| Literature DB >> 35491827 |
Tessa Prince1,2, Xiaofeng Dong1, Rebekah Penrice-Randal1, Nadine Randle1, Catherine Hartley1, Hannah Goldswain1, Benjamin Jones1, Malcolm G Semple1,2,3, J Kenneth Baillie4, Peter J M Openshaw5, Lance Turtle1,2, Grant L Hughes6, Enyia R Anderson6, Edward I Patterson6, Julian Druce7, Gavin Screaton8, Miles W Carroll2,8,9, James P Stewart1,10, Julian A Hiscox1,2,11.
Abstract
New variants of SARS-CoV-2 are continuing to emerge and dominate the global sequence landscapes. Several variants have been labeled variants of concern (VOCs) because they may have a transmission advantage, increased risk of morbidity and/or mortality, or immune evasion upon a background of prior infection or vaccination. Placing the VOCs in context with the underlying variability of SARS-CoV-2 is essential in understanding virus evolution and selection pressures. Dominant genome sequences and the population genetics of SARS-CoV-2 in nasopharyngeal swabs from hospitalized patients were characterized. Nonsynonymous changes at a minor variant level were identified. These populations were generally preserved when isolates were amplified in cell culture. To place the Alpha, Beta, Delta, and Omicron VOCs in context, their growth was compared to clinical isolates of different lineages from earlier in the pandemic. The data indicated that the growth in cell culture of the Beta variant was more than that of the other variants in Vero E6 cells but not in hACE2-A549 cells. Looking at each time point, Beta grew more than the other VOCs in hACE2-A549 cells at 24 to 48 h postinfection. At 72 h postinfection there was no difference in the growth of any of the variants in either cell line. Overall, this work suggested that exploring the biology of SARS-CoV-2 is complicated by population dynamics and that these need to be considered with new variants. In the context of variation seen in other coronaviruses, the variants currently observed for SARS-CoV-2 are very similar in terms of their clinical spectrum of disease. IMPORTANCE SARS-CoV-2 is the causative agent of COVID-19. The virus has spread across the planet, causing a global pandemic. In common with other coronaviruses, SARS-CoV-2 genomes can become quite diverse as a consequence of replicating inside cells. This has given rise to multiple variants from the original virus that infected humans. These variants may have different properties and in the context of a widespread vaccination program may render vaccines less effective. Our research confirms the degree of genetic diversity of SARS-CoV-2 in patients. By comparing the growth of previous variants to the pattern seen with four variants of concern (VOCs) (Alpha, Beta, Delta, and Omicron), we show that, at least in cells, Beta variant growth exceeds that of Alpha, Delta, and Omicron VOCs at 24 to 48 h in both Vero E6 and hACE2-A549 cells, but by 72 h postinfection, the amount of virus is not different from that of the other VOCs.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; RNA sequencing; SARS-CoV-2; cell culture; clinical samples; coronavirus; growth kinetics; minor genomic variants; variants
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35491827 PMCID: PMC9241508 DOI: 10.1128/msphere.00913-21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: mSphere ISSN: 2379-5042 Impact factor: 5.029
FIG 1Testing strategy. (A) Nasopharyngeal swabs from patients with COVID-19 recruited to the ISARIC-4C study were sequenced using an amplicon-based approach on the Oxford Nanopore MinION platform (P0). Virus was isolated from the same nasopharyngeal swabs (P1). (B) Viral isolates from the ISARIC-4C study, B.1.1.7, B.1.351, B.1.617.2, B.1.1.529, and Victoria isolates were grown up into stocks that were then sequenced. (C) Viral stocks were titrated and used to infect hACE2-A549 cells, and 72 h postinfection supernatants were sequenced.
FIG 2Phylogenetic tree of all variants sequenced. All patient swabs (labeled _swab), stock viruses (labeled _Passage#_stock), and variants after 72 h of growth in hACE2-A549 cells (labeled _Passage#_72hrs) were sequenced and a phylogenetic tree constructed to demonstrate the limited diversity between dominant viral genomes of different variants used in this study.
List of variants used
| Lineage | Virus | ID | Date of onset (mo/day/yr) | Day of sampling | Passage no. of stock |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| B | Liverpool/REMRQ0001/2020 | REMRQ-001 | 2/23/2020 | 1 | P4 |
| B | Victoria/01/2020 | NA | 1/2020 | NA | P4 |
| B.1 | SCV2-009 | REMRQ-028 | 3/23/2020 | 1 | P2 |
| B.1 | SCV2-007_RAL01-009_day one | RAL01-009 | 2/25/2020 | 1 | P2 |
| B.1 | SCV2-017_RAL01-009_day three | RAL01-009 | 2/25/2020 | 3 | P2 |
| B.4 | SCV2-011_RAL01-005_day one | RAL01-005 | 2/25/2020 | 1 | P2 |
| B.4 | SCV2-018_RAL01-005_day three | RAL01-005 | 2/25/2020 | 3 | P2 |
| B.1.1 | SCV2-010 | RAL01-004 | 2/24/2020 | 1 | P2 |
| B.1.5 | SCV2-016 | A1344 | 6/5/2020 | P2 | |
| B.1.1.10 | SCV2-008 | RAL01-018 | 3/2/2020 | 1 | P2 |
| B.1.1.7 | Alpha | NA | 1/2021 | P5 | |
| B.1.351 | Beta | NA | 11/2021 | P4 | |
| B.1.617.2 | Delta | NA | P3 | ||
| B.1.1.529 | Omicron | NA | P2 |
NA, not applicable.
FIG 3Comparison of the dominant viral genome sequence of SARS-CoV-2 in ISARIC4C swabs collected from patients in hospital with COVID-19 to the Wuhan reference sequence.
FIG 4Comparison of stocks (_stock) and supernatant after 72 h of infection in hACE2-A549 cells (_72hrs) of the Victoria/01/2020 isolate (B lineage), the Alpha VOC (B.1.1.7), the Beta VOC (B.1.351), the Delta VOC (B.1.617.2), and the Omicron VOC (B.1.1.529) with the Wuhan reference sequence.
FIG 5Growth over time of 10 different viral stocks in Vero E6 cells compared to the variants of concern B.1.1.7 (Alpha), B.1.351 (Beta), B.1.617.2 (Delta), and B.1.1.529 (Omicron). (A) Comparison of Liverpool/REMRQ0001/2020 growth against four different VOCs. (B) Comparison of Victoria/01/2020 growth against four different VOCs. (C) Comparison of SCV2-008 against four different VOCs. (D) Comparison of SCV2-009 against four different VOCs. (E) Comparison of SCV2-010 against four different VOCs. (F) Comparison of SCV2-016 against four different VOCs. (G) Comparison of SCV2-007_RAL01-009_day one against SCV2-017_RAL01-009_day three and four different VOCs. (H) Comparison of SCV2-011_RAL01-005_day one against SCV2-018_RAL01-005_day three and four different VOCs. (I) AUC values (±95% confidence intervals) plotted for each variant and compared to the Beta (B.1.351) VOC. All experiments were repeated in triplicate using supernatant from 6 wells (n = 3).
FIG 6Growth over time of 10 different viral stocks in hACE2-A549 cells compared to the variants of concern B.1.1.7 (Alpha), B.1.351 (Beta), B.1.617.2 (Delta), and B.1.1.529 (Omicron). (A) Comparison of Liverpool/REMRQ0001/2020 growth against four different VOCs. (B) Comparison of Victoria/01/2020 growth against four different VOCs. (C) Comparison of SCV2-008 against four different VOCs. (D) Comparison of SCV2-009 against four different VOCs. (E) Comparison of SCV2-010 against four different VOCs. (F) Comparison of SCV2-016 against four different VOCs. (G) Comparison of SCV2-007_RAL01-009_day one against SCV2-017_RAL01-009_day three and four different VOCs. (H) Comparison of SCV2-011_RAL01-005_day one against SCV2-018_RAL01-005_day three and four different VOCs. (I) AUC values (±95% confidence intervals) plotted for each variant and compared to the Beta (B.1.351) VOC. All experiments were repeated in triplicate using supernatant from 6 wells (n = 3).
FIG 7Phenotypic appearance of plaque assays from variants grown in two different cell lines for 72 h. i, Vero E6 cells; ii, hACE2-A549 cells. Plaque assays were performed on Vero E6 cells. Variants of concern are B.1.1.7 (Alpha VOC), B.1.351 (Beta VOC), B.1.617.2 (Delta VOC), and B.1.1.529 (Omicron VOC). Comparison variants include the Victoria/01/2020 and the Liverpool/REMRQ0001/2020 variants.
FIG 8Plaque area sizes for variants grown at 72 h postinfection in Vero E6 cells (A) and hACE2-A549 cells (B). Plaque sizes were measured using Image J and plotted to demonstrate the spread and variance in plaque sizes. Sizes are shown in square millimeters.