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1. skinke+7q[view] [source] 2020-12-30 23:14:17
>>delbar+(OP)
One thing I wonder is:

How did the UK virus suddenly get 17 mutations at once if it's not a new engineered release by someone?

I'm not a biologist, but that part had me wondering.

Any biologists here who want to explain for a layman?

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2. mschus+wr[view] [source] 2020-12-30 23:23:37
>>skinke+7q
Not a biologist, this is not a biological question per se - all viruses and bacteria mutate over time during replication. It's a question of statistics rather... When you have 100 infected individuals and a virus that mutates in 1% of infected people (note: this is a random number, no idea what the actual mutation rate of coronavirus is), you'll end up with one mutated version. When you have 100k of infected people, you'll end up with 1k mutations that are spreading out and (essentially) self-selecting. And when you hit 1M of infected people... it's 100k mutations.

That is why it would have been important to keep infection rates down until there's a vaccine - because it is more than likely now that there's a strain of coronavirus somewhere that has a different spike protein and so is not caught by the existing vaccines.

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3. skinke+mt[view] [source] 2020-12-30 23:36:43
>>mschus+wr
But how did one new strain suddenly amass 17 previously unseen mutations?

Normally we should have sampled a number of strains with fewer of the same mutations, shouldn't we?

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