Pathogens (Jun 2022)

SARS-CoV-2 Mutant Spectra at Different Depth Levels Reveal an Overwhelming Abundance of Low Frequency Mutations

  • Brenda Martínez-González,
  • María Eugenia Soria,
  • Lucía Vázquez-Sirvent,
  • Cristina Ferrer-Orta,
  • Rebeca Lobo-Vega,
  • Pablo Mínguez,
  • Lorena de la Fuente,
  • Carlos Llorens,
  • Beatriz Soriano,
  • Ricardo Ramos-Ruíz,
  • Marta Cortón,
  • Rosario López-Rodríguez,
  • Carlos García-Crespo,
  • Pilar Somovilla,
  • Antoni Durán-Pastor,
  • Isabel Gallego,
  • Ana Isabel de Ávila,
  • Soledad Delgado,
  • Federico Morán,
  • Cecilio López-Galíndez,
  • Jordi Gómez,
  • Luis Enjuanes,
  • Llanos Salar-Vidal,
  • Mario Esteban-Muñoz,
  • Jaime Esteban,
  • Ricardo Fernández-Roblas,
  • Ignacio Gadea,
  • Carmen Ayuso,
  • Javier Ruíz-Hornillos,
  • Nuria Verdaguer,
  • Esteban Domingo,
  • Celia Perales

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens11060662
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 6
p. 662

Abstract

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Populations of RNA viruses are composed of complex and dynamic mixtures of variant genomes that are termed mutant spectra or mutant clouds. This applies also to SARS-CoV-2, and mutations that are detected at low frequency in an infected individual can be dominant (represented in the consensus sequence) in subsequent variants of interest or variants of concern. Here we briefly review the main conclusions of our work on mutant spectrum characterization of hepatitis C virus (HCV) and SARS-CoV-2 at the nucleotide and amino acid levels and address the following two new questions derived from previous results: (i) how is the SARS-CoV-2 mutant and deletion spectrum composition in diagnostic samples, when examined at progressively lower cut-off mutant frequency values in ultra-deep sequencing; (ii) how the frequency distribution of minority amino acid substitutions in SARS-CoV-2 compares with that of HCV sampled also from infected patients. The main conclusions are the following: (i) the number of different mutations found at low frequency in SARS-CoV-2 mutant spectra increases dramatically (50- to 100-fold) as the cut-off frequency for mutation detection is lowered from 0.5% to 0.1%, and (ii) that, contrary to HCV, SARS-CoV-2 mutant spectra exhibit a deficit of intermediate frequency amino acid substitutions. The possible origin and implications of mutant spectrum differences among RNA viruses are discussed.

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