Talia Kustin’s research while affiliated with Tel Aviv University and other places

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Publications (14)


Targeting an antibody to the IgH locus of B cells to facilitate antigen-induced activation, SHM, CSR and affinity maturation
a, Design of the two AAV vectors. One vector codes for saCas9 and an sgRNA under CMV and U6 promoters, respectively. The second vector codes for the 3BNC117 bNAb cassette flanked by homology arms for integration into the CRISPR–Cas9 cut site at the J-C intron of the IgH locus. The bNAb cassette is expressed on integration under the control of an enhancer-dependent promoter (ED). The cassette includes the light chain in full and the variable segment of the heavy chain, separated by a sequence coding for a Furin cleavage site and a 2 A peptide. The variable heavy chain is followed by a splice donor sequence to allow fusion with the endogenous constant exons on integration, transcription and splicing. An upstream polyadenylation site is provided to terminate the transcription of the endogenous variable heavy chain on integration. b, Depiction of the IgH locus on integration. The bNAb cassette is integrated downstream of the last J segment (J4) and upstream of the intronic enhancer (iEμ), CSR locus and the IgHCμ exons. c, The bNAb mRNA is terminated by alternative polyadenylation sites allowing for membranal (BCR) or soluble expression, before and after differentiation into a plasma cell, respectively. d, Different isotypes of the integrated antibody may be expressed on CSR of engineered B cells. e, SHM in the antibody coding genes may allow for affinity maturation and clonal expansion.
In vivo engineering of B cells to express an anti-HIV bNAb
a, Experimental scheme. Immunizations are indicated in black, above the timeline. Blood collections are indicated in red, below the timeline. b, 3BNC117 IgG titers as quantified by ELISA using an anti-idiotypic antibody to 3BNC117. The black arrows indicate immunizations and the blue arrow indicates the AAV injection. Each line represents a mouse. From left to right: *P = 0.047, P = 0.0201 for two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) of CMV–Cas9gRNA + donor compared to the donor group. n = 3. AUC bar graphs are available in Extended Data Fig. 2. c, Transduction neutralization of TZM.bl cells by the YU2.DG (left) and JRFL (right) HIV pseudoviruses in the presence of IgGs purified from day 136 sera. Neutralization is calculated as percentage reduction from maximal luminescence per sample. The PBS control received immunizations as in c, while the naïve control represents serum IgG from an untreated mouse. Each line represents a mouse. From left to right: *P = 0.0306, P = 0.0116, **P = 0.0037, two-way ANOVA with Šidák’s multiple comparison for time points comparison to PBS. AUC bar graphs are available in Extended Data Fig. 2. d,e, Experimental scheme (d) and 3BNC117 IgG titers (e) as quantified by ELISA for MD39 immunized mice. From left to right: not significant (NS), P = 0.3724 and P = 0.0539; ###P = 0.0008 for two-way ANOVA comparison between groups; and *P = 0.0493, ***P = 0.0007 for two-way ANOVA with Šidák’s multiple comparison for time points in comparison to antigen respective control. f,g, Experimental scheme (f) and 3BNC117 IgG titers (g) as quantified by ELISA for 2CC immunized mice. ####P < 0.0001 for two-way ANOVA comparison between groups and ****P < 0.0001 for two-way ANOVA with Šidák’s multiple comparison for time points in comparison to PBS. h, A representative ELISPOT experiment of total bone marrows from 2CC immunized mice at day 82. i, Quantification of h. *P = 0.0317 for two-sided unpaired t-test.
Source data
In vivo engineered B cells are found in lymphatic tissues 130 days following AAV injection
a, Flow cytometry plots demonstrating 3BNC117 expression among plasmablasts (CD38⁺, CD138⁺, CD19⁺) in the spleen at day 136. Pregated on live, singlets. b, Quantification of a for engineered plasmablasts (CD38⁺ CD138⁺ 3BNC117⁺). Mean is indicated by the bars. NS, P = 0.9892; ****P < 0.0001, one-way ANOVA with Tukey’s multiple comparison. c, Flow cytometry plots demonstrating 3BNC117 expression of cells with a germinal center phenotype (GL7⁺, CD95/Fas⁺) in the spleen. Pregated on live, singlets. FSC, Fourier shell correlation. d, Quantification of c. Mean is indicated by the bars. GC, germinal center. NS, P = 0.8916; **P = 0.0054 one-way ANOVA with Tukey’s multiple comparison. e, Pie charts of 3BNC117VH variants amplified from spleen and liver DNA at day 136 and from purified AAV. Orange shading indicates the R30K variant. Numbers in the middle of the pies indicate the total frequency of mutant reads in these samples. f, dN/dS values for the positions along the VH segment, on the basis of Illumina sequencing of DNA amplified from the spleen (blue) or liver (orange) of a single mouse or AAV (purple). The dotted line represents values >1, indicative of positive selection. For dots colored with lighter shades, the assignment of a dN/dS value >1 is not statistically significant. No position in the AAV sample reached statistical significance. Gray shading indicates complementarity-determining region loops. The R30 position is indicated.
Source data
AAV biodistribution and saCas9 off-target cleavage analysis reveal a high safety profile
a, Donor AAV copy number quantification by qPCR in indicated tissues at day 136 from mice injected with two AAVs as in Fig. 2a. b, Relative copy number of donor AAV between days 37 and 136 in selected tissues. c, Relative copy number of donor AAV between mice injected with two AAVs, as in Fig. 2a, and mice injected with donor AAV only, at day 136. For b and c, indicated are the mean of relative expression and error bars corresponding to lower and upper boundaries derived from two-sided unpaired t-test. For b, from left to right: *P = 0.0496, P = 0.0139, P = 0.0389, P = 0.0243; **P = 0.0046; comparison between the two time points. For c, from left to right: *P = 0.0128, P = 0.0147 for comparison between the two mice groups. n = 3 biologically independent animals. The y axes in a–c use a log scale. LN, lymph nodes and BM, bone marrow. d, Unbiased CHANGE-seq analysis of potential saCas9 off-target cleavage with the sgRNA used in this study. Localization, annotation in the genome, number of mismatches and percentage read counts are indicated for each on- or off-target site. Sequence of the sgRNA with the protospacer adjacent motif (PAM) is indicated on the top. Black arrows indicate target sites used for analysis of mouse samples. Mismatches between off-target sites and intended sgRNA target are color-coded. e, On- and off-target saCas9 cleavage, of target sites indicated in d by black arrows, in the spleen (mauve) and liver (beige) of mice injected with two AAVs, as in Fig. 2a, at day 136, as compared to uncut, naïve splenic lymphocytes DNA. For spleen and liver tissues, n = 3 biologically independent animals. For the control uncut, naïve splenic lymphocyte DNA, n = 1. Mean values ± s.d. are indicated.
Source data
Assessing expression of the transgene in different subsets of cells
a, Vector design. The donor cassette expresses a GFP, separated from the 3BNC117 cassette by a 2A peptide. b, Experimental design. c,d, Quantification of GFP⁺ 3BNC117⁺ in the spleen (c) or bone marrow (d) of recipient mice. Mean values and standard deviation are indicated. For each group, n = 3 biologically independent mice. *P = 0.0284, ***P = 0.0004 for two-way ANOVA. e, Quantification of GFP⁺ cells in spleen. ####P < 0.0001 for two-way ANOVA and ****P < 0.0001 for two-way ANOVA with Tukey’s multiple comparison. f,g, Quantification of the 3BNC117⁺ CD138⁺ population from B220⁺, GFP⁺ cells in the spleen (f) *P = 0.0147 for unpaired two-tailed t-test, or bone marrow (g) *P = 0.0471 for unpaired two-tailed t-test. Mean values are indicated.
Source data

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In vivo engineered B cells secrete high titers of broadly neutralizing anti-HIV antibodies in mice
  • Article
  • Publisher preview available

August 2022

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594 Reads

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58 Citations

Nature Biotechnology

Alessio D. Nahmad

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Cicera R. Lazzarotto

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Natalie Zelikson

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[...]

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Adi Barzel

Transplantation of B cells engineered ex vivo to secrete broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs) has shown efficacy in disease models. However, clinical translation of this approach would require specialized medical centers, technically demanding protocols and major histocompatibility complex compatibility of donor cells and recipients. Here we report in vivo B cell engineering using two adeno-associated viral vectors, with one coding for Staphylococcus aureus Cas9 (saCas9) and the other for 3BNC117, an anti-HIV bNAb. After intravenously injecting the vectors into mice, we observe successful editing of B cells leading to memory retention and bNAb secretion at neutralizing titers of up to 6.8 µg ml⁻¹. We observed minimal clustered regularly interspaced palindromic repeats (CRISPR)–Cas9 off-target cleavage as detected by unbiased CHANGE-sequencing analysis, whereas on-target cleavage in undesired tissues is reduced by expressing saCas9 from a B cell-specific promoter. In vivo B cell engineering to express therapeutic antibodies is a safe, potent and scalable method, which may be applicable not only to infectious diseases but also in the treatment of noncommunicable conditions, such as cancer and autoimmune disease.

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Inferring Protein Function in an Emerging Virus: Detection of the Nucleoprotein in Tilapia Lake Virus

March 2022

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103 Reads

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21 Citations

Emerging viruses impose global threats to animal and human populations and may bear novel genes with limited homology to known sequences, necessitating the development of novel approaches to infer and test protein functions. This challenge is dramatically evident in tilapia lake virus (TiLV), an emerging "orthomyxo-like" virus that threatens the global tilapia aquaculture and food security of millions of people. The majority of TiLV proteins have no homology to known sequences, impeding functionality assessments. Using a novel bioinformatics approach, we predicted that TiLV's Protein 4 encodes the nucleoprotein, a factor essential for viral RNA replication. Multiple methodologies revealed the expected properties of orthomyxoviral nucleoproteins. A modified yeast three-hybrid assay detected Protein 4-RNA interactions, which were independent of the RNA sequence, and identified specific positively charged residues involved. Protein 4-RNA interactions were uncovered by R-DeeP and XRNAX methodologies. Immunoelectron microscopy found that multiple Protein 4 copies localized along enriched ribonucleoproteins. TiLV RNA from cells and virions coimmunoprecipitated with Protein 4. Immunofluorescence microscopy detected Protein 4 in the cytoplasm and nuclei, and nuclear Protein 4 increased upon CRM1 inhibition, suggesting CRM1-dependent nuclear export of TiLV RNA. Together, these data reveal TiLV's nucleoprotein and highlight the ability to infer protein functionality, including novel RNA-binding proteins, in emerging pathogens. These are important in light of the expected discovery of many unknown viruses and the zoonotic potential of such pathogens



Figure 4. Prevalence and characteristics of Delta clades. (A) Frequency of the five Delta clades A-E between April and July 2020 in countries where the Delta variant has rapidly increased. Frequencies were calculated per time-point, where non-complete/corrupted sequences that could not be classified as any of the Delta clades were removed from the analysis but not from the number of total sequences, hence not all frequencies sum up to 100%. The number of the total sequences evaluated per country is indicated in parentheses. (B) A comparison of cycle threshold (Ct) values from individuals infected by Delta D versus other clades of Delta, (C) breakdown of the proportion of vaccinated versus non-vaccinated individuals infected by Delta D, other clades of Delta and the Alpha variant.
The unique evolutionary dynamics of the SARS-CoV-2 Delta variant

August 2021

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202 Reads

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15 Citations

The SARS-Coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) driven pandemic was first recognized in late 2019, and the first few months of its evolution were relatively clock-like, dominated mostly by neutral substitutions. In contrast, the second year of the pandemic was punctuated by the emergence of several variants that bore evidence of dramatic evolution. Here, we compare and contrast evolutionary patterns of various variants, with a focus on the recent Delta variant. Most variants are characterized by long branches leading to their emergence, with an excess of non-synonymous substitutions occurring particularly in the Spike and Nucleocapsid proteins. In contrast, the Delta variant that is now becoming globally dominant, lacks the signature long branch, and is characterized by a step-wise evolutionary process that is ongoing. Contrary to the “star-like” topologies of other variants, we note the formation of several distinct clades within Delta that we denote as clades A-E. We find that sequences from the Delta D clade are dramatically increasing in frequency across different regions of the globe. Delta D is characterized by an excess of non-synonymous mutations, mostly occurring in ORF1a/b, and also T140I in ORF7b, and G215C in Nucleocapsid. We conclude that the Delta surge these days is composed almost exclusively of Delta D, and discuss whether selection or random genetic drift has driven the emergence of Delta D.


Variant frequencies of SARS-CoV-2-positive samples
a, Variant frequencies across the time of the study, including the number of samples collected throughout the study. All values were calculated by averaging over a sliding window of 7 days. All samples sequenced in this study are included herein, including unpaired samples. b, Breakdown of variant frequencies based on the four groups of this study. The pie charts display the proportion of each variant (B.1.1.7, B.1.351 and WT) for paired vaccinated cases versus non-vaccinated controls separated by dosage (as defined in the main text), with cases on the left and their associated control on the right. Only paired samples are shown in the figure.
Results of matched vaccinated cases and non-vaccinated controls separated by effectiveness and VOC
In each table, a cell reflects the number of pairs concordant (upper left and lower right) or discordant (upper right or lower left) for a given variant. The left panel focuses on the comparison between B.1.1.7 and WT (pairs with B.1.351 were removed), whereas the right panel focuses on comparing B.1.351 and either WT or B.1.1.7 (denoted collectively as ‘other’). Of note, the McNemar test focuses on a comparison of only discordant samples. Under a null hypothesis of equal vaccine effectiveness against all variants, we expect an equal number of discordant pairs in the upper right cell and the lower left cell, in each of the tables.
Breakdown of SARS-CoV-2 variant distribution during windows of weeks post vaccination
The first three panels correspond to the dose1 group and the last three panels correspond to the dose2 group. The number of pairs and the isolation date range of the samples are noted for each panel. The dose2 B.1.351 case that is shown in the 14–20 days category was isolated exactly 14 days after the second dose.
A maximum-likelihood phylogenetic tree of Israeli SARS-CoV-2 samples including those sequenced herein
Vaccinees are colored in violet or green, non-vaccinees are colored in brown, and black sequences are publicly available sequences from Israel (marked as ‘other’, Supplementary Table 2). Clades composed of the B.1.1.7, B.1.351 and WT sequences are encircled in blue, orange and gray, respectively.
Evidence for increased breakthrough rates of SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern in BNT162b2-mRNA-vaccinated individuals

August 2021

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695 Reads

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357 Citations

Nature Medicine

The BNT162b2 mRNA vaccine is highly effective against SARS-CoV-2. However, apprehension exists that variants of concern (VOCs) may evade vaccine protection, due to evidence of reduced neutralization of the VOCs B.1.1.7 and B.1.351 by vaccine sera in laboratory assays. We performed a matched cohort study to examine the distribution of VOCs in infections of BNT162b2 mRNA vaccinees from Clalit Health Services (Israel) using viral genomic sequencing, and hypothesized that if vaccine effectiveness against a VOC is reduced, its proportion among breakthrough cases would be higher than in unvaccinated controls. Analyzing 813 viral genome sequences from nasopharyngeal swabs, we showed that vaccinees who tested positive at least 7 days after the second dose were disproportionally infected with B.1.351, compared with controls. Those who tested positive between 2 weeks after the first dose and 6 days after the second dose were disproportionally infected by B.1.1.7. These findings suggest reduced vaccine effectiveness against both VOCs within particular time windows. Our results emphasize the importance of rigorously tracking viral variants, and of increasing vaccination to prevent the spread of VOCs.


In-vivo engineering of B cells elicits memory retention and allows for secretion of broadly neutralizing antibodies in mice

May 2021

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16 Reads

The Journal of Immunology

A potential single-shot HIV therapy may be transplanted engineered B cells allowing strong secretion of broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs). However, extensive, and expensive ex-vivo manipulations performed in specialized facilities hinders clinical potential of this approach. Furthermore, allogeneic B cell therapy necessitates MHC-II compatibility to receive mandatory T-cell help. To overcome these limitations, we engineer B cells in-vivo. In particular, we demonstrate that a single, systemic dose of dual AAV, one coding for CRISPR/Cas9 and another coding for a bNAb donor cassette, allows for site specific integration in B cells. Following immunizations, we show memory retention and bNAb secretion at high titers. Antibodies secreted by the engineered B cells were found to be of multiple isotypes and IgGs could neutralize autologous and heterologous pseudoviruses. We found engineered B cell subsets in the spleen and blood. We detected homing of in-vivo engineered cells to germinal centers and bone marrow. Biodistribution of the donor AAV over time and as compared to a CRISPR- group, indicated expansion of engineered B cells in lymphatic tissues. We determined minimal CRISPR/Cas9 off-target cleavage, using unbiased, highly sensitive, CHANGE-Seq analysis. Finally, we diminished on-target, non-productive double-strand breaks at undesired tissues by expressing Cas9 from a B cell specific promoter. Eliciting a specific, neutralizing serological response to hypervariable viruses is a long-standing challenge in medicine. B cell engineering provides an opportunity to express therapeutic antibodies to generate an adaptive and evolving immunity.


In vivo engineered B cells retain memory and secrete high titers of anti-HIV antibodies in mice

April 2021

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364 Reads

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2 Citations

As a potential single-shot HIV therapy, transplanted engineered B cells allow robust secretion of broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs). However, ex vivo engineering of autologous B cells is expensive and requires specialized facilities, while allogeneic B cell therapy necessitates MHC compatibility. Here, we develop in vivo B cell engineering, by injecting two adeno associated viral vectors, one coding for saCas9 and another coding for a bNAb. Following immunizations, we demonstrate memory retention and bNAb secretion at neutralizing titers. We observed minimal CRISPR/Cas9 off-target cleavage, using unbiased CHANGE-Seq analysis, while on-target cleavage at undesired tissues is reduced by expressing saCas9 from a B cell specific promoter. In vivo B cell engineering is thus a safe, potent and scalable method for expressing desired antibodies against HIV and beyond. One sentence summary B cells can be engineered in vivo to robustly secrete anti-HIV bNAbs in a safe, durable and scalable manner.


Demographic statistics on paired cases and controls sequenced herein. Absolute counts are shown, relative proportions are in brackets.
Evidence for increased breakthrough rates of SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern in BNT162b2 mRNA vaccinated individuals

April 2021

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106 Reads

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62 Citations

The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has been raging for over a year, creating global detrimental impact. The BNT162b2 mRNA vaccine has demonstrated high protection levels, yet apprehension exists that several variants of concerns (VOCs) can surmount the immune defenses generated by the vaccines. Neutralization assays have revealed some reduction in neutralization of VOCs B.1.1.7 and B.1.351, but the relevance of these assays in real life remains unclear. Here, we performed a case-control study that examined whether BNT162b2 vaccinees with documented SARS-CoV-2 infection were more likely to become infected with B.1.1.7 or B.1.351 compared with unvaccinated individuals. Vaccinees infected at least a week after the second dose were disproportionally infected with B.1.351 (odds ratio of 8:1). Those infected between two weeks after the first dose and one week after the second dose, were disproportionally infected by B.1.1.7 (odds ratio of 26:10), suggesting reduced vaccine effectiveness against both VOCs under different dosage/timing conditions. Nevertheless, the B.1.351 incidence in Israel to-date remains low and vaccine effectiveness remains high against B.1.1.7, among those fully vaccinated. These results overall suggest that vaccine breakthrough infection is more frequent with both VOCs, yet a combination of mass-vaccination with two doses coupled with non-pharmaceutical interventions control and contain their spread.


Nucleotide diversity π for acute infections across different virus samples and genes
(A) Each point represents the π diversity of a single sample, across all genes sequenced. Diversity values were calculated using transition mutations only. (B) Gene by gene breakdown of nucleotide π diversity. “gag” represent the gag-pol reading frame. Values for HIV envelope (env) (squares) were taken from previously published data [15].
Variant frequency plots in representative samples
Shown are frequencies of transition variants called by AccuNGS, for representative samples from each virus (HIV, top row, RSV, middle row, CMV, bottom row). Variant frequencies lower than 1% are faded. Samples exemplify mixed genotype infections (HIV6, CMV2), mutation biases and presumable hypermutation via host editing (HIV9, RSV samples), and relatively homogenous populations (HIV3, CMV5, CMV4) (see text for details).
Illustration of method for haplotype reconstruction
The method searches for enrichment of pairs of mutations on the same read, and concatenation of enriched reads that share a mutation into a reconstructed minor haplotype. Notably, the concatenation approach is suitable for populations with limited diversity, as is the case in acute infections; in highly diverse populations, many haplotypes may share the “blue” mutation illustrated in the figure.
Haplotype reconstruction based on co-occurrence of variants on the same reads
Shown are inferred haplotypes (lines) based on consecutive significant associations of pairs of variants (shapes) one to another on the same read. The uppermost line in each panel represents the consensus sequence, which by definition is the major haplotype in each sample. Both HIV6 and CMV2 samples show strong evidence of an additional haplotype, which is likely a second founder genotype. Sample HIV9 shows evidence of G>A hyper-mutation in the context of APOBEC3 editing, samples RSV4 and RSV15 show evidence of T>C or A>G hyper-mutation in the context of ADAR editing in regions spanning a few hundred bases. The hyper-mutated region in RSV4 sample is magnified for clarity. “Empty” panels signify what are likely single haplotype infections, with no evidence of hyper-mutation.
Details of samples sequenced from clinical virus samples
Drivers of within-host genetic diversity in acute infections of viruses

November 2020

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138 Reads

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25 Citations

Genetic diversity is the fuel of evolution and facilitates adaptation to novel environments. However, our understanding of what drives differences in the genetic diversity during the early stages of viral infection is somewhat limited. Here, we use ultra-deep sequencing to interrogate 43 clinical samples taken from early infections of the human-infecting viruses HIV, RSV and CMV. Hundreds to thousands of virus templates were sequenced per sample, allowing us to reveal dramatic differences in within-host genetic diversity among virus populations. We found that increased diversity was mostly driven by presence of multiple divergent genotypes in HIV and CMV samples, which we suggest reflect multiple transmitted/founder viruses. Conversely, we detected an abundance of low frequency hyper-edited genomes in RSV samples, presumably reflecting defective virus genomes (DVGs). We suggest that RSV is characterized by higher levels of cellular co-infection, which allow for complementation and hence elevated levels of DVGs.


Full genome viral sequences inform patterns of SARS-CoV-2 spread into and within Israel

November 2020

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235 Reads

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151 Citations

Full genome sequences are increasingly used to track the geographic spread and transmission dynamics of viral pathogens. Here, with a focus on Israel, we sequence 212 SARS-CoV-2 sequences and use them to perform a comprehensive analysis to trace the origins and spread of the virus. We find that travelers returning from the United States of America significantly contributed to viral spread in Israel, more than their proportion in incoming infected travelers. Using phylodynamic analysis, we estimate that the basic reproduction number of the virus was initially around 2.5, dropping by more than two-thirds following the implementation of social distancing measures. We further report high levels of transmission heterogeneity in SARS-CoV-2 spread, with between 2-10% of infected individuals resulting in 80% of secondary infections. Overall, our findings demonstrate the effectiveness of social distancing measures for reducing viral spread.


Citations (13)


... [4][5][6][7] Recognition of this has led to extensive research into in vivo T cell engineering and a single report describing in vivo B cell engineering. [8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15] Targeted gene transfer into these cell types will thus likely be of strong utility. ...

Reference:

In vivo targeted gene delivery using adenovirus-antibody site-specific covalent conjugates
In vivo engineered B cells secrete high titers of broadly neutralizing anti-HIV antibodies in mice

Nature Biotechnology

... By and large, when discovered, TiLV's ten main proteins showed no significant sequence similarity to other known viral proteins (Bacharach et al., 2016). Among these ten, Proteins 1 -3 were predicted to serve as subunits of TiLV RNA-depended RNA polymerase (RdRP) (Abu Rass et al., 2022), a prediction recently validated experimentally and structurally (Arragain et al., 2023). These sequences and their associated functions were not included in the training or the test data. ...

Inferring Protein Function in an Emerging Virus: Detection of the Nucleoprotein in Tilapia Lake Virus

... 14 Vertical transmission of the virus was found in previous studies, and this might suggest a possible etiology for this phenomenon. 15,16 Several other studies attempted to determine the association between COVID-19 during pregnancy and fetal outcomes. Some pointed to a higher rate of miscarriage, especially during the first trimester, while others failed to provide sufficient data to reach a conclusion on adverse pregnancy outcomes, or did not show such an association. ...

The association between SARS‐CoV‐2 infection and late pregnancy loss

... The variants of SARS-CoV-2 is classified by transmissibility, disease severity the response to vaccination by produced immunoglobulin IgG antibody, reduced effectiveness of treatments, or diagnostic detection failures, and termed as VOC or VOI [43][44][45]. ...

The unique evolutionary dynamics of the SARS-CoV-2 Delta variant

... The ongoing genetic evolution of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) and the emergence of highly transmissible variants of concern (VOCs) have significantly hampered vaccine effectiveness against transmission and symptomatic infection [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17]. Although booster doses offer protection against severe disease and hospitalization, challenges such as waning immunity, continuous exposure to immune-evasive VOCs, and insufficient induction of mucosal immunity have notably decreased vaccine effectiveness, contributing to the sustained circulation of SARS-CoV-2 [5][6][7][8][9][10][11][17][18][19][20][21][22][23]. ...

Evidence for increased breakthrough rates of SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern in BNT162b2-mRNA-vaccinated individuals

Nature Medicine

... Although most studies focused on ex vivo BCR editing, one study recently attempted to perform BCR editing directly in vivo using two adenoviral vectors, encoding respectively the CRISPR/Cas9 system and the donor template [50]. Following vector infusion, engineered antibodies were detected in mouse sera, showing the feasibility of this kind of approach. ...

In vivo engineered B cells retain memory and secrete high titers of anti-HIV antibodies in mice

... The first country to carry out mass vaccination against COVID-19 was Israel. On Sunday, 20 December 2020, the Israeli population received the first dosage of the vaccine [14][15][16], resulting in a vaccination rate of 60% of adults and those in at-risk categories. ...

Evidence for increased breakthrough rates of SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern in BNT162b2 mRNA vaccinated individuals

... These enigmas require an in-depth investigation of within-host genetic diversity that accumulated during chronic infections. However, one of the major challenges in assessing such within-host genetic diversity are high error rates associated with sequencing low biomass samples of viruses (McCrone and Lauring 2016;Zhao and Illingworth 2019;Gelbart, et al. 2020;Tonkin-Hill, et al. 2021;. This makes inferences of levels of genetic diversity, and measurement of mutation frequencies (also denoted as intra-host single-nucleotides variants, iSNVs), very challenging. ...

Drivers of within-host genetic diversity in acute infections of viruses

... For example, information on the transmission dynamics of SARS-CoV-2, that can be characterized by the basic reproduction number R 0 and the effective reproduction number R e , was critical to understanding whether current pandemic restrictions were controlling transmission [2] and whether new variants might cause pressure on healthcare systems. As well as estimating R e from the available case-count data [3,4], the availability of significant numbers of sequences created the opportunity to estimate this, and other parameters, through sequenceand phylogenetic-based methods [5][6][7]. ...

Full genome viral sequences inform patterns of SARS-CoV-2 spread into and within Israel

... Mutational tendencies in base sequences, along with the associated selection processes, play a crucial role in shaping and interpreting RNA virus phylogenetic trees. Incorporating these factors into phylogenetic analyses significantly enhances our understanding of the evolutionary processes governing these viral particles [12]. ...

Biased Mutation and Selection in RNA Viruses

Molecular Biology and Evolution