Learning from prepandemic data to forecast viral escape.
Nicole N ThadaniSarah F GurevPascal NotinNoor YoussefNathan J RollinsDaniel RitterChris SanderYarin GalDebora S MarksPublished in: Nature (2023)
Effective pandemic preparedness relies on anticipating viral mutations that are able to evade host immune responses to facilitate vaccine and therapeutic design. However, current strategies for viral evolution prediction are not available early in a pandemic-experimental approaches require host polyclonal antibodies to test against 1-16 , and existing computational methods draw heavily from current strain prevalence to make reliable predictions of variants of concern 17-19 . To address this, we developed EVEscape, a generalizable modular framework that combines fitness predictions from a deep learning model of historical sequences with biophysical and structural information. EVEscape quantifies the viral escape potential of mutations at scale and has the advantage of being applicable before surveillance sequencing, experimental scans or three-dimensional structures of antibody complexes are available. We demonstrate that EVEscape, trained on sequences available before 2020, is as accurate as high-throughput experimental scans at anticipating pandemic variation for SARS-CoV-2 and is generalizable to other viruses including influenza, HIV and understudied viruses with pandemic potential such as Lassa and Nipah. We provide continually revised escape scores for all current strains of SARS-CoV-2 and predict probable further mutations to forecast emerging strains as a tool for continuing vaccine development ( evescape.org ).
Keyphrases
- sars cov
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- high throughput
- immune response
- deep learning
- public health
- escherichia coli
- computed tomography
- hepatitis c virus
- single cell
- antiretroviral therapy
- hiv positive
- human immunodeficiency virus
- risk factors
- body composition
- hiv testing
- genetic diversity
- copy number
- human health
- toll like receptor
- magnetic resonance imaging
- dendritic cells
- healthcare
- men who have sex with men
- contrast enhanced
- resistance training
- inflammatory response
- climate change
- risk assessment
- magnetic resonance
- medical education
- psychometric properties
- dual energy