMID: 35112910
ISSN: 2576-098x
CID: 5170822

Phylogeography Reveals Association between Swine Trade and the Spread of Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea Virus in China and across the World

He, Wan-Ting; Bollen, Nena; Xu, Yi; Zhao, Jin; Dellicour, Simon; Yan, Ziqing; Gong, Wenjie; Zhang, Cheng; Zhang, Letian; Lu, Meng; Lai, Alexander; Suchard, Marc A; Ji, Xiang; Tu, Changchun; Lemey, Philippe; Baele, Guy; Su, Shuo
The ongoing SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome)-CoV (coronavirus)-2 pandemic has exposed major gaps in our knowledge on the origin, ecology, evolution, and spread of animal coronaviruses. Porcine epidemic diarrhea virus (PEDV) is a member of the genus Alphacoronavirus in the family Coronaviridae that may have originated from bats and leads to significant hazards and widespread epidemics in the swine population. The role of local and global trade of live swine and swine-related products in disseminating PEDV remains unclear, especially in developing countries with complex swine production systems. Here, we undertake an in-depth phylogeographic analysis of PEDV sequence data (including 247 newly sequenced samples) and employ an extension of this inference framework that enables formally testing the contribution of a range of predictor variables to the geographic spread of PEDV. Within China, the provinces of Guangdong and Henan were identified as primary hubs for the spread of PEDV, for which we estimate live swine trade to play a very important role. On a global scale, the United States and China maintain the highest number of PEDV lineages. We estimate that, after an initial introduction out of China, the United States acted as an important source of PEDV introductions into Japan, Korea, China, and Mexico. Live swine trade also explains the dispersal of PEDV on a global scale. Given the increasingly global trade of live swine, our findings have important implications for designing prevention and containment measures to combat a wide range of livestock coronaviruses.
PMCID:8826572
PMID: 34951645
ISSN: 1537-1719
CID: 5170772

Hunting alters viral transmission and evolution in a large carnivore

Fountain-Jones, Nicholas M; Kraberger, Simona; Gagne, Roderick B; Gilbertson, Marie L J; Trumbo, Daryl R; Charleston, Michael; Salerno, Patricia E; Chris Funk, W; Crooks, Kevin; Logan, Kenneth; Alldredge, Mathew; Dellicour, Simon; Baele, Guy; Didelot, Xavier; VandeWoude, Sue; Carver, Scott; Craft, Meggan E
Hunting can fundamentally alter wildlife population dynamics but the consequences of hunting on pathogen transmission and evolution remain poorly understood. Here, we present a study that leverages a unique landscape-scale quasi-experiment coupled with pathogen-transmission tracing, network simulation and phylodynamics to provide insights into how hunting shapes feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) dynamics in puma (Puma concolor). We show that removing hunting pressure enhances the role of males in transmission, increases the viral population growth rate and increases the role of evolutionary forces on the pathogen compared to when hunting was reinstated. Changes in transmission observed with the removal of hunting could be linked to short-term social changes while the male puma population increased. These findings are supported through comparison with a region with stable hunting management over the same time period. This study shows that routine wildlife management can have impacts on pathogen transmission and evolution not previously considered.
PMID: 35087217
ISSN: 2397-334x
CID: 5170812

Considerable escape of SARS-CoV-2 Omicron to antibody neutralization

Planas, Delphine; Saunders, Nell; Maes, Piet; Guivel-Benhassine, Florence; Planchais, Cyril; Buchrieser, Julian; Bolland, William-Henry; Porrot, Françoise; Staropoli, Isabelle; Lemoine, Frederic; Péré, Hélène; Veyer, David; Puech, Julien; Rodary, Julien; Baele, Guy; Dellicour, Simon; Raymenants, Joren; Gorissen, Sarah; Geenen, Caspar; Vanmechelen, Bert; Wawina-Bokalanga, Tony; Martí-Carreras, Joan; Cuypers, Lize; Sève, Aymeric; Hocqueloux, Laurent; Prazuck, Thierry; Rey, Félix A; Simon-Loriere, Etienne; Bruel, Timothée; Mouquet, Hugo; André, Emmanuel; Schwartz, Olivier
The SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant was first identified in November 2021 in Botswana and South Africa1-3. It has since spread to many countries and is expected to rapidly become dominant worldwide. The lineage is characterized by the presence of around 32 mutations in spike-located mostly in the N-terminal domain and the receptor-binding domain-that may enhance viral fitness and enable antibody evasion. Here we isolated an infectious Omicron virus in Belgium from a traveller returning from Egypt. We examined its sensitivity to nine monoclonal antibodies that have been clinically approved or are in development4, and to antibodies present in 115 serum samples from COVID-19 vaccine recipients or individuals who have recovered from COVID-19. Omicron was completely or partially resistant to neutralization by all monoclonal antibodies tested. Sera from recipients of the Pfizer or AstraZeneca vaccine, sampled five months after complete vaccination, barely inhibited Omicron. Sera from COVID-19-convalescent patients collected 6 or 12 months after symptoms displayed low or no neutralizing activity against Omicron. Administration of a booster Pfizer dose as well as vaccination of previously infected individuals generated an anti-Omicron neutralizing response, with titres 6-fold to 23-fold lower against Omicron compared with those against Delta. Thus, Omicron escapes most therapeutic monoclonal antibodies and, to a large extent, vaccine-elicited antibodies. However, Omicron is neutralized by antibodies generated by a booster vaccine dose.
PMID: 35016199
ISSN: 1476-4687
CID: 5170802

Context-specific emergence and growth of the SARS-CoV-2 Delta variant

McCrone, John T; Hill, Verity; Bajaj, Sumali; Pena, Rosario Evans; Lambert, Ben C; Inward, Rhys; Bhatt, Samir; Volz, Erik; Ruis, Christopher; Dellicour, Simon; Baele, Guy; Zarebski, Alexander E; Sadilek, Adam; Wu, Neo; Schneider, Aaron; Ji, Xiang; Raghwani, Jayna; Jackson, Ben; Colquhoun, Rachel; O'Toole, Áine; Peacock, Thomas P; Twohig, Kate; Thelwall, Simon; Dabrera, Gavin; Myers, Richard; Faria, Nuno R; Huber, Carmen; Bogoch, Isaac I; Khan, Kamran; du Plessis, Louis; Barrett, Jeffrey C; Aanensen, David M; Barclay, Wendy S; Chand, Meera; Connor, Thomas; Loman, Nicholas J; Suchard, Marc A; Pybus, Oliver G; Rambaut, Andrew; Kraemer, Moritz U G
The Delta variant of concern of SARS-CoV-2 has spread globally causing large outbreaks and resurgences of COVID-19 cases 1-3 . The emergence of Delta in the UK occurred on the background of a heterogeneous landscape of immunity and relaxation of non-pharmaceutical interventions 4,5 . Here we analyse 52,992 Delta genomes from England in combination with 93,649 global genomes to reconstruct the emergence of Delta, and quantify its introduction to and regional dissemination across England, in the context of changing travel and social restrictions. Through analysis of human movement, contact tracing, and virus genomic data, we find that the focus of geographic expansion of Delta shifted from India to a more global pattern in early May 2021. In England, Delta lineages were introduced >1,000 times and spread nationally as non-pharmaceutical interventions were relaxed. We find that hotel quarantine for travellers from India reduced onward transmission from importations; however the transmission chains that later dominated the Delta wave in England had been already seeded before restrictions were introduced. In England, increasing inter-regional travel drove Delta's nationwide dissemination, with some cities receiving >2,000 observable lineage introductions from other regions. Subsequently, increased levels of local population mixing, not the number of importations, was associated with faster relative growth of Delta. Among US states, we find that regions that previously experienced large waves also had faster Delta growth rates, and a model including interactions between immunity and human behaviour could accurately predict the rise of Delta there. Delta's invasion dynamics depended on fine scale spatial heterogeneity in immunity and contact patterns and our findings will inform optimal spatial interventions to reduce transmission of current and future VOCs such as Omicron.
PMCID:8722612
PMID: 34981069
ISSN: n/a
CID: 5170792

Context-specific emergence and growth of the SARS-CoV-2 Delta variant

Kraemer, Moritz; McCrone, John; Hill, Verity; Bajaj, Sumali; Evans-Pena, Rosario; Lambert, Ben; Inward, Rhys; Bhatt, Samir; Volz, Erik; Ruis, Christopher; Dellicour, Simon; Baele, Guy; Zarebski, Alexander; Sadilek, Adam; Wu, Neo; Schneider, Aaron; Ji, Xiang; Raghwani, Jayna; Jackson, Ben; Colquhoun, Rachel; O'Toole, Aine; Peacock, Thomas; Twohig, Kate; Thelwall, Simon; Dabrera, Gavin; Meyers, Richard; Faria, Nuno; Huber, Carmen; Khan, Kamran; Bogoch, Isaac; Plessis, Louis; Barrett, Jeffrey; Aanensen, David; Barclay, Wendy; Chand, Meera; Connor, Thomas; Loman, Nicholas; Suchard, Marc; Pybus, Oliver; Rambaut, Andrew
The Delta variant of concern of SARS-CoV-2 has spread globally causing large outbreaks and resurgences of COVID-19 cases. The emergence of Delta in the UK occurred on the background of a heterogeneous landscape of immunity and relaxation of non-pharmaceutical interventions. Here we analyse 52,992 Delta genomes from England in combination with 93,649 global genomes to reconstruct the emergence of Delta, and quantify its introduction to and regional dissemination across England, in the context of changing travel and social restrictions. Through analysis of human movement, contact tracing, and virus genomic data, we find that the focus of geographic expansion of Delta shifted from India to a more global pattern in early May 2021. In England, Delta lineages were introduced >1,000 times and spread nationally as non-pharmaceutical interventions were relaxed. We find that hotel quarantine for travellers from India reduced onward transmission from importations; however the transmission chains that later dominated the Delta wave in England had been already seeded before restrictions were introduced. In England, increasing inter-regional travel drove Delta's nationwide dissemination, with some cities receiving >2,000 observable lineage introductions from other regions. Subsequently, increased levels of local population mixing, not the number of importations, was associated with faster relative growth of Delta. Among US states, we find that regions that previously experienced large waves also had faster Delta growth rates, and a model including interactions between immunity and human behaviour could accurately predict the rise of Delta there. Delta’s invasion dynamics depended on fine scale spatial heterogeneity in immunity and contact patterns and our findings will inform optimal spatial interventions to reduce transmission of current and future VOCs such as Omicron.
PMCID:8722606
PMID: 34981043
ISSN: n/a
CID: 5170782

Global disparities in SARS-CoV-2 genomic surveillance

Brito, Anderson F; Semenova, Elizaveta; Dudas, Gytis; Hassler, Gabriel W; Kalinich, Chaney C; Kraemer, Moritz U G; Ho, Joses; Tegally, Houriiyah; Githinji, George; Agoti, Charles N; Matkin, Lucy E; Whittaker, Charles; Howden, Benjamin P; Sintchenko, Vitali; Zuckerman, Neta S; Mor, Orna; Blankenship, Heather M; de Oliveira, Tulio; Lin, Raymond T P; Siqueira, Marilda Mendonça; Resende, Paola Cristina; Vasconcelos, Ana Tereza R; Spilki, Fernando R; Aguiar, Renato Santana; Alexiev, Ivailo; Ivanov, Ivan N; Philipova, Ivva; Carrington, Christine V F; Sahadeo, Nikita S D; Gurry, Céline; Maurer-Stroh, Sebastian; Naidoo, Dhamari; von Eije, Karin J; Perkins, Mark D; van Kerkhove, Maria; Hill, Sarah C; Sabino, Ester C; Pybus, Oliver G; Dye, Christopher; Bhatt, Samir; Flaxman, Seth; Suchard, Marc A; Grubaugh, Nathan D; Baele, Guy; Faria, Nuno R
Genomic sequencing provides critical information to track the evolution and spread of SARS-CoV-2, optimize molecular tests, treatments and vaccines, and guide public health responses. To investigate the spatiotemporal heterogeneity in the global SARS-CoV-2 genomic surveillance, we estimated the impact of sequencing intensity and turnaround times (TAT) on variant detection in 167 countries. Most countries submit genomes >21 days after sample collection, and 77% of low and middle income countries sequenced <0.5% of their cases. We found that sequencing at least 0.5% of the cases, with a TAT <21 days, could be a benchmark for SARS-CoV-2 genomic surveillance efforts. Socioeconomic inequalities substantially impact our ability to quickly detect SARS-CoV-2 variants, and undermine the global pandemic preparedness.
PMCID:8404891
PMID: 34462754
ISSN: n/a
CID: 5170732

Emergence and spread of SARS-CoV-2 lineage B.1.620 with variant of concern-like mutations and deletions

Dudas, Gytis; Hong, Samuel L; Potter, Barney I; Calvignac-Spencer, Sébastien; Niatou-Singa, Frédéric S; Tombolomako, Thais B; Fuh-Neba, Terence; Vickos, Ulrich; Ulrich, Markus; Leendertz, Fabian H; Khan, Kamran; Huber, Carmen; Watts, Alexander; OlendraitÄ—, Ingrida; Snijder, Joost; Wijnant, Kim N; Bonvin, Alexandre M J J; Martres, Pascale; Behillil, Sylvie; Ayouba, Ahidjo; Maidadi, Martin Foudi; Djomsi, Dowbiss Meta; Godwe, Celestin; Butel, Christelle; Å imaitis, Aistis; GabrielaitÄ—, MiglÄ—; KatÄ—naitÄ—, Monika; Norvilas, Rimvydas; RaugaitÄ—, Ligita; Koyaweda, Giscard Wilfried; Kandou, Jephté Kaleb; Jonikas, Rimvydas; NasvytienÄ—, Inga; ŽemeckienÄ—, ŽivilÄ—; Gečys, Dovydas; TamuÅ¡auskaitÄ—, KamilÄ—; NorkienÄ—, Milda; VasiliÅ«naitÄ—, Emilija; ŽiogienÄ—, DanguolÄ—; Timinskas, Albertas; Å ukys, Marius; Å arauskas, Mantas; Alzbutas, Gediminas; Aziza, Adrienne Amuri; Lusamaki, Eddy Kinganda; Cigolo, Jean-Claude Makangara; Mawete, Francisca Muyembe; Lofiko, Emmanuel Lokilo; Kingebeni, Placide Mbala; Tamfum, Jean-Jacques Muyembe; Belizaire, Marie Roseline Darnycka; Essomba, René Ghislain; Assoumou, Marie Claire Okomo; Mboringong, Akenji Blaise; Dieng, Alle Baba; JuozapaitÄ—, DovilÄ—; Hosch, Salome; Obama, Justino; Ayekaba, Mitoha Ondo'o; Naumovas, Daniel; Pautienius, Arnoldas; Rafaï, Clotaire Donatien; VitkauskienÄ—, Astra; UgenskienÄ—, Rasa; GedvilaitÄ—, Alma; ÄŒereÅ¡kevičius, Darius; LesauskaitÄ—, Vaiva; Žemaitis, Lukas; GriÅ¡kevičius, Laimonas; Baele, Guy
Distinct SARS-CoV-2 lineages, discovered through various genomic surveillance initiatives, have emerged during the pandemic following unprecedented reductions in worldwide human mobility. We here describe a SARS-CoV-2 lineage - designated B.1.620 - discovered in Lithuania and carrying many mutations and deletions in the spike protein shared with widespread variants of concern (VOCs), including E484K, S477N and deletions HV69Δ, Y144Δ, and LLA241/243Δ. As well as documenting the suite of mutations this lineage carries, we also describe its potential to be resistant to neutralising antibodies, accompanying travel histories for a subset of European cases, evidence of local B.1.620 transmission in Europe with a focus on Lithuania, and significance of its prevalence in Central Africa owing to recent genome sequencing efforts there. We make a case for its likely Central African origin using advanced phylogeographic inference methodologies incorporating recorded travel histories of infected travellers.
PMCID:8486757
PMID: 34599175
ISSN: 2041-1723
CID: 5170762