A SARS-CoV-2 vaccine candidate would likely match all currently circulating strains
Preprint
- 27 April 2020
- preprint
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in bioRxiv
Abstract
The magnitude of the COVID-19 pandemic underscores the urgency for a safe and effective vaccine. Here we analyzed SARS-CoV-2 sequence diversity across 5,700 sequences sampled since December 2019. The Spike protein, which is the target immunogen of most vaccine candidates, showed 93 sites with shared polymorphisms; only one of these mutations was found in more than 1% of currently circulating sequences. The minimal diversity found among SARS-CoV-2 sequences can be explained by drift and bottleneck events as the virus spread away from its original epicenter in Wuhan, China. Importantly, there is little evidence that the virus has adapted to its human host since December 2019. Our findings suggest that a single vaccine should be efficacious against current global strains.One Sentence Summary: The limited diversification of SARS-CoV-2 reflects drift and bottleneck events rather than adaptation to humans as the virus spread.Keywords
All Related Versions
- Published version: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 117 (38), 23652.
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