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Sequencing identifies multiple early introductions of SARS-CoV-2 to the New York City Region

Authors :
Manon Ragonnet-Cronin
John Cadley
Lawrence Hsu Lin
Megan S. Hogan
Ludovic Boytard
Antonio Serrano
Dacia Dimartino
Marie I. Samanovic
Melissa Call
Iman Osman
Matija Snuderl
Vanessa Raabe
Mark J. Mulligan
Brendan Belovarac
Xiaojun Feng
Christian Marier
George Jour
Maria E Aguero-Rosenfeld
Amy Rapkiewicz
Peter Meyn
Raquel Ordoñez
Nicholas A. Vulpescu
Carolina Arguelles-Grande
Jared Pinnell
Paul Zappile
Lily Geidelberg
Kimon V. Argyropoulos
Tatyana Gindin
Theodore Vougiouklakis
Guomiao Shen
André M. Ribeiro-dos-Santos
Andrew Lytle
Emily P. Huang
Min Jae Kim
Margaret Black
Adriana Heguy
Gael Westby
Paolo Cotzia
Erik M. Volz
Raven Luther
John J. Chen
Yutong Zhang
Emily Guzman
Matthew T. Maurano
Sitharam Ramaswami
Source :
medRxiv, Genome Research, Genome Res
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

Effective public response to a pandemic relies upon accurate measurement of the extent and dynamics of an outbreak. Viral genome sequencing has emerged as a powerful approach to link seemingly unrelated cases, and large-scale sequencing surveillance can inform on critical epidemiological parameters. Here, we report the analysis of 236 SARS-CoV2 sequences from cases in the New York City metropolitan area during the initial stages of the 2020 COVID-19 outbreak. The majority of cases throughout the region had no recent travel history or known exposure, and genetically linked cases were spread throughout the region. Comparison to global viral sequences showed that the majority were most related to cases from Europe. Our data are consistent with numerous seed transmissions from multiple sources and a prolonged period of unrecognized community spreading. This work highlights the complementary role of real-time genomic surveillance in addition to traditional epidemiological indicators.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
medRxiv, Genome Research, Genome Res
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....85b79b0d22b194eabf4f96c77c7b1a55