Wednesday, April 1, 2026
ADVT 
India

What's driving Delta Covid variant to spread

Darpan News Desk IANS, 07 Sep, 2021 11:25 AM
  • What's driving Delta Covid variant to spread

New Delhi, Sep 7 (IANS) The ability to evade neutralising antibodies while increasing infectivity is the reason why the Delta variant of SARS-CoV-2 has turned dominant in several countries including the UK, the US and India, according to an international team of researchers.

Researchers from National Centre for Disease Control, Delhi, under the Ministry of Health; CSIR Institute of Genomics and Integrative Biology, Delhi, and University of Cambridge in the UK examined how the Delta variant was able to evade the immune response.

The team extracted serum from blood samples from individuals who had previously been infected with the coronavirus or who had been vaccinated with either the Oxford/AstraZeneca or Pfizer vaccines.

Serum contains antibodies raised in response to infection or vaccination.

They found that the Delta variant virus was 5.7-fold less sensitive to the sera from previously-infected individuals, and as much as eight-fold less sensitive to vaccine sera, compared with the Alpha variant. In other words, it takes eight times as many antibodies from a vaccinated individual to block the virus.

Consistent with this, an analysis of over 100 infected healthcare workers at three Delhi hospitals, nearly all of whom had been vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2, found the Delta variant to be transmitted between vaccinated staff to a greater extent than the alpha variant. The findings are detailed in the journal Nature.

"Infection of vaccinated healthcare workers with the Delta variant is a significant problem. Although they themselves may only experience mild Covid, they risk infecting individuals who have suboptimal immune responses to vaccination due to underlying health conditions -- and these patients could then be at risk of severe disease," said Professor Anurag Agrawal from the CSIR Institute.

Further, using 3D airway organoids -- 'mini-organs' grown from cells from the airway, which mimic its behaviour -- the team studied what happens when the virus reaches the respiratory tract. Working under secure conditions, the team used both a live virus and a 'pseudotyped virus' -- a synthetic form of the virus that mimicked key mutations on the Delta variant -- and used this to infect the organoids.

They found that the Delta variant was more efficient at breaking into the cells compared with other variants as it carried a larger number of cleaved spikes on its surface. Once inside the cells, the variant was also better able to replicate. Both of these factors give the virus a selection advantage compared to other variants, helping explain why it has become so dominant.

"We urgently need to consider ways of boosting vaccine responses against variants among healthcare workers. It also suggests infection control measures will need to continue in the post-vaccine era," Agrawal said.

MORE India ARTICLES

Mumbai’s Sikh Community Rallies To Save Troubled Punjab & Maharashtra Co-operative Bank

Mumbai’s Sikh community, many of whose members stand to lose their life savings should the Punjab & Maharashtra Co-operative Bank collapse, has come together to save the troubled bank.

Mumbai’s Sikh Community Rallies To Save Troubled Punjab & Maharashtra Co-operative Bank

Chandigarh Girl Amanpreet Kaur Sidhu, Instructor Killed In Cessna Plane Crash In Telangana

Chandigarh Girl Amanpreet Kaur Sidhu, Instructor Killed In Cessna Plane Crash In Telangana
A Cessna plane crashed in the fields of Sultanpur village in Vikarabad district of Telangana, 100 km from the city

Chandigarh Girl Amanpreet Kaur Sidhu, Instructor Killed In Cessna Plane Crash In Telangana

PV Sindhu Joins Breast Cancer Awareness Effort Using AR Tech

World Badminton Champion P.V. Sindhu has joined an innovative effort to create awareness about breast cancer using Augmented Reality technology.

PV Sindhu Joins Breast Cancer Awareness Effort Using AR Tech

Punjab and Maharshtra Co-operative Bank Sam: How Waryam Singh Used His ‘Channels’ To Build The Wadhawan Emprire

From the biggest fleet of Rolls Royce Phantoms in India to the luxury business jet Falcon 2000, the high-flying Wadhawans, arrested in the multi-crore PMC Bank scam, owned the most fabulous machines the world of hijinks has ever seen.  

Punjab and Maharshtra Co-operative Bank Sam: How Waryam Singh Used His ‘Channels’ To Build The Wadhawan Emprire

Books This Weekend: Of Guru Gobind Singh And The Creation Of The Khalsa, The Churning Within A Dalit IFS Officer

There is much to be gained from the IANS Bookshelf this Weekend. Read on!    

Books This Weekend: Of Guru Gobind Singh And The Creation Of The Khalsa, The Churning Within A Dalit IFS Officer

FIR Lodged Against 49 Celebrities Who Wrote Open Letter To PM Modi On Mob Lynching

The letter was written by 49 personalities, including filmmakers Mani Ratnam, Anurag Kashyap, Shyam Benegal, veteran actor Soumitra Chatterjee and vocalist Shubha Mudgal in July this year.

FIR Lodged Against 49 Celebrities Who Wrote Open Letter To PM Modi On Mob Lynching