4.6 Article

Rapid SARS-CoV-2 Intra-Host and Within-Household Emergence of Novel Haplotypes

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 14, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v14020399

Keywords

SARS-CoV-2; epidemiology; viral genomics; intra-host haplotypes; longitudinal analysis; NGS sequencing; minimum spanning network; phylogenetic analysis

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This study investigates the COVID-19 outbreak in a small Italian town and reveals the unique ancestor haplotype of the virus, as well as its evolution within and across households. It provides evidence that novel viral haplotypes can naturally arise within a short time period, regardless of symptom severity or immune system deficiencies. The study also shows that the lockdown measures effectively controlled viral spread and the emergence of new variants.
In February 2020, the municipality of Vo', a small town near Padua (Italy) was quarantined due to the first coronavirus disease 19 (COVID-19)-related death detected in Italy. To investigate the viral prevalence and clinical features, the entire population was swab tested in two sequential surveys. Here we report the analysis of 87 viral genomes, which revealed that the unique ancestor haplotype introduced in Vo' belongs to lineage B, carrying the mutations G11083T and G26144T. The viral sequences allowed us to investigate the viral evolution while being transmitted within and across households and the effectiveness of the non-pharmaceutical interventions implemented in Vo'. We report, for the first time, evidence that novel viral haplotypes can naturally arise intra-host within an interval as short as two weeks, in approximately 30% of the infected individuals, regardless of symptom severity or immune system deficiencies. Moreover, both phylogenetic and minimum spanning network analyses converge on the hypothesis that the viral sequences evolved from a unique common ancestor haplotype that was carried by an index case. The lockdown extinguished both the viral spread and the emergence of new variants.

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