Rapid Emergence and Evolution of SARS-CoV-2 Intrahost Variants among COVID-19 Patients with Prolonged Infections, Singapore.

Publication date: Jul 01, 2025

The evolution and spread of SARS-CoV-2 variants have driven successive waves of global COVID-19 outbreaks, yet the longitudinal dynamics of intrahost variation within the same patient remain less clear. We conducted a longitudinal cohort study by deep sequencing 198 swab samples collected from COVID-19 patients with varying infection durations. Our analysis showed that prolonged infections enhanced viral genomic diversity, leading to emergence of co-occurring variants that maintained high (>20%) frequency and became dominant in virus populations. We observed heterogeneous intrahost dynamics among individual patients, 2 of whom exhibited a minor variant of the spike D614G substitution over the course of infection. The increase in intrahost variants strongly correlated with prolonged infections, highlighting the complex interplay between viral diversity and host factors. This study revealed the intricate evolutionary mechanisms driving the emergence of de novo variants and lineage dominance, which could inform development of effective vaccine candidates and strategies to protect public health.

Concepts Keywords
D614g coronavirus disease
Health coronavirus virus evolution
Host COVID-19
Singapore genetic diversity
Viral intrahost
respiratory infections
SARS
SARS-CoV-2
Singapore
variants
viruses
zoonoses

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19
disease MESH Infections
disease IDO infection
disease IDO host
pathway KEGG Coronavirus disease
disease MESH respiratory infections
disease MESH zoonoses

Original Article

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