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The Role of Lebanon in the COVID-19 Butterfly Effect: The B.1.398 Example.

Dalal NourRayane RafeiAlessandra P LamarcaLuiz Gonzaga Paula de AlmeidaMarwan OsmanMohamad Bachar IsmailHassan MallatAtika BerryGwendolyne BurfinQuentin SemanasLaurence JossetHamad HassanFouad DabboussiBruno LinaPhilippe ColsonAna Tereza Ribeiro de VasconcelosMounzer Hamze
Published in: Viruses (2022)
In the present study, we provide a retrospective genomic surveillance of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic in Lebanon; we newly sequence the viral genomes of 200 nasopharyngeal samples collected between July 2020 and February 2021 from patients in different regions of Lebanon and from travelers crossing the Lebanese-Syrian border, and we also analyze the Lebanese genomic dataset available at GISAID. Our results show that SARS-CoV-2 infections in Lebanon during this period were shaped by the turnovers of four dominant SARS-CoV-2 lineages, with B.1.398 being the first to thoroughly dominate. Lebanon acted as a dispersal center of B.1.398 to other countries, with intercontinental transmissions being more common than within-continent. Within the country, the district of Tripoli, which was the source of 43% of the total B.1.398 sequences in our study, was identified as being an important source of dispersal in the country. In conclusion, our findings exemplify the butterfly effect, by which a lineage that emerges in a small area can be spread around the world, and highlight the potential role of developing countries in the emergence of new variants.
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