1/9 Something seemed familiar about the Q498R mutation. Then I remembered: @_b_meyer, examining in-vitro evolution of RBD mutations, predicted this mutation could emerge & lead to a variant with higher infectivity & immune evasion than any existing ones. nature.com/articles/s4156…
2/9 Q498R was not just one of many mutations they predicted: it was far & away their top candidate to become a major RBD mutation. It's the only novel mutation they mention in the abstract, noting that it requires the N501Y mutation to confer increased ACE2 binding affinity.
3/9 They used yeast to display human ACE2 receptors, then let various versions of SARS-CoV-2 S RBD compete against one another, with the highest binding-affinity RBDs advancing to the next round.
4/9 Random mutations were introduced in ways I'm not competent to explain, so I've included the relevant description in the screenshot below.
5/9 Mutations common in known VOCs quickly emerged, especially E484K and N501Y, which quickly became dominant. To me, this seems a good indication that their methods are valid & useful.
6/9 For library B5, they used ACE2 that required extremely high binding affinity, & this "resulted in the fixation of mutations E484K, Q498R and N501Y in all sequenced clones." Q498R was present in all the RBD variants with the highest binding affinity.
7/9 Figure 2f shows binding affinity on the x-axis and makes clear the ability of Q498R to increase ACE 2 binding affinity, hence their prediction that this mutation could emerge & spread.
8/9 Perhaps even more worrying, computer modeling by this team indicates that Q498R could confer a significant amount of immune evasion on any variant possessing it. No wonder this new SA variant is the first to worry @GuptaR_lab since the emergence of Delta.
9/9 I'm not an expert, so if I've made any errors or mischaracterized anything above, I welcome corrections from real experts. Besides @_b_meyer, the only other authors on the study on Twitter I could find were @Matthew_Gagne_ and @Nadav_Elad.

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More from @LongDesertTrain

6 Oct
@MallorySl810 1/ I don't know, but I'm super curious about this as well. I suspect all respiratory viruses are mostly airborne, but the topic's not been studied enough to know for certain. The way rhinoviruses seem almost unaffected by anti-Covid measures seems particularly baffling.
@MallorySl810 2/ There are something like 170 different rhinoviruses, so that might have something to do with it. But did most—or at least some—of those rhinovirus varieties see huge reductions in prevalence like influenza, RSV (last winter), human metapneumovirus, & others? @MackayIM
@MallorySl810 @MackayIM 3/ And if so, what are the characteristics of the rhinovirus varieties that were unaffected by NPIs? I believe rhinoviruses are mostly found in children, so perhaps this is part of the explanation, though I'm not sure how.
Read 4 tweets
27 Sep
1/8 Fascinating and important study here. Finds that a Delta-specific vaccine could leave us vulnerable to Beta & similar variants, while a Beta-specific vaccine would leave us vulnerable to Delta. What can protect us from both? The Original Recipe D614G vaccine.
2/8 Beta and Delta are far apart in evolutionary terms, so the effectiveness of antibodies against each are much reduced against the other—a 34-fold decrease in the case of Delta nAb's against Beta.
3/8 Delta-specific antibodies also saw a 27-fold reduction in neutralization against a SARS-CoV-2 virus isolated from an HIV patient w/long-term infection. This virus had presumably evolved to evade the host's immune response. It's thought the Alpha variant originated this way.
Read 8 tweets
25 Sep
1/19 Hand hygiene & surface cleaning as tools to prevent respiratory infections should go down in history as the "miasma theory" of the 21st century. Both captured something true but caused great harm when applied to the wrong category of disease.
2/19 The miasma theory accurately identified air as the source of much disease transmission but opposed germ theory and famously led experts to overlook contaminated water as the source of important GI diseases like cholera.
3/19 Similarly, hand hygiene (and maybe surface disinfection) help to control spread of GI pathogens but appear to do almost nothing to prevent transmission of respiratory infections. The disproportionate emphasis on them has likely done harm by... nature.com/articles/d4158…
Read 19 tweets
29 Aug
1/10 This shouldn't even be a debate. Who could argue against this? Knowledge is the ultimate public good, & to restrict access to scientific papers to those at academic institutions w/subscriptions to journals is a crime.
2/10 Out-of-control, continually strengthening copyright & patent laws are an economic weapon wielded by the rich against the poor and by enormous, monopolistic firms against small firms. This is a major driver of inequality that receives scant attention.
cepr.net/technology-pat…
3/10 The alleged justification for strong IP laws is that they incentivize & facilitate innovation. But as @DeanBaker13 points out in his indispensable (& free) book Rigged, in their current form, IP protections greatly impede innovation. See Ch. 5 deanbaker.net/books/rigged.h…
Read 10 tweets
27 May
1/ This is unreal. The study title is "Same-day SARS-CoV-2 antigen test screening in an indoor mass-gathering live music event: a randomised controlled trial." It is being cited as evidence that rapid antigen tests can make social events safe. But there are a couple problems...
2/ They gave rapid tests to over 1000 people and randomly divided those who tested negative into two groups. One went to a concert, where they were encouraged to dance and sing, and the others stayed home. I encourage you to read the entire abstract in the 2 pictures below.
3/ Results: None who went to the concert tested positive for Covid eight days later, but two of those who stayed home tested positive. Yay for rapid tests, right? Not exactly.
Read 12 tweets
26 May
1/5 Phenomenal thread here on the noxious effects of competitive grading on education, even on those who appear to benefit the most from such a system.
2/5 Difficulty lies in

1. Convincing enough people competitive grading is harmful &

2. Transforming our education system into one that "meets students where they are, helps them build their interests & skills, teaches them they ARE valuable by being."
3/5 In Finland, "hustle culture" scorned & competition in academics minimized from the very beginning. How did Finland create such a healthy, non-competitive culture? It's certainly worth looking into.
Read 5 tweets

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