Tracking of Mutational Signature of SARS-CoV-2 Omicron on Distinct Continents and Little Difference was Found

Author:

Zheng Shu-Yue1,Zhang Yun-Peng1,Liu Yu-Xin1,Zhao Wei1,Peng Xiang-Lei1,Zheng Yan-Peng1,Fu Yuan-Hui1,Yu Jie-Mei1ORCID,He Jin-Sheng1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Life Sciences and Bioengineering, Beijing Jiaotong University, Beijing 100044, China

Abstract

The Omicron variant is currently ravaging the world, raising serious concern globally. Monitoring genomic variations and determining their influence on biological features are critical for tracing its ongoing transmission and facilitating effective measures. Based on large-scale sequences from different continents, this study found that: (i) The genetic diversity of Omicron is much lower than that of the Delta variant. Still, eight deletions (Del 1–8) and 1 insertion, as well as 130 SNPs, were detected on the Omicron genomes, with two deletions (Del 3 and 4) and 38 SNPs commonly detected on all continents and exhibiting high-occurring frequencies. (ii) Four groups of tightly linked SNPs (linkage I–IV) were detected, among which linkage I, containing 38 SNPs, with 6 located in the RBD, increased its occurring frequency remarkably over time. (iii) The third codons of the Omicron shouldered the most mutation pressures, while the second codons presented the least flexibility. (iv) Four major mutants with amino acid substitutions in the RBD were detected, and further structural analysis suggested that the substitutions did not alter the viral receptor binding ability greatly. It was inferred that though the Omicron genome harbored great changes in antigenicity and remarkable ability to evade immunity, it was immune-pressure selected. This study tracked mutational signatures of Omicron variant and the potential biological significance of the SNPs, and the linkages await further functional verification.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Virology,Infectious Diseases

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