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Why Do the Omicron Variants Spread So Easily?

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Plus: Did you read this? Monkeypox high alert, "parentese," and strange lava life. | July 26, 2022 ?

Plus: Did you read this? Monkeypox high alert, "parentese," and strange lava life. [View in browser]( | [Become a member]( July 26, 2022   Did a friend forward this? [Subscribe here](. Good Morning! Here’s the One Question and some related Nautilus stories—plus the top science news this week [READ NAUTILUS](   ONE QUESTION Why Do the Omicron Variants Spread So Easily? INTERVIEW BY BRIAN GALLAGHER One question for [Abdullah Syed]([,]( a postdoctoral researcher working with Jennifer Doudna in her lab at the Gladstone Institutes, an independent, nonprofit life science research organization located San Francisco.   I started working on this question exactly the day after the Omicron sequence was published, near Thanksgiving. It was a Twitter post that alerted the whole world and everyone said, “Wow, this is very different.” By the middle of December, it was the most common virus in the U.S. That’s an insanely fast level of transmissibility. It had a lot more mutations than any previous variant, especially in the spike protein that recognizes and binds to the receptor in the cells of your lungs. Previous variants had only four, five, six mutations in the spike protein. Omicron has more than 30. That could mean it’s able to get around the antibodies that have already been generated through the vaccine or through previous infections. Those mutations would make the spike look different, and a different-looking spike may not be recognized by antibodies that you already have. Or, the mutations could make the spike protein more efficient, better able to bind and transmit. In our new [study](, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, we tried to find out which of these makes Omicron spread so easily. I designed and optimized a way of making particles that look like SARS-CoV-2. They have all the same proteins that SARS-CoV-2, but we take out the RNA inside and we put in another piece of RNA that we can detect more easily, that codes for luciferase, which makes cells luminescent, or glow. This virus-like particle, or VLP, is basically a toy version of Omicron. It allows us to swap out one protein at a time and see what impact they have on the efficiency of the virus. We can see, for example, if you take the original 2019 virus, and you put in the Omicron spike—does that make the virus-like particle more efficient? We saw that the spike was a little bit more efficient, although not enough to explain a huge increase in transmissibility. We also looked at neutralizing antibody levels. With the spike protein of Omicron, no matter which vaccine you got, or even if you were infected by previous variants, the antibodies you have were significantly weaker against Omicron compared to previous variants. The new Omicron subvariants—the BA.2, BA.3, BA.4, BA.5—have even more immune escape. It’s more efficient than the variants before Delta, but roughly the same as Delta. Omicron’s immune escape is significantly more than previous variants, including Delta. So, immune escape has a bigger effect on transmissibility. I hope Pfizer and Moderna update to the most recent Omicron, BA.5, but they’re planning for BA.1, and it’ll be available in the fall from what the FDA has stated. Probably every six months we’ll need a vaccine that addresses the most recent variant because it’s continuing to change quite quickly. But over the long term, I would say probably about every eight years, we would lose our immunity. If we don’t update the vaccines and the virus continues to change, then it may be back to the 2020 situation, where the virus is so different that the immune system doesn’t recognize it. If you got COVID in 2020, your risk of dying was 10 times higher than it is today—at least 10 times higher.   Related Nautilus Stories   [HEALTH]( [How the Coronavirus Stays One Step Ahead of Us]( BY MEGAN SCUDELLARI At first, no one looked twice at the new variant. [Continue reading →](   [PSYCHOLOGY]( [Friendship Is a Lifesaver]( BY LYDIA DENWORTH My mother-in-law, Carol, lives alone. It was her 75th birthday the other day. [Continue reading →](   [ECONOMICS]( [The Economic Case for Vaccine Passports]( BY ROBERT H. FRANK The latest surge in COVID-19 cases in the United States has been called a pandemic of antivaxxers and conspiracy theorists. [Continue reading →](   [EVOLUTION]( [How Coronavirus Mutations Arise and New Variants Emerge]( BY MAKI NARO & DIANA KWON In 2020, SARS-Cov-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, changed the world. [Continue reading →](   [PSYCHOLOGY]( [Horror Fans Have More Fun During a Pandemic]( BY COLTAN SCRIVNER People running through the streets in terror, stores being looted for supplies, and, of course, people eating other people. [Continue reading →]( Experience the endless possibilities and deep human connections that science offers [SUBSCRIBE TO NAUTILUS](   [To Invest in AI, You Need Rulebreakers]( Artificial intelligence is a huge investment opportunity with massive potential—so massive, [Motley Fool]( designed Rule Breakers: Artificial Intelligence to help investors like you target the companies poised to win big with this breakthrough technology. The exclusive report bundle features top AI stock recommendations curated by industry experts. [Sign up today]( to get stock advice that beats the market! [Learn More](   DID YOU READ THIS? The top science news this week   [Monkeypox Has Become a Global Health Emergency, Says WHO]( The World Health Organization just raised the monkeypox threat to its highest alert level, signaling that managing the outbreak will require international coordination. [New Scientist→](   [“Parentese” Is Truly a Lingua Franca, Global Study Finds]( Remarkable cross-cultural research, involving adults spanning the globe, found that people don’t differ much in how they communicate with babies. [The New York Times→](   [Hawaii’s Lava Caves Are Teeming with Bacterial “Dark Matter”]( The island’s volcanic environments hold clues to whether Mars hosted life in its ancient past, and hint at how a diverse community of microbes could live today in the Red Planet’s lava caves. [Gizmodo→]( –Brian Gallagher, associate editor   [BECOME A SUBSCRIBER]( [Apparel That Will Protect Our Oceans]( Nautilus and Jungles have teamed up to release a limited-edition line of stunning apparel. The [Nautilus x Jungles collection]( will benefit the 30x30 initiative—a global effort to protect 30% of our oceans by 2030. These distinctive pieces feature captivating imagery from the Schmidt Ocean Institute and provocative quotes from legendary biologist and environmentalist Roger Payne. [Subscribe to Nautilus]( and save 50% on a piece from the Nautilus x Jungles collection. [Claim This Offer](   [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [Instagram]( Copyright © 2022 NautilusNext, All rights reserved. You were subscribed to the newsletter from nautil.us. Our mailing address is: NautilusNext 360 W 36th Street, 7S, New York, NY 10018 To view in your browser, [click here]( . Don't want to hear from us anymore? Click here to [unsubscribe]( .

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