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The SARS-CoV-2 Omicron (B.1.1.529) variant exhibits altered pathogenicity, transmissibility, and fitness in the golden Syrian hamster model

Authors :
Shuofeng Yuan
Zi-Wei Ye
Ronghui Liang
Kaiming Tang
Anna Jinxia Zhang
Gang Lu
Chon Phin Ong
Vincent Kwok-Man Poon
Chris Chung-Sing Chan
Bobo Wing-Yee Mok
Zhenzhi Qin
Yubin Xie
Haoran Sun
Jessica Oi-Ling Tsang
Terrence Tsz-Tai Yuen
Kenn Ka-Heng Chik
Chris Chun-Yiu Chan
Jian-Piao Cai
Cuiting Luo
Lu Lu
Cyril Chik-Yan Yip
Hin Chu
Kelvin Kai-Wang To
Honglin Chen
Dong-Yan Jin
Kwok-Yung Yuen
Jasper Fuk-Woo Chan
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

The newly emerging SARS-CoV-2 Omicron (B.1.1.529) variant first identified in South Africa in November 2021 is characterized by an unusual number of amino acid mutations in its spike that renders existing vaccines and therapeutic monoclonal antibodies dramatically less effective. The in vivo pathogenicity, transmissibility, and fitness of this new Variant of Concerns are unknown. We investigated these virological attributes of the Omicron variant in comparison with those of the currently dominant Delta (B.1.617.2) variant in the golden Syrian hamster COVID-19 model. Omicron-infected hamsters developed significantly less body weight losses, clinical scores, respiratory tract viral burdens, cytokine/chemokine dysregulation, and tissue damages than Delta-infected hamsters. The Omicron and Delta variant were both highly transmissible (100% vs 100%) via contact transmission. Importantly, the Omicron variant consistently demonstrated about 10-20% higher transmissibility than the already-highly transmissible Delta variant in repeated non-contact transmission studies (overall: 30/36 vs 24/36, 83.3% vs 66.7%). The Delta variant displayed higher fitness advantage than the Omicron variant without selection pressure in both in vitro and in vivo competition models. However, this scenario drastically changed once immune selection pressure with neutralizing antibodies active against the Delta variant but poorly active against the Omicron variant were introduced, with the Omicron variant significantly outcompeting the Delta variant. Taken together, our findings demonstrated that while the Omicron variant is less pathogenic than the Delta variant, it is highly transmissible and can outcompete the Delta variant under immune selection pressure. Next-generation vaccines and antivirals effective against this new VOC are urgently needed.One Sentence SummaryThe novel SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant, though less pathogenic, is highly transmissible and outcompetes the Delta variant under immune selection pressure in the golden Syrian hamster COVID-19 model.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6214b36e75d673af50a9f9b6494757c5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.01.12.476031