Lambda Variant
- July 7, 2021
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Lambda Variant
Subject: Environment
Context: Even as the Delta variant of the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus continues to drive the rise in infections around the world, another variant, Lambda, is increasingly being seen by scientists and health experts as a new emerging threat.
Concept:
- The World Health Organization designated the Lambda variant, previously known by its formal scientific name C.37, as the seventh and newest “variant of interest
- Like the Delta variant, the Lambda variant, which has now been detected in more than 25 countries, is feared to be more transmissible than the original virus
- it is believed to have originated in Peru, it accounts for almost 80% of the infections. this variant has been detected in more than 25 countries, although the numbers are still very small.
- the Lambda variant has at least seven significant mutations in the spike protein (the Delta variant has three) which could have a range of implications, including the possibility of increased transmissibility or enhanced resistance to antibodies, created either through natural infection or vaccination.
- the Lambda variant had greater infectivity than the Alpha and Gamma variants.
Variant of interest
- The designation as a “variant of interest” means that the genetic changes involved are predicted or known to affect transmissibility, disease severity, or immune escape.
- It is also an acknowledgement of the fact that the variant has caused significant community transmission in multiple countries and population groups.
- There are currently seven variants, including the Lambda, that the WHO classifies as “variants of interest”. Another four – Alpha, Beta, Gamma and Delta – have been designated as “variants of concern”, and are considered a bigger threat.
- These were all recently named after letters of the Greek alphabet to avoid linkage with the country of their origin that had been happening until then.