Gujarat reports its first case of XE variant of coronavirus

So far, only 600 instances of variant have been recorded in global repository 

April 08, 2022 10:12 pm | Updated April 09, 2022 07:43 am IST - NEW DELHI

A man reacts as a health worker collects swab samples for COVID-19 testing in Ahmedabad. File

A man reacts as a health worker collects swab samples for COVID-19 testing in Ahmedabad. File | Photo Credit: The Hindu

On a day the Centre expanded the availability of precaution doses, the XE variant of coronavirus, a more infectious but not more severe than the Omicron variety, has been found in Gujarat, a highly placed official confirmed to The Hindu.

This week, Mumbai civic officials reported a case of the XE variant from a sample isolated in February, but officials at the Indian Sarscov2 Genome Consortium (INSACOG), a network of labs that tracks sequences, and the Union Health Ministry, are yet to confirm if it is an XE variant.

“Samples from Gujarat have been sent to NCDC, but from what we see this fits the definition of XE more than the Mumbai one,” the person cited earlier said on condition of anonymity.

An INSACOG laboratory in Gujarat, the Gujarat Biotechnology Research Centre (GBRC), has reportedly confirmed the variant. The Hindu reached out to the GBRC lab head, Madhavi Joshi, who declined to comment.

The Hindu could not glean additional details on the person from Gujarat who has tested positive for the XE.

While several variants of the coronavirus have emerged in the last two years because of mutations, recombination variants occur when, in extremely rare situations, two different lineages of the virus co-infect the same cell in the host and exchange fragments of their individual genomes. This generates a descendent variant having mutations that occurred in both the original lineages of the virus. The XE variant, for instance, is a recombinant of the BA.1 and BA.2 subtypes of the Omicron variant.

While the current XE variant has generated public concern because the World Health Organisation has signalled its potential for increased infectivity, there have been other recombinants of the Sarscov2 that have been identified by genome scientists. There are three hybrid or recombinant viruses in total that have been detected so far. These are XD, XE and XF, of which XD and XF are a combination of the Delta and Omicron variants.

So far, only 600 instances of the XE variant have been officially reported in the global repository GISAID and this is causing confusion among scientists on what relative proportion of genetic material from the BA.1 and BA.2 would qualify for a variant to be in the ‘XE’ category.

The Mumbai civic body that reported the possible case of the XE in Mumbai said that the person was double vaccinated, and had tested negative for COVID-19 on arrival in India. But on March 2, 2022, in routine testing conducted by Suburban Diagnostics, she was found to be positive and quarantined. The result of the test done the following day was negative.

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