City
Epaper

Australian researchers uncover evolutionary 'bursts' in Covid variants

By IANS | Updated: February 25, 2022 15:55 IST

Sydney, Feb 25 A new research led by Australia's Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity found that ...

Open in App

Sydney, Feb 25 A new research led by Australia's Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity found that the Covid virus is for short periods able to speed up its evolutionary pace and create variants faster than other viruses.

The research, published in the Molecular Biology and Evolution journal on Friday, detailed "mutational bursts" in the Covid virus before returning to its "normal" rate of mutation.

Lead researcher Sebastian Duchene from the University of Melbourne and his team conducted hundreds of genome sequences of strains of the novel coronavirus in an attempt to understand the mechanism by which "variants of concern" such as Delta or Omicron emerge, Xinhua news agency reported.

"Initially it was believed that SARS-CoV-2 must have increased its evolutionary rate in general, but actually it's the virus's ability to temporarily increase its speed which is causing the difference in pace," said Duchene.

The paper revealed that successive variants of concern such as Beta and Delta had mutated faster than earlier variants, noting differences of months to weeks.

It noted that the "substitution rate", the number of new mutations in each generation, would need to be four times faster than the background rate in order to generate the four variants of concern analyzed.

"The Delta variant, for example, emerged within just six weeks from its ancestral form."

Duchene added that factors such as the strong natural selection of Covid to avoid immunity and high levels of transmission, especially among unvaccinated populations, could all play a role in these periods of rapid mutation.

He said the findings highlighted the importance of maintaining genome sequencing efforts to ensure the early detection of new variants.

"With this virus evolving so rapidly, early detection is paramount in enabling us to monitor and respond to the virus," said Duchene.

"Anything we can do to have less virus out there will help reduce the probability that new variants will emerge," Duchene added.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: The Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and ImmunitySebastian ducheneaustraliaSydneyMolecular biologySahil kiniNavy australia
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalAliens in Australia? Senator Ralph Babet Claims ‘Alien-Human Hybrids’ Living Among Humans

InternationalTropical Cyclone Narelle: Australian Skies Turned Blood-Red Due to Cyclonic Storm? Here's What Happened

CricketIND W vs AUS W LIVE Cricket Streaming: When and Where To Watch India vs Australia 1st T20I Match

InternationalAustralia: 3 Killed, 4 Injured in Shooting at Lake Cargelligo in New South Wales; Police Ask Residents to Stay Indoors

CricketDamien Martyn: Former Australia World Cup Winner Hospitalised in Induced Coma

Health Realted Stories

Health'Murderous Corruption': Rahul Gandhi hits out at AINRC-BJP govt over 'fake drugs' in Puducherry

HealthPakistan lacks coherent plan to combat HIV as cases continue to rise: Report

HealthAIIMS Delhi launches VR training centre for medical students

HealthCritical illness protection gap widens in India despite rising employer health coverage: Report

HealthStudy finds rising cancer rates especially after breast cancer treatment