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Detection of SARS-CoV-2 intra-host recombination during superinfection with Alpha and Epsilon variants in New York City.

Joel O WertheimJade C WangMindy LeelawongDarren P MartinJennifer L HavensMoinuddin A ChowdhuryJonathan E PekarHelly AminAnthony ArroyoGordon Akanzuwine AwandareHoi Yan ChowEdimarlyn GonzalezElizabeth LuomaCollins M Morang'aAnton NekrutenkoStephen D ShankStefan SilverPeter Kojo QuashieJennifer L RakemanVictoria RuizLucia V TorianTetyana I VasylyevaSergei L Kosakovsky PondScott Hughes
Published in: Nature communications (2022)
Recombination is an evolutionary process by which many pathogens generate diversity and acquire novel functions. Although a common occurrence during coronavirus replication, detection of recombination is only feasible when genetically distinct viruses contemporaneously infect the same host. Here, we identify an instance of SARS-CoV-2 superinfection, whereby an individual was infected with two distinct viral variants: Alpha (B.1.1.7) and Epsilon (B.1.429). This superinfection was first noted when an Alpha genome sequence failed to exhibit the classic S gene target failure behavior used to track this variant. Full genome sequencing from four independent extracts reveals that Alpha variant alleles comprise around 75% of the genomes, whereas the Epsilon variant alleles comprise around 20% of the sample. Further investigation reveals the presence of numerous recombinant haplotypes spanning the genome, specifically in the spike, nucleocapsid, and ORF 8 coding regions. These findings support the potential for recombination to reshape SARS-CoV-2 genetic diversity.
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