New COVID-19 Variant C.1.2 Detected In South Africa Can Mutate 1.7 Times Faster, Experts Warn About Symptoms
New COVID-19 Variant C.1.2 Detected In South Africa Can Mutate 1.7 Times Faster, Experts Warn About Symptoms
The newly detected COVID-19 strain in South Africa is capable of making 41.8 mutations per year which are approximately 1.7-fold faster than the current global rate.
Written By: Satata Karmakar | Updated : August 30, 2021 11:12 AM IST
New COVID-19 Variant C.1.2 Detected In South Africa, Experts Warn About The Symptoms
As the threat of a possible third wave looms large in India, South Africa on Sunday identified a potential variant of interest (VOI) of COVID-19 that is assigned to the PANGO lineage C.1.2. According to the reports, the C.1.2 strain of coronavirus was first detected in May 2021 in South Africa when the country was experiencing the third wave. Speaking to the media, the officials stated that the C.1.2 variant of COVID-19 has since been detected across the majority of the provinces in South Africa and in seven other countries spanning Africa, Europe, Asia, and Oceania.
C.1.2 COVID-19 Variant Know All About It
Health experts have warned that a new variant of COVID-19 can give rise to another ferocious wave in the future. The newly detected variant of interest in South Africa has also been termed as a variant of concern by the experts. The variant has evolved from C.1, one of the lineages that dominated the first wave of SARS-CoV-2 infections in South Africa and were last detected in January 2021. According to the experts, C.1.2 is a deadly coronavirus variant that is associated with increased transmissibility and reduced neutralisation sensitivity. "Compared to C.1, the new variant has "mutated substantially" and is more mutations away from the original virus detected in Wuhan than any other Variant of Concern (VOC) or VOI detected so far worldwide," a researcher was quoted as saying.
C.1.2 Can Have 41.8 Mutations Every Year How Threatening Is It?
The study showed that C.1.2 has 41.8 mutations per year. It is approximately 1.7-fold faster than the current global rate and 1.8-fold faster than the initial estimate of SARS-CoV-2 evolution.
In the report, the researchers also stated that a similarly short period of increased evolution was also associated with the emergence of the Alpha, Beta, and Gamma VOCs. They also suggested that a single event, followed by the amplification of cases, drove a faster mutation rate. "About 52 per cent of the spike mutations identified in C.1.2 have previously been identified in other VOIs and VOCs. These include D614G, common to all variants, and E484K and N501Y which are shared with Beta and Gamma, with E484K also seen in Eta and N501Y in Alpha," an expert was quoted as saying.
The recent study has also found consistent increases in the number of C.1.2 genomes in South Africa on a monthly basis, rising from 0.2 per cent in May to 1.6 per cent in June and 2.0 per cent in July. "The rate of mutations is similar to the increases seen in Beta and Delta in South Africa during early detection," one of the researchers said.
Meanwhile, India has also reported the presence of a new sub-lineage AY.12 of the Delta variant of Covid, which was recently classified in Israel. A recent report by the Indian SARS-CoV-2 Genomics Consortium (INSACOG), many cases in India that were earlier classified as Delta, are now being reclassified as AY.12.
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Symptoms You Should Look Out For
New symptoms associated with the variant are yet to be confirmed by health experts. However, they have cautioned that some of the common symptoms of the variants could be runny nose, persistent cough, throat pain, body ache, loss of smell and taste, fever, muscle cramps, pink eyes, diarrhoea, etc. The best way to stay protected from any of the strains is by following the safety protocols of the COVID-19 pandemic which includes wear your masks properly, keep your hands clean with sanitiser or soap and water, and maintaining social distancing.
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