What's the 'Pi' COVID variant dubbed 'BA.6' – and will we be frightened about it?

Another new Omicron variant has obtained scientists speaking.

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Although the World Health Organisation (WHO) declared the top of COVID-19 as a world well being emergency in May, the virus remains to be widespread - and mutating.

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While the EG.5 and EG.5.1 now makes up one in seven cases within the UK, a brand new heavily-mutated model of Omicron may very well be one other trigger for concern.

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So far the most recent BA.2 "sub-lineage" (coined BA.6 or 'Pi') has solely been sequenced a handful of instances in Denmark and Israel - however the early variations exhibiting up might imply it has the potential to trigger a recent wave of infections.

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Here's what we all know up to now.

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Where has it been discovered - and when did it emerge?

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The new variant is a mutation of the primary sub-variant of Omicron generally known as BA.2 that emerged in November 2021.

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It has solely been sequenced 3 times, twice in Denmark and as soon as in Israel, having first been recognized in Denmark on 24 July.

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This doesn't suggest there aren't extra circumstances, nevertheless it has solely appeared on a small variety of events when scientists have screened virus samples for his or her genetic make-up.

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Some are predicting it could already be within the UK and the US.

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At such an early stage, it hasn't been given an official title - though some are referring to it as BA.6 or the 'Pi' variant.

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How is it completely different?

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Compared to the unique BA.2, the brand new variant has 33 mutations of the spike protein - the membranes on the surface of the virus that enable it to enter and infect human cells.

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These are the issues that change because the virus grows and evolves - and will help it unfold quicker or evade immunity supplied by both pure an infection or vaccines.

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Professor Andrew Easton, a virologist on the University of Warwick, explains: "Some mutations are damaging to the virus, some are neutral so don't have any impact at all, and others may benefit the virus.

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"Those advantages might give it a bonus in rising extra successfully or quickly - or permitting it to evade the immunity that already exists locally."

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Because of the massive variety of mutations, it is being known as a 'saltation' - a big mutational change from one technology of virus to the subsequent, which was used to explain Omicron when it first emerged.

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Should we be frightened?

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With solely three circumstances sequenced, it's "way too early to say what impact this new variant will have", in accordance with Ryan Hisner, a web based COVID genomic sequencing tracker on X, previously generally known as Twitter.

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Professor Christina Pagel, an professional in operational analysis at UCL, provides that though it's "very, very early days" it has "a lot of new mutations that make it very different to previous Omicron strains".

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She says this might imply it's "potentially more able to cause a big wave" as a result of it might outstrip the immunity we have already got.

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But Professor Easton says though there are a substantial variety of mutations - you want much more circumstances to see if a sample of fast unfold, immune escape or extra extreme illness emerges.

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"In order to assess all these things it's a numbers game," he tells Sky News.

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"It's not something we can easily predict - but what we can say is that these mutations may affect the virus's ability to escape immunity - or spread faster."

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For instance a variant labelled BS.1.1 appeared with vital mutations in 2022 however "had little impact globally".

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The most essential factor for now, Professor Easton stresses, is surveillance.

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"The earlier you're able to pick up a variant of concern the earlier you can intervene in terms of alerting people to the risks - or altering vaccines.

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"Because the quicker you react the lesser the influence on individuals."

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