Covishield offers protection from 'double mutant', says CCMB


Hyderabad, Apr 23 (IANS): Covishield vaccine offers protection from double mutant variant of novel coronavirus, shows a study by the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology (CCMB).

CCMB Director Rakesh K. Mishra termed this as a very preliminary but encouraging result.

"Early results using in vitro neutralisation assay show that both convalescent (prior infection) sera and Covishield vaccinated sera offer protection against the B.1.617 variant, aka double mutant," he said in a tweet.

The CCMB's finding came close on the heels of an announcement by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) that Covaxin neutralises multiple variants of SARS-CoV-2 and effectively works against the double mutant strain as well.

Covaxin is India's first indigenous Covid vaccine developed by Bharat Biotech in collaboration with ICMR.

Covishield has been developed by Oxford-Astrazeneca and is being produced by Serum Institute of India, Pune.

Both Covaxin and Covishield are part of India's ongoing Covid vaccination programme.

The 'double mutant' (B.1.617) is said to be responsible for the current surge in Covid-19 cases in Maharashtra and other states in India. Scientists earlier feared that vaccines may not offer protection from 'double mutant' as it may escape the immune system.

After the CCMB's latest announcement that Covishield too offers protection from 'double mutant', experts say this again underscore the need for people to get vaccinated.

CCMB scientist Divya Tej Sowpati tweeted that the convalescent sera is from September 2020, hence most likely of an infection of a variant which is not B.1.617.

He also pointed to misinformation and confusion about the circulating SARS-CoV-2 variants in India.

Though B.1.617 is called 'double mutant', it is characterised by more than 15 mutations. "It got dubbed the 'double mutant' because of two spike mutations, L452R and E484Q, which were mutations of concern because of their immune escape properties, and possible high infectivity," wrote Sowpati, who is leading Covid-19 genomics at CCMB.

According to him, B.1.618 is not the 'triple mutant'. "Triple Mutant: Again, WRONG name, because it has many more defining mutations. Dubbed 'triple' because in addition to the two mutations, it also has V382L in its Spike. This is a sub-lineage of B.1.617, found mainly in MH samples and also a bit in other states."

He also clarified that B.1.618 which was first sampled in West Bengal in late October 2020, has nothing to do with B.1.617, except for a couple of shared variants that all SARS-CoV-2 strains have at this point such as D614G.

According to him, the main concern with B.1.618 is that it is found in growing proportions in West Bengal and has the spike del145-146 as well as E484K, both of which are known immune escape mutations.

The scientist said that the names of "double" and "triple" mutants are wrong and misleading and that they have no connection to the lineage seen in West Bengal.

 

  

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Comment on this article

  • Jossey Saldanha, Mumbai

    Fri, Apr 23 2021

    On 20th April 2021 I took my second doze of Covishield. I met the Doctor at the Covid Hospital who told me that in spite of this Vaccine you can still get Covid but I can only guarantee that you will not die because of Covid ...

    DisAgree Agree [4] Reply Report Abuse

  • Daniel, Mangalore

    Fri, Apr 23 2021

    That is the purpose of the vaccine. Just to improve your immunity so that Incase you get covid you don't get hospitalised or God forbid die. I got by first dose 3 days ago. I request people who are eligible to go and take it when it's available from may 1 the demand will increase as youth will be eligible

    DisAgree Agree [3] Reply Report Abuse


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