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The B.1.427/1.429 (epsilon) SARS-CoV-2 variants are more virulent than ancestral B.1 (614G) in Syrian hamsters
Timothy Carroll; Douglas Fox; Neeltje van Doremalen; Erin Ball; Mary Kate Morris; Alicia Sotomayor-Gonzalez; Venice Servellita; Arjun Rustagi; Claude Kwe Yinda; Linda Fritts; Julia Rebecca Port; Zhong-Min Ma; Myndi Holbrook; Jonathan Schulz; Catherine A. Blish; Carl Hanson; Charles Y. Chiu; Vincent Munster; Sarah Stanley; Christopher J Miller.
Affiliation
  • Timothy Carroll; UC Davis: University of California Davis
  • Douglas Fox; UC Berkeley: University of California Berkeley
  • Neeltje van Doremalen; NIAID Rocky Mountain Laboratories
  • Erin Ball; UC Davis: University of California Davis
  • Mary Kate Morris; California Department of Public Health
  • Alicia Sotomayor-Gonzalez; UC San Francisco: University of California San Francisco
  • Venice Servellita; UCSF
  • Arjun Rustagi; Stanford University School of Medicine
  • Claude Kwe Yinda; NIAID Rocky Mountain Laboratories
  • Linda Fritts; UC Davis: University of California Davis
  • Julia Rebecca Port; NIAID Rocky Mountain Laboratories
  • Zhong-Min Ma; UC Davis: University of California Davis
  • Myndi Holbrook; NIAID Rocky Mountain Laboratories
  • Jonathan Schulz; NIAID Rocky Mountain Laboratories
  • Catherine A. Blish; Stanford University School of Medicine
  • Carl Hanson; California Department of Public Health
  • Charles Y. Chiu; University of California San Francisco
  • Vincent Munster; NIAID Rocky Mountain Laboratories
  • Sarah Stanley; UC Berkeley: University of California Berkeley
  • Christopher J Miller; UC Davis
Preprint in En | PREPRINT-BIORXIV | ID: ppbiorxiv-457626
ABSTRACT
As novel SARS-CoV-2 variants continue to emerge, it is critical that their potential to cause severe disease and evade vaccine-induced immunity is rapidly assessed in humans and studied in animal models. In early January 2021, a novel variant of concern (VOC) designated B.1.429 comprising 2 lineages, B.1.427 and B.1.429, was originally detected in California (CA) and shown to enhance infectivity in vitro and decrease antibody neutralization by plasma from convalescent patients and vaccine recipients. Here we examine the virulence, transmissibility, and susceptibility to pre-existing immunity for B 1.427 and B 1.429 in the Syrian hamster model. We find that both strains exhibit enhanced virulence as measured by increased body weight loss compared to hamsters infected with ancestral B.1 (614G), with B.1.429 causing the most body weight loss among all 3 lineages. Faster dissemination from airways to parenchyma and more severe lung pathology at both early and late stages were also observed with B.1.429 infections relative to B.1. (614G) and B.1.427 infections. In addition, subgenomic viral RNA (sgRNA) levels were highest in oral swabs of hamsters infected with B.1.429, however sgRNA levels in lungs were similar in all three strains. This demonstrates that B.1.429 replicates to higher levels than ancestral B.1 (614G) or B.1.427 in the upper respiratory tract (URT) but not in the lungs. In multi-virus in-vivo competition experiments, we found that epsilon (B.1.427/B.1.429) and gamma (P.1) dramatically outcompete alpha (B.1.1.7), beta (B.1.351) and zeta (P.2) in the lungs. In the URT gamma, and epsilon dominate, but the highly infectious alpha variant also maintains a moderate size niche. We did not observe significant differences in airborne transmission efficiency among the B.1.427, B.1.429 and ancestral B.1 (614G) variants in hamsters. These results demonstrate enhanced virulence and high relative fitness of the epsilon (B.1.427/B.1.429) variant in Syrian hamsters compared to an ancestral B.1 (614G) strain. Author SummaryIn the last 12 months new variants of SARS-CoV-2 have arisen in the UK, South Africa, Brazil, India, and California. New SARS-CoV-2 variants will continue to emerge for the foreseeable future in the human population and the potential for these new variants to produce severe disease and evade vaccines needs to be understood. In this study, we used the hamster model to determine the epsilon (B.1.427/429) SARS-CoV-2 strains that emerged in California in late 2020 cause more severe disease and infected hamsters have higher viral loads in the upper respiratory tract compared to the prior B.1 (614G) strain. These findings are consistent with human clinical data and help explain the emergence and rapid spread of this strain in early 2021.
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Full text: 1 Collection: 09-preprints Database: PREPRINT-BIORXIV Type of study: Prognostic_studies Language: En Year: 2021 Document type: Preprint
Full text: 1 Collection: 09-preprints Database: PREPRINT-BIORXIV Type of study: Prognostic_studies Language: En Year: 2021 Document type: Preprint