Abstract

The descendants of the B lineage are the most predominant variants among the SARS-CoV-2 virus due to the incorporation of new mutations augmenting the infectivity of the virus. There is a substantial increase in the transition transversion bias, nucleotide diversity and purifying selection on the spike protein in the descendants of the B lineage of the SARS-CoV-2 virus on a temporal scale. A strong bias for C-to-U substitutions is found in the genes encoding spike protein in this lineage. The positive selection has operated on the spike gene of B lineages and its sub-lineages. The B.1 lineage has undergone positive selection on site 501 of the receptor binding domain ultimately reflected in a key substitution N501Y in its three descendant lineages namely B.1.1.7, B.1.351 and P.1. The intensity of purifying selection on the multiple sites of the spike gene has increased substantially in the sub-lineages of B.1 in a timescale. The binding site 501 on the spike protein in B lineage is found to coevolve with other amino acid sites. This study sheds light on the evolutionary trajectory of the B lineage into highly infectious descendants in the recent past under the influence of positive and purifying selection exerted by natural immunity and vaccination of the host.

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