1. Introduction, Transmission Dynamics, and Fate of Early SARS-CoV-2 Lineages in Santa Clara County, California
- Author
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Villarino, Elsa, Deng, Xianding, Kemper, Carol A, Jorden, Michelle A, Bonin, Brandon, Rudman, Sarah L, Han, George S, Yu, Guixia, Wang, Candace, Federman, Scot, Bushnell, Brian, Consortium, CZB COVIDTracker, Wadford, Debra A, Lin, Wen, Tao, Ying, Paden, Clinton R, Bhatnagar, Julu, MacCannell, Tara, Tong, Suxiang, Batson, Joshua, and Chiu, Charles Y
- Subjects
Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Aged ,COVID-19 ,California ,Contact Tracing ,Female ,Genetic Variation ,Genome ,Viral ,Genotype ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Phylogeny ,Risk Factors ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Travel ,Young Adult ,viral whole-genome sequencing ,public health surveillance ,epidemiology ,D614G lineage ,viral evolution ,CZB COVIDTracker Consortium ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Microbiology - Abstract
We combined viral genome sequencing with contact tracing to investigate introduction and evolution of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 lineages in Santa Clara County, California, from 27 January to 21 March 2020. From 558 persons with coronavirus disease 2019, 101 genomes from 143 available clinical samples comprised 17 lineages, including SCC1 (n = 41), WA1 (n = 9; including the first 2 reported deaths in the United States, with postmortem diagnosis), D614G (n = 4), ancestral Wuhan Hu-1 (n = 21), and 13 others (n = 26). Public health intervention may have curtailed the persistence of lineages that appeared transiently during February and March. By August, only D614G lineages introduced after 21 March were circulating in Santa Clara County.
- Published
- 2021