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Brand new paper coming out from PNAS, This is from a quite several relative big shot in the field of genome evolution. The authors utilized high quality genome sequenced across the world for accurate viral ancestry prediction.
Link to paper:
www.pnas.org
PDF version:
Original Abstract:
In a phylogenetic network analysis of 160 complete human severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-Cov-2) genomes, we find three central variants distinguished by amino acid changes, which we have named A, B, and C, with A being the ancestral type according to the bat outgroup coronavirus. The A and C types are found in significant proportions outside East Asia, that is, in Europeans and Americans. In contrast, the B type is the most common type in East Asia, and its ancestral genome appears not to have spread outside East Asia without first mutating into derived B types, pointing to founder effects or immunological or environmental resistance against this type outside Asia. The network faithfully traces routes of infections for documented coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases, indicating that phylogenetic networks can likewise be successfully used to help trace undocumented COVID-19 infection sources, which can then be quarantined to prevent recurrent spread of the disease worldwide.
Some key talk away from this paper:
1. Type A COVID19 is the ancestor to all the other genotypes
2. Most United States cases are type A, so is Australia.
3. Type B overwhelmingly dominates China as well as other East Asian countries
4. Type C is mostly found in European countries and it has little linkage with type B.
5. Type B almost seems super well adapted to human of East Asian genomic lineage due to immunological difference compared to either African or European lineage. Terrifying to be honest as the virus is well adapted to target only a sub population of homo sapiens.
Now this is becoming really puzzling. Previously most researchers hypothesized that COVID19 originated from Wuhan China. From the genomic data so far, it seems to be not the case.
I will say this publications has generated quite a lot of discussion in scientific field. The "really bad flu season" experienced by the United States from 2019 to 2020 may need to be re-investigated to accurately trace the origin COVID19. Good thing is most medical clinics have samples swabs stored in liquid nitrogen for sequencing analysis. Just need to access them and we will know whether it was a bad flu season or it was something else.
As more and more genomic information becomes available, researchers across the world will eventually get to the bottom of the origin.
Finding and understanding the origin is crucial. Because whatever the original host for these corona-virus is, there will definitely be new varients of this virus ready to jump onto human. Finding the viral reservoir can give us precious time in predicting future coronavirus outbreaks. @the54thvoid
It is not a question of "IF" another wave of coronavirus will hit, it is a matter of "How soon"
Link to paper:

Phylogenetic network analysis of SARS-CoV-2 genomes
This is a phylogenetic network of SARS-CoV-2 genomes sampled from across the world. These genomes are closely related and under evolutionary selection in their human hosts, sometimes with parallel evolution events, that is, the same virus mutation emerges in two different human hosts. This makes...
PDF version:
Original Abstract:
In a phylogenetic network analysis of 160 complete human severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-Cov-2) genomes, we find three central variants distinguished by amino acid changes, which we have named A, B, and C, with A being the ancestral type according to the bat outgroup coronavirus. The A and C types are found in significant proportions outside East Asia, that is, in Europeans and Americans. In contrast, the B type is the most common type in East Asia, and its ancestral genome appears not to have spread outside East Asia without first mutating into derived B types, pointing to founder effects or immunological or environmental resistance against this type outside Asia. The network faithfully traces routes of infections for documented coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases, indicating that phylogenetic networks can likewise be successfully used to help trace undocumented COVID-19 infection sources, which can then be quarantined to prevent recurrent spread of the disease worldwide.
Some key talk away from this paper:
1. Type A COVID19 is the ancestor to all the other genotypes
2. Most United States cases are type A, so is Australia.
3. Type B overwhelmingly dominates China as well as other East Asian countries
4. Type C is mostly found in European countries and it has little linkage with type B.
5. Type B almost seems super well adapted to human of East Asian genomic lineage due to immunological difference compared to either African or European lineage. Terrifying to be honest as the virus is well adapted to target only a sub population of homo sapiens.
Now this is becoming really puzzling. Previously most researchers hypothesized that COVID19 originated from Wuhan China. From the genomic data so far, it seems to be not the case.
I will say this publications has generated quite a lot of discussion in scientific field. The "really bad flu season" experienced by the United States from 2019 to 2020 may need to be re-investigated to accurately trace the origin COVID19. Good thing is most medical clinics have samples swabs stored in liquid nitrogen for sequencing analysis. Just need to access them and we will know whether it was a bad flu season or it was something else.
As more and more genomic information becomes available, researchers across the world will eventually get to the bottom of the origin.
Finding and understanding the origin is crucial. Because whatever the original host for these corona-virus is, there will definitely be new varients of this virus ready to jump onto human. Finding the viral reservoir can give us precious time in predicting future coronavirus outbreaks. @the54thvoid
It is not a question of "IF" another wave of coronavirus will hit, it is a matter of "How soon"
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