Nature Communications (Jan 2022)

Viral infection and transmission in a large, well-traced outbreak caused by the SARS-CoV-2 Delta variant

  • Baisheng Li,
  • Aiping Deng,
  • Kuibiao Li,
  • Yao Hu,
  • Zhencui Li,
  • Yaling Shi,
  • Qianling Xiong,
  • Zhe Liu,
  • Qianfang Guo,
  • Lirong Zou,
  • Huan Zhang,
  • Meng Zhang,
  • Fangzhu Ouyang,
  • Juan Su,
  • Wenzhe Su,
  • Jing Xu,
  • Huifang Lin,
  • Jing Sun,
  • Jinju Peng,
  • Huiming Jiang,
  • Pingping Zhou,
  • Ting Hu,
  • Min Luo,
  • Yingtao Zhang,
  • Huanying Zheng,
  • Jianpeng Xiao,
  • Tao Liu,
  • Mingkai Tan,
  • Rongfei Che,
  • Hanri Zeng,
  • Zhonghua Zheng,
  • Yushi Huang,
  • Jianxiang Yu,
  • Lina Yi,
  • Jie Wu,
  • Jingdiao Chen,
  • Haojie Zhong,
  • Xiaoling Deng,
  • Min Kang,
  • Oliver G. Pybus,
  • Matthew Hall,
  • Katrina A. Lythgoe,
  • Yan Li,
  • Jun Yuan,
  • Jianfeng He,
  • Jing Lu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-28089-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

Read online

The SARS-CoV-2 Delta variant has spread rapidly worldwide. Here, the authors characterise a single chain of transmission of Delta in China, and find evidence that it is more infectious and replicates faster during early infection compared to early pandemic lineages.