Browsing by Author "Monajjemi, M, Sayiner, HS, Kandemirli, F, Mollaamin, F"
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Publication An overview on lambda, epsilon, kappa, iota and zeta variants of covid-19 and its probability to merge with delta & delta plus, why it is a concern(2022-10-15) Monajjemi M., Sayiner H.S., Kandemirli F., Mollaamin F.; Monajjemi, M, Sayiner, HS, Kandemirli, F, Mollaamin, FCOVID-19 is caused by the virus SARS-CoV-2 that belongs to the Corona groups. The subgroups of the coronavirus families are α, β, γ, and δ coronavirus. On June 15, 2021, the string λ of SARS-CoV-2 was evaluated as a variant of interest via the World Health Organization. This string has a high prevalence in some parts of South American countries, but it occurred only occasionally in Brazil. This study confirms that mutations in the λ-spike protein can be destroyed the neutralizing antibodies and increase infectivity. Coronaviruses such as SARS-CoV-2 have an evolutionary superpower called “recombination” which permits the mixing of their genomes into novel combinations. Unlike regular mutation, which precedes slowly one change at a time, recombination can produce whole changes in a coronavirus genome. Although right now, is a concern, a mixing of λ with other variants such as is much more of a concern compared to alone variants. There is another item: the recombination can arise within the sample after it was taken from the infected person, not while it was inside their body.