Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Institute of Evolutionary Biology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
Science. 2021 Feb 12;371(6530):708-712. doi: 10.1126/science.abf2946. Epub 2021 Jan 8.
The United Kingdom's COVID-19 epidemic during early 2020 was one of world's largest and was unusually well represented by virus genomic sampling. We determined the fine-scale genetic lineage structure of this epidemic through analysis of 50,887 severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) genomes, including 26,181 from the UK sampled throughout the country's first wave of infection. Using large-scale phylogenetic analyses combined with epidemiological and travel data, we quantified the size, spatiotemporal origins, and persistence of genetically distinct UK transmission lineages. Rapid fluctuations in virus importation rates resulted in >1000 lineages; those introduced prior to national lockdown tended to be larger and more dispersed. Lineage importation and regional lineage diversity declined after lockdown, whereas lineage elimination was size-dependent. We discuss the implications of our genetic perspective on transmission dynamics for COVID-19 epidemiology and control.
2020 年初英国的 COVID-19 疫情是世界上规模最大的疫情之一,病毒基因组采样的代表性异常强。我们通过分析 50887 个严重急性呼吸系统综合征冠状病毒 2(SARS-CoV-2)基因组,包括来自英国的 26181 个样本,确定了该疫情的精细遗传谱系结构,这些样本来自英国第一波感染期间的全国各地。我们使用大规模系统发育分析结合流行病学和旅行数据,量化了遗传上不同的英国传播谱系的规模、时空起源和持久性。病毒输入率的快速波动导致了>1000 个谱系;在全国封锁之前引入的谱系往往更大、更分散。封锁后,谱系的输入和区域谱系多样性下降,而谱系的消除则取决于谱系的大小。我们讨论了我们的遗传视角对 COVID-19 流行病学和控制的传播动态的影响。