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Coronavirus Mutates To Escape Immune System
Live Science
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7 hours ago
The virus often mutates by simply deleting small pieces of its genetic code. The mutations "disguise" the virus from antibodies.
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Tech
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00:00
The novel coronavirus has recently developed a number of worrisome mutations, resulting
00:05
in multiple new variants popping up around the world.
00:08
A new study sheds light on how the virus mutates so easily, and why these mutations help it
00:14
escape the body's immune system.
00:16
The beauty of this story is it's quite complex, but it's really rather simple.
00:27
The study researchers found that SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, often mutates
00:33
by simply deleting small pieces of its genetic code.
00:37
Although the virus has its own proofreading mechanism that fixes errors as it replicates,
00:43
the deletions get around this.
00:45
So what deletions do is not only alter one site, but they can alter a string of sequential
00:50
letters in a row.
00:51
And so you can't proofread against that, and you can alter a number of amino acids that
00:57
build up that protein.
00:59
And so it does represent a way that the virus can quickly adapt.
01:02
Oh, it's devilishly clever.
01:05
For their study, the researchers used a database to analyze nearly 150,000 genetic sequences of
01:12
SARS-CoV-2.
01:13
They found that these deletions frequently show up in similar spots on the genome.
01:18
And these deletions started to line up to very distinct sites, and so that's why we've
01:23
called them recurrent deletion regions, because we kept seeing them over and over and over
01:26
again from viruses from different places at different times in genetically distinct
01:32
viruses.
01:33
Possibly these deletions were leading to the escape or the evolution away from antibodies
01:38
that are binding it.
01:39
This would be a way to get around that, because the antibodies won't be able to recognize.
01:43
Yeah, because remember, the key thing in biology is shape, and precise little changes in shape,
01:50
even in a big molecule, can have really, really big effects, right?
01:56
So perfectly attuned to recognize shape, small movement, and this thing doesn't see this
02:02
anymore.
02:03
I mean, one missing building block out of about 1,200 can knock out the binding of antibodies
02:09
that are potently neutralizing.
02:10
So you're looking at, you know, less than a 1%, you know, change there.
02:15
Small changes in biology can have massive effects.
02:19
And that's why we have to think about antibiotic resistance and antiviral drug resistance, and
02:26
da-da-da-da-da-da.
02:27
That's where it's really hard whenever you're trying to describe this, because it's hard to
02:32
show something which is gone, right?
02:34
Absence is hard to show, but these tiny little absences have a big, big effect.
02:42
Does it seem like the main goal from the evolution perspective is to sort of escape the immune
02:49
system, and this transmissibility might be like a secondary factor, or we don't, like
02:54
a beneficial side effect, but we don't really...
02:56
The virus has evolved to replicate efficiently, and it'll evolve around anything that gets in
03:01
its way, or go extinct.
03:03
Evolution finds these sweet spots, and this is a pretty good virus, right?
03:08
What it's doing is, every single time it's replicated, think of the millions of people
03:12
that the virus is replicating in the world each day, right?
03:15
Because anything that we can do to dampen the number of times it replicates, just like
03:20
Kevin said, will buy us a little bit of time.
03:25
Coming up with the tools now that we know that they're important, and that they can alter
03:28
the immunogenicity of the molecule the way that some antibodies bind it, and understand
03:34
if there's clinical changes that are associated with that.
03:37
And that's, in some ways, what happened with the discovery of the variants from South Africa,
03:42
and from the United Kingdom, both of which have deletions.
03:45
Will we see something happen like we do with flu vaccines, that these need to be reformulated
03:51
frequently?
03:52
You know, it's not going to be an all or nothing where one day, you know, the virus can be blocked
03:57
by a vaccine, and the next day it's gone.
04:00
It's a continuum.
04:01
But you still have something that's 90 or 85% efficacious, which I think, at the start
04:06
of this pandemic, we'd all sign up for.
04:08
It's not just going to be this virus.
04:09
It'll be the next virus, and the next virus, and the next virus, and the next virus.
04:13
They will continue to emerge.
04:15
They will continue to evolve.
04:17
And we continually have to play cat and mouse and stay one step ahead of them.
04:23
Their results underscore the importance of closely monitoring the virus's evolution
04:28
by tracking these deletions and other mutations.
04:31
The findings also show why it's important to wear a mask and implement other measures
04:36
to prevent the virus from spreading.
04:38
The more people it infects, the more chances it has to replicate and potentially mutate.
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