International Journal of Infectious Diseases (May 2021)

Emergence and outcomes of the SARS-CoV-2 ‘Marseille-4’ variant

  • Pierre-Edouard Fournier,
  • Philippe Colson,
  • Anthony Levasseur,
  • Christian A. Devaux,
  • Philippe Gautret,
  • Marielle Bedotto,
  • Jeremy Delerce,
  • Ludivine Brechard,
  • Lucile Pinault,
  • Jean-Christophe Lagier,
  • Florence Fenollar,
  • Didier Raoult

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 106
pp. 228 – 236

Abstract

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Background: In Marseille, France, following a first severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) outbreak in March–May 2020, a second epidemic phase occurred from June, involving 10 new variants. The Marseille-4 variant caused an epidemic that started in August and is still ongoing. Methods: The 1038 SARS-CoV-2 whole genome sequences obtained in our laboratory by next-generation sequencing with Illumina technology were analysed using Nextclade and nextstrain/ncov pipelines and IQ-TREE. A Marseille-4-specific qPCR assay was implemented. Demographic and clinical features were compared between patients with the Marseille-4 variant and those with earlier strains. Results: Marseille-4 harbours 13 hallmark mutations. One leads to an S477N substitution in the receptor binding domain of the spike protein targeted by current vaccines. Using a specific qPCR, it was observed that Marseille-4 caused 12–100% of SARS-CoV-2 infections in Marseille from September 2020, being involved in 2106 diagnoses. This variant was more frequently associated with hypoxemia than were clade 20A strains before May 2020. It caused a re-infection in 11 patients diagnosed with different SARS-CoV-2 strains before June 2020, suggesting either short-term protective immunity or a lack of cross-immunity. Conclusions: Marseille-4 should be considered as a major SARS-CoV-2 variant. Its sudden appearance points towards an animal reservoir, possibly mink. The protective role of past exposure and current vaccines against this variant should be evaluated.

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