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Novel Coronavirus Jumped From Bats To Humans With 'Very Little Change': Scientists

The new study revealed that for the first 11 months of the Covid-19 pandemic, there has been very little 'important genetic change' observed in the coronavirus.

A new study suggests that the ability of the novel coronavirus to spread from one person to another likely evolved in the flying mammal prior to it jumping to its new human host. It analysed that the progenitor of the virus underwent "very little change" to adapt to humans from bats

Hundreds of thousands of sequenced genomes of the SARS-CoV-2 virus were assessed in the study, published in the journal PLOS Biology. It was revealed that for the first 11 months of the Covid-19 pandemic, there has been very little 'important genetic change' observed in the coronavirus.

"This does not mean no changes have occurred, mutations of no evolutionary significance accumulate and 'surf' along the millions of transmission events, like they do in all viruses," explained study first author Oscar MacLean from the University of Glasgow Centre for Virus Research in Scotland.

But the scientists said it was "surprising" how transmissible SARS-CoV-2 has been from the outset.

It was also noted that some changes such as the D614G mutation, and similar tweaks in the virus spike protein has affected its biology.

"Usually viruses that jump to a new host species take some time to acquire adaptations to be as capable as SARS-CoV-2 at spreading, and most never make it past that stage, resulting in dead-end spillovers or localised outbreaks," said Sergei Pond, another co-author of the study from Temple University in the US.

Analysing the mutations undergone by the novel coronavirus and related sarbecoviruses -- the group of viruses the COVID virus belongs to from bats and pangolins -- the scientists found evidence of fairly significant change, but all before the emergence of SARS-CoV-2 in humans.

Based on this observation, the researchers said SARS-CoV-2 came with a ready-made ability to infect humans and other mammals, with these properties likely evolving in bats prior to it jumping to humans.

"While an undiscovered 'facilitating' intermediate species cannot be discounted, collectively, our results support the progenitor of SARS-CoV-2 being capable of efficient human–human transmission as a consequence of its adaptive evolutionary history in bats, not humans, which created a relatively generalist virus," the scientists wrote in the study.

Although the novel coronavirus is still cleared by the human immune response in the vast majority of infections, the scientists cautioned that it is now moving away faster from the January 2020 variant used in all of the current vaccines to raise protective immunity.

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The current vaccines will continue to work against most of the circulating variants, but as more time passes, and the bigger the differential between vaccinated and not-vaccinated numbers of people, they said there will be more opportunity for the virus to escape vaccines.

"The first race was to develop a vaccine. The race now is to get the global population vaccinated as quickly as possible," said David L Robertson, lead author of the study from the the University of Glasgow.

Meanwhile, another recent study on Covid-19 suggested that a higher concentration of airborne pollen is associated with increased novel coronavirus infection rates. The study used data from 31 countries across five continents.

Theresearch team collected data on airborne pollen concentrations, weather conditions and SARS-CoV-2 infections, taking into consideration the variation of infection rates from one day to another, and the total number of positive tests.

Researchers at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) and the Helmholtz Zentrum Munchen in Germany noted that people in high-risk groups can protect themselves by watching pollen forecasts and wearing dust filter masks.

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The researchers also included data on population density and the effects of lockdown measures.

With PTI Inputs

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