• About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • DMCA
  • Sitemap
  • Write For Us
Wednesday, March 3, 2021
Daily illinois - USA | News, Sports & Updates Web Magazine
  • Covid-19
  • News
    • All
    • Education
    • Politics
    • Sports
    • World
    FBI Director Says Domestic Extremism ‘Metastasizing’ Around The Country

    FBI Director Says Domestic Extremism ‘Metastasizing’ Around The Country

    Top racing trainer Gordon Elliott apologizes over photo of himself sitting on a dead horse

    Horse racing faces fresh scrutiny after footage appears of a jockey posing on a dead horse

    6 Dr. Seuss Books Will No Longer Be Published Over Offensive Images

    6 Dr. Seuss Books Will No Longer Be Published Over Offensive Images

    Molly-Mae has now been found in breach of the Advertising Code for her online competition

    Molly-Mae Hague breaks advertising code for Instagram giveaway

    Elizabeth Warren rips stock buybacks as 'nothing but paper manipulation'

    Elizabeth Warren rips stock buybacks as ‘nothing but paper manipulation’

    This is the car that golf legend Tiger Woods was driving when seriously injured in a rollover accident on Tuesday.

    Tiger Woods Faces Tough Recovery From Leg Injuries Sustained In Car Crash

    Marissa Mayer Missed a Big Meeting by Over-Napping: What Entrepreneurs Should Take From Her 'Woops' Moment

    Marissa Mayer Missed a Big Meeting by Over-Napping: What Entrepreneurs Should Take From Her ‘Woops’ Moment

    Trump blasts GOP lawmakers who voted to impeach: 'Get rid of them all'

    Trump blasts GOP lawmakers who voted to impeach: ‘Get rid of them all’

    Sabres' Eichel day-to-day; Ullmark still out

    Sabres’ Eichel day-to-day; Ullmark still out

    John Oliver Unloads on ‘Colossal Asshole’ Andrew Cuomo

    John Oliver Unloads on ‘Colossal Asshole’ Andrew Cuomo

  • Science & Tech
    • All
    • Mobile
    Best Cheap Wireless Keyboard Deals for March 2021 | Digital Trends

    Best Cheap Wireless Keyboard Deals for March 2021 | Digital Trends

    6 steps to build a data-driven company, according to experts

    6 steps to build a data-driven company, according to experts

    Xiaomi Mi 11 back against floor

    Xiaomi, not Samsung or Apple, is taking advantage of Huawei’s woes in Europe

    'DarkModeBuddy' is a new Mac app for automating Dark Mode switching based on ambient light - 9to5Mac

    ‘DarkModeBuddy’ is a new Mac app for automating Dark Mode switching based on ambient light – 9to5Mac

    A powerline tower in a grassy field.

    Hackers tied to Russia’s GRU targeted the US grid for years

    Microsoft’s Xbox Game Streaming app for Windows includes touch controls, gyro, and more

    Microsoft’s Xbox Game Streaming app for Windows includes touch controls, gyro, and more

    FDA advisors endorse Janssen's single-shot COVID-19 vaccine

    FDA advisors endorse Janssen’s single-shot COVID-19 vaccine

    Facebook apologizes for 'mistake' in threatening to ban 81-year-old woolen pig knitter for hate speech

    Facebook apologizes for ‘mistake’ in threatening to ban 81-year-old woolen pig knitter for hate speech

    How will NASA's Perseverance rover engineers pilot first helicopter on Mars?

    How will NASA’s Perseverance rover engineers pilot first helicopter on Mars?

    Sir David Attenborough narrates the "exhibits" in this AR iPhone app

    Sir David Attenborough narrates the “exhibits” in this AR iPhone app

  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    Why Fox News is having a day-long meltdown over Dr. Seuss

    Why Fox News is having a day-long meltdown over Dr. Seuss

    What Jeffrey Epstein did was vile. Why Dasha Nekrasova made a horror movie about it

    What Jeffrey Epstein did was vile. Why Dasha Nekrasova made a horror movie about it

    Morgan Wallen fans vote him back onto Tennessee radio after racist-slur controversy

    Morgan Wallen fans vote him back onto Tennessee radio after racist-slur controversy

    The 2021 Golden Globes proved we no longer need the Golden Globes

    The 2021 Golden Globes proved we no longer need the Golden Globes

    Melissa Trueblood, who has worked for the Golden Globes for 20 years, is helping put together a show for the history books.

    A Golden Globes production veteran explains how to put together a show during a pandemic

    Lawyer for Britney Spears' dad defends him, but #FreeBritney fans aren't having it

    Lawyer for Britney Spears’ dad defends him, but #FreeBritney fans aren’t having it

    Why 'Small Axe' is the Golden Globe nominee you need to catch up on first

    Why ‘Small Axe’ is the Golden Globe nominee you need to catch up on first

    Ava Max released her debut album,

    Ava Max Looks To A Post-Pandemic Future With Her Euphoric New Video

    22 weekend culture picks: A Belafonte birthday bash with Jay-Z and Tiffany Haddish

    22 weekend culture picks: A Belafonte birthday bash with Jay-Z and Tiffany Haddish

    Broadway Is Dark. London Is Quiet. But in Australia, It’s Showtime.

    Broadway Is Dark. London Is Quiet. But in Australia, It’s Showtime.

  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Travel
    Spoon By H, a Korean restaurant and café closed its doors on Saturday, Feb. 27, after it shared Instagram posts detailing its struggles with fighting refund requests it deemed fraudulent. (Google Maps)

    Restaurants are reportedly being hurt by refund request scams

    12 fashion and beauty brands that give back to women

    12 fashion and beauty brands that give back to women

    What you need to know before you take a road trip this spring

    What you need to know before you take a road trip this spring

    Coronavirus in Illinois updates: Here’s what happened March 1 with COVID-19 in the Chicago area

    Coronavirus in Illinois updates: Here’s what happened March 1 with COVID-19 in the Chicago area

    Why East L.A. community members still worry about the future of a beloved tree

    Why East L.A. community members still worry about the future of a beloved tree

    When can we go on vacation again? This is what experts say

    When can we go on vacation again? This is what experts say

    Style Picks: Everything On Our March Wish List

    Style Picks: Everything On Our March Wish List

    Emmanuel Faber - stepping down from CEO role

    Emmanuel Faber to stand down as Danone CEO amid investor pressure

    Prince Harry revealed that he and Meghan began their relationship "upside-down," in that they dated in private at first, before revealing themselves to the public as a couple.

    Queen Elizabeth bought grandson Archie a waffle maker for Christmas, Prince Harry says

    NBC’s “78th Annual Golden Globe Awards” - Winners Press Experience

    Is Nomadland now the Oscar frontrunner for Best Picture? It’s complicated.

37 °f
Chicago
33 ° Thu
33 ° Fri
33 ° Sat
35 ° Sun
No Result
View All Result
Daily illinois - USA | News, Sports & Updates Web Magazine
No Result
View All Result
Home Science & Tech

Could a homegrown coronavirus strain be partly to blame for California’s surge?

by Staff Writer
January 24, 2021
in Science & Tech
Reading Time: 5min read
0
Could a homegrown coronavirus strain be partly to blame for California's surge?
493
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter



California scientists have discovered a homegrown coronavirus strain that appears to be propagating faster than any other variant on the loose in the Golden State.

Related posts

Best Cheap Wireless Keyboard Deals for March 2021 | Digital Trends

Best Cheap Wireless Keyboard Deals for March 2021 | Digital Trends

March 3, 2021
6 steps to build a data-driven company, according to experts

6 steps to build a data-driven company, according to experts

March 2, 2021

Two independent research groups said they stumbled upon the new strain while looking for signs that a highly transmissible variant from the United Kingdom had established itself here. Instead, they found a new branch of the virus’ family tree — one whose sudden rise and distinctive mutations have made it a prime suspect in California’s vicious holiday surge.

As they pored over genetic sequencing data in late December and early January, the two teams saw evidence of the new strain’s prolific spread leap off their spreadsheets. Though focused on different regions of the state, they uncovered trends that were both remarkably similar and deeply worrying.

Researchers at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles found that although the strain had been barely detectable in early October, it accounted for 24% of roughly 4,500 viral samples gathered throughout California in the last weeks of 2020.

In a separate analysis of 332 virus samples culled mostly from Northern California during late November and December, 25% were of the same type.

“There was a homegrown variant under our noses,” said Dr. Charles Chiu, a laboratory medicine specialist at UC San Francisco who examined the samples from the northern part of the state with collaborators from the California Department of Public Health. Were they not on the hunt for the U.K. strain and other viral variants, he said, “we could have missed this at every level.”

The new strain, which scientists have dubbed B.1.426, bears five mutations in its genetic code. One of them, known as L452R, alters the virus’ spike protein, the tool it uses to infiltrate human cells and turn them into virus-making factories.

Over multiple generations, even a small improvement in this ability will help a virus propagate more easily through a population, driving up infections, hospitalizations and deaths.

Spotty surveillance efforts that use genetic sequencing to track changes in the virus had detected a single instance of B.1.426 in California way back in July. As far as scientists can tell, it lay low for the next three months.

Then it got busy.

The team at Cedars-Sinai collected 192 viral samples from patients at the medical center between Nov. 22 and Dec. 28. At 11 p.m. on New Year’s Eve, they uploaded those samples to their genetic sequencer, which began to spit out the data over the first weekend of the new year. The strain’s sudden prominence elicited both wonder and sorrow.

“We said, ‘Wow! There’s something different, something we didn’t expect to find,’” said Dr. Eric Vail, a pathologist who usually sequences genes in search of cancer drivers. “All of a sudden, your brain starts going a mile a minute.”

All thoughts quickly turned to the state’s calamitous COVID-19 surge — a run-up in illness and death that stressed hospitals to their limit, killed more than 18,000 Californians and doubled the state’s total death toll in the space of less than three months.

Had they found the culprit?

The preliminary evidence seemed damning. It was certainly found at the scene of the crime. Flummoxed health officials working to contain the outbreak had hypothesized that they were up against a new coronavirus strain with enhanced transmission capabilities.

But there were several other suspects to consider as well, including chilly weather, restaurant dining, holiday gatherings and a growing disregard for public health measures.

To clarify B.1.426’s role in the surge, investigators will need to determine just how much devastation it is capable of producing. That inquiry will focus on its transmissibility as well as its ability to circumvent the tools — including masks, drugs and vaccines — that can be used to bring the pandemic under control.

For now, both sets of researchers doubt they have found a lone actor. But they may have caught an accomplice.

Chiu said his skepticism stems in part from the fact that the surge in cases across the state seems to have begun before the new strain saw its steepest growth. “It may have contributed to this surge, or simply gone along for the ride,” he said.

In addition, the strain’s sudden prominence among viral samples in Northern California could be due in part to its role in an unusually large outbreak at Kaiser Permanente San Jose Medical Center that infected at least 77 staffers and 15 patients, and resulted in one employee death. Officials are investigating whether an infected but asymptomatic employee was able to spread the virus widely with the help of a battery-powered fan that was part of an inflatable Christmas tree costume.

“It seemed to spread quite fast,” said Dr. Sara Cody, the health officer for Santa Clara County, where the hospital is located. “We are trying to understand whether the features of that outbreak are because of this variant — does this variant of the virus behave in some different way — or does it have to do with other factors that were present at the hospital?”

In Southern California, where the timelines of the surge and B.1.426’s emergence seem better aligned, researchers are more inclined to blame the virus.

“It probably helped to accelerate the number of cases around the holiday season,” Vail said. “But human behavior is the predominant factor in the spread of a virus, and the fact that it happened when the weather became colder and in the midst of the holidays when people gather is not an accident.”

Scientists in Chiu’s lab have already begun cultivating armies of the new strain, derived from four patients recently infected with it. Creating large batches under controlled conditions is a first step in testing whether the any of its mutations enhance its ability to latch onto, invade and hijack human cells.

Those early efforts have raised cause for concern.

“It grows pretty robustly,” Chiu said.

Adding to his concern are the findings of other researchers at Howard University who engineered and tested a version of the coronavirus with the L452R mutation, which rose to prominence in a strain that surfaced in Denmark in March. The Howard team found that the mutation helps the virus attach more firmly to human cells, potentially enhancing its transmission.

In Chiu’s lab, as well as at Cedars-Sinai, scientists will put the new strain through its paces to look for signs that B.1.426’s mutations have enhanced its performance.

Other experiments will explore whether the antibodies generated by the immune systems of people who have been infected by or vaccinated against the coronavirus will recognize this new strain.

Some damning evidence has already come to light. State health officials reported this week that a patient in Monterey County who had tested positive for an infection in April and recovered has now been infected with B.1.426.

That suggests that the new strain may be able to hide its presence from antibodies created after exposure to other versions of the virus — a phenomenon known as “immune escape.” If that’s the case, it might undermine the effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines and antibody-based treatments.

“The takeaway is that this is a variant that’s becoming more prevalent and we need to lean in and understand more about it,” Cody said.



Source by www.latimes.com

Share197Tweet123Share49
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Van Morrison teams with Eric Clapton for anti-lockdown song

Van Morrison teams with Eric Clapton for anti-lockdown song

December 19, 2020
Sen. Rand Paul's ‘Festivus Report’ claims $54B in tax dollars was 'totally wasted'

Sen. Rand Paul’s ‘Festivus Report’ claims $54B in tax dollars was ‘totally wasted’

December 23, 2020
'Zombie' greenhouse gas lurks in permafrost beneath the Arctic Ocean

‘Zombie’ greenhouse gas lurks in permafrost beneath the Arctic Ocean

December 24, 2020
Spoon By H, a Korean restaurant and café closed its doors on Saturday, Feb. 27, after it shared Instagram posts detailing its struggles with fighting refund requests it deemed fraudulent. (Google Maps)

Restaurants are reportedly being hurt by refund request scams

0
Fact check: New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced he would defer his annual raise

Fact check: New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced he would defer his annual raise

0
Swedish government sidelines epidemiologist who steered country's no lockdown experiment as deaths rise

Swedish government sidelines epidemiologist who steered country’s no lockdown experiment as deaths rise

0
Spoon By H, a Korean restaurant and café closed its doors on Saturday, Feb. 27, after it shared Instagram posts detailing its struggles with fighting refund requests it deemed fraudulent. (Google Maps)

Restaurants are reportedly being hurt by refund request scams

March 3, 2021
12 fashion and beauty brands that give back to women

12 fashion and beauty brands that give back to women

March 3, 2021
What you need to know before you take a road trip this spring

What you need to know before you take a road trip this spring

March 3, 2021
Daily illinois - USA | News, Sports & Updates Web Magazine

Copyright © 2020 Dailyillinois.com.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • DMCA
  • Sitemap
  • Write For Us

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • About Us Page
  • Contact
  • DMCA Policy
  • Home 1
  • Privacy Policy
  • Submit, Guest Post, Write For Us and Become a Contributor
  • Terms of Use

Copyright © 2020 Dailyillinois.com.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.