Evolutionary Dynamics and Dissemination Pattern of the SARS-CoV-2 Lineage B.1.1.33 During the Early Pandemic Phase in Brazil

Paola Cristina Resende(Ministério da Saúde), Edson Delatorre(Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo), Tiago Gräf(Fundação Oswaldo Cruz), Daiana Mir(Universidad de la República de Uruguay), Fernando Couto Motta(Ministério da Saúde), Luciana Appolinario(Ministério da Saúde), Anna Carolina Dias Paixão(Ministério da Saúde), Ana Carolina da Fonseca Mendonça(Ministério da Saúde), Maria Ogrzewalska(Ministério da Saúde), Bráulia Costa Caetano(Ministério da Saúde), Gabriel Luz Wallau(Fundação Oswaldo Cruz), Cássia Docena(Fundação Oswaldo Cruz), Mirleide Cordeiro dos Santos(Instituto Evandro Chagas), Jessylene de Almeida Ferreira(Instituto Evandro Chagas), Edivaldo Costa Sousa(Instituto Evandro Chagas), Sandro Patroca da Silva(Instituto Evandro Chagas), Sandra Bianchini Fernandes, Lucas A. Vianna, Larissa da Costa Souza, Jean F G Ferro, Vanessa Brandão Nardy, Cliomar A. Santos, Irina Nastassja Riediger, Maria do Carmo Debur, Júlio Croda(Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso do Sul), Wanderson Kleber de Oliveira(Ministry of Defence), André Luiz de Abreu(Ministério da Saúde), Gonzalo Bello(Fundação Oswaldo Cruz), Marilda Mendonça Siqueira(Ministério da Saúde)
Frontiers in Microbiology
February 17, 2021
Cited by 88Open Access
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Abstract

A previous study demonstrates that most of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) Brazilian strains fell in three local clades that were introduced from Europe around late February 2020. Here we investigated in more detail the origin of the major and most widely disseminated SARS-CoV-2 Brazilian lineage B.1.1.33. We recovered 190 whole viral genomes collected from 13 Brazilian states from February 29 to April 31, 2020 and combined them with other B.1.1 genomes collected globally. Our genomic survey confirms that lineage B.1.1.33 is responsible for a variable fraction of the community viral transmissions in Brazilian states, ranging from 2% of all SARS-CoV-2 genomes from Pernambuco to 80% of those from Rio de Janeiro. We detected a moderate prevalence (5–18%) of lineage B.1.1.33 in some South American countries and a very low prevalence (<1%) in North America, Europe, and Oceania. Our study reveals that lineage B.1.1.33 evolved from an ancestral clade, here designated B.1.1.33-like, that carries one of the two B.1.1.33 synapomorphic mutations. The B.1.1.33-like lineage may have been introduced from Europe or arose in Brazil in early February 2020 and a few weeks later gave origin to the lineage B.1.1.33. These SARS-CoV-2 lineages probably circulated during February 2020 and reached all Brazilian regions and multiple countries around the world by mid-March, before the implementation of air travel restrictions in Brazil. Our phylodynamic analysis also indicates that public health interventions were partially effective to control the expansion of lineage B.1.1.33 in Rio de Janeiro because its median effective reproductive number ( R e ) was drastically reduced by about 66% during March 2020, but failed to bring it to below one. Continuous genomic surveillance of lineage B.1.1.33 might provide valuable information about epidemic dynamics and the effectiveness of public health interventions in some Brazilian states.


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