Molecular Architecture of Early Disseminationand Massive Second Wave of the SARS-CoV-2 Virus in a Major Metropolitan Area
By
Scott Wesley Long,
Randall J. Olsen,
Paul A. Christensen,
David W. Bernard,
James J Davis,
Maulik Shukla,
Marcus Nguyen,
Matthew Ojeda Saavedra,
Prasanti Yerramilli,
Layne Pruitt,
Sishir Subedi,
Hung-Che Kuo,
Heather Hendrickson,
Ghazaleh Eskandari,
Hoang A.T. Nguyen,
James Hunter Long,
Muthiah Kumaraswami,
Jule Goike,
Daniel Boutz,
Jimmy Gollihar,
Jason S McLellan,
Chia-Wei Chou,
Kamyab Javanmardi,
Ilya J. Finkelstein,
James M. Musser
Posted 23 Sep 2020
medRxiv DOI: 10.1101/2020.09.22.20199125
We sequenced the genomes of 5,085 SARS-CoV-2 strains causing two COVID-19 disease waves in metropolitan Houston, Texas, an ethnically diverse region with seven million residents. The genomes were from viruses recovered in the earliest recognized phase of the pandemic in Houston, and an ongoing massive second wave of infections. The virus was originally introduced into Houston many times independently. Virtually all strains in the second wave have a Gly614 amino acid replacement in the spike protein, a polymorphism that has been linked to increased transmission and infectivity. Patients infected with the Gly614 variant strains had significantly higher virus loads in the nasopharynx on initial diagnosis. We found little evidence of a significant relationship between virus genotypes and altered virulence, stressing the linkage between disease severity, underlying medical conditions, and host genetics. Some regions of the spike protein - the primary target of global vaccine efforts - are replete with amino acid replacements, perhaps indicating the action of selection. We exploited the genomic data to generate defined single amino acid replacements in the receptor binding domain of spike protein that, importantly, produced decreased recognition by the neutralizing monoclonal antibody CR30022. Our study is the first analysis of the molecular architecture of SARS-CoV-2 in two infection waves in a major metropolitan region. The findings will help us to understand the origin, composition, and trajectory of future infection waves, and the potential effect of the host immune response and therapeutic maneuvers on SARS-CoV-2 evolution.
Download data
- Downloaded 14,419 times
- Download rankings, all-time:
- Site-wide: 472
- In pathology: 3
- Year to date:
- Site-wide: 2,252
- Since beginning of last month:
- Site-wide: 3,157
Altmetric data
Downloads over time
Distribution of downloads per paper, site-wide
PanLingua
News
- 27 Nov 2020: The website and API now include results pulled from medRxiv as well as bioRxiv.
- 18 Dec 2019: We're pleased to announce PanLingua, a new tool that enables you to search for machine-translated bioRxiv preprints using more than 100 different languages.
- 21 May 2019: PLOS Biology has published a community page about Rxivist.org and its design.
- 10 May 2019: The paper analyzing the Rxivist dataset has been published at eLife.
- 1 Mar 2019: We now have summary statistics about bioRxiv downloads and submissions.
- 8 Feb 2019: Data from Altmetric is now available on the Rxivist details page for every preprint. Look for the "donut" under the download metrics.
- 30 Jan 2019: preLights has featured the Rxivist preprint and written about our findings.
- 22 Jan 2019: Nature just published an article about Rxivist and our data.
- 13 Jan 2019: The Rxivist preprint is live!