Marc Johnson Profile picture
Feb 26 8 tweets 3 min read Read on X
I found (or rediscovered) another cryptic lineage this weekend, and this is the weirdest one yet.

Sometimes it almost feels like someone is playing an extremely elaborate prank on me.

I'm not sure even I believe this one.

1/
The lineage is from a sewershed in Switzerland. The group submitted hundreds of sequences recently and the lineage appeared twice in samples from late last year, both times from the same sewershed.

2/
The lineage is derived from B.1.416*, a lineage that circulated in late 2020 and was most prevalent in Switzerland.

I’m still working on reconstructing the genome, but there were several revealing bits in the parts I’ve analyzed.

3/ Image
I'm actually pretty sure I saw this same lineage from samples in 2021. Same sewershed and many of the same changes, but the lineages is MUCH more divergent than before.
4/
Here was the first clue. The samples had lots of sequences that still had the s2m element, which meant it was not BA.2 or XBB-derived, but those sequences lacked G29742T, so it wasn’t Delta or XBD-derived.

It also had T29758G, which told me this was probably a cryptic.

5/ Image
The samples had sequence that lacked R203K/G204R, which meant it was pre-B.1.1, but it had C28833T, which was the first clue that it was B.1.416-derived.

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The wild part is the RBD. It had multiple deletions and the overall sequence is significantly changed. I would have thought this were a sequencing mistake, but the same nearly identical mutations and deletions appeared in both samples.

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Almost every AA that contacts ACE2 is mutated or deleted in this Spike; could it even still bind ACE2?

It’s possible the sequence is not real, but there were thousands of reads, and it wasn't a reconstruction. It was raw reads.

Could the RBD change this much?

Thoughts?
7/7 Image

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More from @SolidEvidence

Feb 26
Swiss variant update, another record is broken.

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Late last year the Swiss deposited a whole bunch of wastewater sequences going back a few years. We screened the data and found a cryptic lineage from Lousanne in 2021.

I don’t think I ever posted about it because it wasn’t that exotic, and it disappeared 2 years ago.

2/ Image
The lineage was present from 5/21-7/21, 5 samples total. It’s one of many lineages that was a B.1 derivative with the s2m ‘bat reversion’ T29758G.

3/ Image
Read 9 tweets
Feb 23
How common are SARS-CoV-2 persistent infections (revisited).

Last summer I tried to calculate how frequent persistent SARS-CoV-2 infections were from sequence info.

Since there was a recent paper on this, I thought I would revisit my calculations.
1/
My calculations depend on 2 assumptions.

1. Sequences with Orf1a:K1795Q usually (>80% of the time) come from persistent infections (excluding Gamma and BS.1).

2. About 4-10% of all long persistent infections acquire Orf1a:K1795Q.

2/
Let's revisit the first assumption with new data.

How many times did Orf1a:K1795Q appear in sequences in the last 6 months?

69

How many of those were ‘older’ lineages?

About 60.

So definitely over 80%. Assumption still stands.

3/ Image
Read 13 tweets
Feb 17
Biosafety restrictions and Biothreat assessment: a rant.

Regulations are fine, but double standards are frustrating.

1/
Background, my lab studies cryptic lineages: evolutionarily advanced SARS-CoV-2 lineages detected in wastewater from an unknown source (we are now pretty certain cryptics are from long persistent infections).

We’ve found scores of these.

2/
doi.org/10.1371/journa…
We don’t know who the patients are, what their symptoms are, or where in the body the virus is replicating.

We just know that the infections have been going on for years and the viruses have been under enormous selective pressure.

3/
medrxiv.org/content/10.110…
Read 17 tweets
Feb 15
New Jersey Cryptic lineage update.

Background: Cryptic lineages are evolutionarily advanced SARS-CoV-2 lineages detected in wastewater from an unknown source.

We are fairly certain that these are derived from patients with persistent SARS-CoV-2 infections.

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If you are curious why we believe that cryptic lineages are from individual patients and not some non-human source, please read this thread. The paper on this should be coming out soon.

2/

The NJ lineage was first detected in mid-2023, but we didn’t get a clean look at its Spike sequence until November. It’s a B.1-derived lineage, so it is probably at least a 3 year infection.

3/
Read 16 tweets
Feb 10
Wow, check out the RBD from this cryptic lineage from wastewater samples; it's still circulating in some poor patient in Newark, NJ.

1/ Image
We've actually been seeing snippets of this lineage for a while, but we didn't get a good look at its RBD until recently.
2/
Three things I can say about it:
1) It's B.1-derived, so probably at least a 3 year infection

2) It's evolving fast, there are new variations every time we see it

3) They are shedding a ton. This is a sewershed with 1.5 million people and we are still seeing it regularly.

3/
Read 5 tweets
Feb 1
Another highly divergent circulating BA.2 was just announced in South Africa.

Do we need to be worried?

1/

The key question with a new variant is if it has the ability to get through our first major line of defense, our neutralizing antibodies (NA).

The vast majority (>90%) of NAs target the receptor binding domain of Spike, so that is where I look for answers.

2/
There are 3 main classes of NAs that target the RBD, and we know a lot about where each targets. This is a cheat sheet I made about 3 years ago based on the data from @jbloom_lab and @yunlong_cao.

3/ Image
Read 13 tweets

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