South African scientists discovered a new variant of COVID-19 that they say might be behind the recent surge of infections in the country, resulting in panic across the world as countries fear the international spread of the highly mutated variation.
South Africa was experiencing a rate of 200 new daily confirmed cases until recently when the number suddenly spiked to 2,465 on Thursday. Scientists studied virus samples from the outbreakโfound mostly concentrated in Gauteng the most populous province in the country and home to Johannesburgโand discovered the new variant, named B.1.1.529.
โHere is a mutation variant of serious concern,โ Health Minister Joe Phaahla said at a media briefing Thursday. Phaahla said that the latest variant was behind the โexponential riseโ of cases, but experts are still trying to confirm it, as establishing an actual connection takes time.
Currently, there are no indications that the variant has arrived in the United States. Most of the cases are still concentrated in South Africa with others being reported in Botswana, Israel, and Hong Kong, where the infection was identified in travellers coming from South Africa. Belgium reported its first case of the variant on Friday.
South African scientist Tulio de Oliveira said in the Thursday media briefing that B.1.1.529 has been discovered to have a โunique constellationโ of greater than 30 mutations to its spike proteins, which is significantly higher than the delta variant. As spike proteins bind to infected cells, a high number of mutations can affect how easily the variant spreads among the population.
The B.1.1.529 variant contained a total of 50 mutations. It has 10 mutations on the ACE2 receptor, which enables the virus to infect human cells, compared to three for the Beta variant, and two for the Delta, according to de Oliveira.
Head of UK COVID-19 Genomics Consortium, Professor Sharon Peacock said to Reuters that โthis is a more transmissible variant,โ but โa significant number of mutations detected are really unknown.โ She added that studies are rapidly being conducted in South Africa but theyโre going to take several weeks to be completed.
Lawrence Young, a virologist at the University of Warwick, said to AP that the variant โlooks like itโs spreading rapidly,โ even though itโs currently found only in parts of South Africa.
According to Prof. Richard Lessells, from the University of KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa, the latest variant carries similarities with Beta and Lambda variants, in that itโs susceptible to evade immunity.
โAll these things are what give us some concern that this variant might have not just enhanced transmissibilityโso spread more efficientlyโbut might also be able to get around parts of the immune system and the protection we have in our immune system,โ Lessells said.
The infected cases have largely been found in young people. According to Phaahla, only about 25 percent in the age category 18โ34 are presently vaccinated in the country.
Similar to the Alpha variant, the last iteration could have originated in a single immune-compromised individual who could have genetically modified the virus when his or her body could not get rid of it in time.
American officials, under the guidance of Dr. Anthony Fauci, are in talks with their South African counterparts to gauge the severity of the situation and find out more details regarding the variant. Whether the United States will impose travel restrictions is not yet clear.
Even if restrictions are imposed, viruses have a way of spreading and itโs only a matter of time before it reaches the shores of the country, said Dr. Michael Osterholm, an infectious disease expert at the University of Minnesota, to The Associated Press.
โWe have demonstrated time and time again that if the variant shows up anywhere in the world, you can pretty much count on it being everywhere in the world,โ according to Osterholm.