City
Epaper

'JN.1 has numerous changes never seen in previous variants'

By IANS | Updated: December 26, 2023 19:55 IST

New Delhi, Dec 26 JN.1 has numerous changes that have never been seen in previous variants, according to ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Dec 26 JN.1 has numerous changes that have never been seen in previous variants, according to experts on Tuesday.

First detected in Luxembourg in August, JN.1 is currently present in about 41 countries, including India.

Due to its rapid spread, the World Health Organisation (WHO) has classified JN.1 as a separate variant of interest (VOI), from the parent lineage BA.2.86. It was previously classified as VOI as part of BA.2.86 sublineages.

Till date, India reportedly has 69 cases of JN.1 variant -- from Goa, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, and Telangana.

JN.1 variant is a descendent lineage of Omicron sub-variant BA.2.86, with the earliest sample collected on August 25, 2023.

In comparison with BA.2.86, JN.1 has the additional L455S mutation in the spike protein -- which has immune-evasion properties.

"JN.1 is an all new variant with numerous changes that had never been seen in any commonly circulating lineage before. This is unlike other recent variants, which were merely a few mutations from their predecessor," Dr Rajeev Jayadevan, co-chairman of the National Indian Medical Association Covid Task Force, told IANS.

"Therefore, the disease patterns from an immune evasiveness and spread capability of this variant needs careful attention," he added.

He said immune invasiveness of a variant as the ability of the virus to overcome the existing immune response within an individual.

The WHO, in its latest epidemiological update, said that the global number of new Covid-19 cases has increased by 52 per cent during the last one month. The UN health body also reported an increase in hospital, ICU admissions as well as deaths globally.

While EG.5 remains to be the most reported VOI globally, as per the WHO, JN.1 could increase the burden of respiratory infections in many countries, it said.

"With the limited information available, we are aware that JN.1 has suddenly increased in numbers around the world, and is rapidly displacing the earlier circulating sublineage XBB. This means that JN.1 has the ability to overcome immunity generated by prior infection, vaccination, booster or any combinations of the above," Dr Jayadevan said.

Scientists Vinod Scaria and Bani Jolly in a post on X.com stated that JN.1’s "capability for immune escape from antibodies is elicited due to prior infections or vaccines. The immune escape would mean reinfections would pick up significantly".

However, "there is no evidence to suggest that JN.1 could pose a significant more threat to public health compared to other variants in circulation", the scientist duo said, adding "the high immune escape property would mean JN.1 could out-compete other variants".

"What remains to be seen is an analysis of deaths that occurred during this wave with critical evaluation of the reasons that led to the death. At this time it appears that death was primarily caused by aggravation of existing health conditions, in otherwise frail individuals. A better picture will emerge in the coming weeks," Dr Jayadevan said.

Dr Ishwar Gilada, Consultant in Infectious Diseases Unison Medicare and Research Centre, Mumbai called on to increase wastewater surveillance and genome sequencing in the country.

"With wastewater, we can predict what can happen in the next 10 to 20 days in that particular town or municipal corporation area or a big city.

"Whole genome sequencing can help you know whether any new sub variant of Covid is coming," he told IANS.

Meanwhile, the Health Ministry said on Tuesday reported the number of active Covid cases has gone up to 4,170. Three new fatalities were also reported from Karnataka.

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

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalUS President Trump, First Lady Melania arrive at Winfield House in London

InternationalMalta keen on India-EU FTA negotiations, looking to expand trade: Ambassador Reuben Gauci

International"We have a deal on TikTok, will speak to Xi Jinping to confirm everything up," says Trump

InternationalMoS Pabitra Margherita meets Australia PM Albanese at Port Moresby during Papua New Guinea I-day celebrations

Other SportsAsia Cup: Richie Richardson likely to officiate Pakistan–UAE clash, say sources

International Realted Stories

International"India is putting a lot of resources to help deliver technology for future," Chairman of APACMed says

InternationalVice President CP Radhakrishnan meets Mauritius PM Ramgoolam, discussions on trade and economics held

InternationalTrump calls PM Modi to convey birthday wishes, expresses gratitude for support on "ending" Ukraine conflict

InternationalAustralian MP Tim Watts meets Maharashtra Dy CM Shinde, discusses boosting ties in agriculture, med-tech, education

InternationalPM Modi thanks "friend" Donald Trump for birthday greetings; says committed to taking ties to new heights