Shahid Jameel, Virologist, and Director, Trivedi School of Biosciences, Ashoka University
The spike protein of the coronavirus enables it to bind to the ACE2
receptor on host cells —a
process which studies have show to be crucial for the virus to enter the
cells and cause infection.
Variants of the novel coronavirus carrying two specific mutations in their
spike protein may
evade antibodies and make vaccines less effective, according to eminent
virologist Shahid
Jameel, who says the need of the hour is to improve surveillance for
"homegrown" lineages of
the virus.
Dr. Jameel, Director of the Trivedi School of Biosciences at Ashoka
University in Haryana,
said these two mutations would lead to a "drastic change" in the
structure of the part of the
spike protein that binds with antibodies, making vaccines less effective
against such variants.
The spike protein of the coronavirus enables it to bind to the ACE2
receptor on host cells —a
process which studies have show to be crucial for the virus to enter the
cells and cause infection.
According to the noted virologist, currently, the data is consistent with
poor activity of
neutralising antibodies against the South African lineage of the
coronavirus, which carries both
these mutations on the spike protein.
At GYANTEEKA, an online presentation-discussion series hosted by the Indian
National
Young Academy of Science (INYAS), New Delhi to spread awareness and bust
myths on
vaccines, Dr. Jameel said these mutations are in the 501st and 484th amino
acid building blocks
that make up the virus spike protein.
In his presentation on Saturday, the noted virologist said both these
mutations happen at the
interface where antibodies bind to the virus spike protein.
"At the interface, there are a couple of key amino acid residues. One
is the N501Y mutation.
Another emerging mutation is the E484K mutation, and if you notice, the 484
changes
negatively charged amino acid into positively charged amino acid," he
explained in his
presentation, citing studies.
"If you have both 501 and 484 mutations happening at the same time in
the same virus, that
virus is likely to either evade antibody response, or it is going to make
the antibodies less
effective. That's the take-home," he added.
On Tuesday, the Health ministry said four people in the country tested
positive for infection
with the South African variant, and one for the Brazil variant — a first
for India.
While in India, there have not been reports of community transmission of
these virus, Dr.
Jameel believes the need of the hour is also to look out for homegrown variants.
"Remember
India already has about 11 million infections now, so there could easily be
homegrown variants
and I think for that it is very important to have genomic surveillance,
which is done at scale,"
the virologist said.
"And for that government of India has set up an inter-ministerial
Group which is called INSA
COG which brings together 10 different National Laboratories to start
sequencing at a density
of about 5%," he added.
Currently, the virologist said India is sequencing at a density of about
0.05%.
"So essentially, the plan is to upscale sequencing about a hundredfold
in the country," Dr.
Jameel added.
A recent study by the scientists of CSIR-Centre for Cellular and Molecular
Biology (CCMB)
in Hyderabad analysed over 5,000 coronavirus variants, describing how the
virus has evolved
over the course of the pandemic.
It found that a variant carrying the N440K mutation is spreading a lot more
in the southern
States of India.
"We now have emerging evidence that the N440K variant is spreading a
lot more in southern
states. Closer surveillance is needed to understand its spread
properly," CCMBDirector Rakesh
Mishra said in a statement.
While variants with immune-escape such as the South African variant have
been identified
with only a low prevalence in India, Dr. Mishra believes this could be
because not enough
sequencing has been done.
"More coronavirus genomes need to be sequenced across the country to accurately identify the
emergence
of these and other new variants," he added.
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https://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/health/coronavirus-variants-with-two-specific-mutationsmay-
evade-antibodies-says-virologist-shahid-jameel/article33894768.ece
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