Seven species of coronary mutation are identified in France

Mutations in the dangerous but less serious coronary were identified in France, and that may be why Europe is marking an increase in COVID-19 cases. The chief of a French research hospital has revealed to lawmakers last week the discovery of SARS-CoV-2 species. IHU head Méditranée Infection in Marseille Didier Raoul, [...]
The chief of a French research hospital has revealed to lawmakers last week the discovery of SARS-CoV-2 species.
The head of the IHU Méditranée Infection at Marseje Didier Raoul, who is a microbiologist, told French senators that hospital infectious diseases experts found seven virus mutations during an analysis of COVID-19 tests during the summer.
According to him, one species had entered the country through people coming from North Africa, after France lifted restrictions on the impasse in June. As reported by The Sunday Times, while the mutation has now disappeared, others have emerged.
According to the expert, the newly displayed types of coronary are “less heavy”, which shows that “something is happening with this virus, which makes it different”. According to Raoul, mutations observed by French experts are “a highly degraded version of the original form.
Over 1,000 of this new virus's origins are in circulation worldwide, and the scholar identified seven of them in Nigeria.
Experts said each of these lines represents genome sequences from different countries. According to researchers, monitoring and tracking backgrounds are very important, as they can help determine how a virus spreads through populations and communities.
The first shows viral sequences from China, as well as global exports including Southeast Asia, South Korea, Japan, Australia, Europe and the United States. The second represents a viral sequence from the explosion in Italy, while the third represents a new European and fourth line points to the sequence from Iceland, Turkey and Great Britain
There is a fifth line representing the sequence from Saudi Arabia, the Netherlands, Turkey, Egypt, Finland and England. The sixth represents the viral sequence from the Netherlands, and the seventh line shows the sequences from Turkey, Egypt, Finland, Saudi Arabia and England.











