key: cord-0841405-6z9j1m3z authors: Joshi, Madhvi; Puvar, Apurvasinh; Kumar, Dinesh; Ansari, Afzal; Pandya, Maharshi; Raval, Janvi; Patel, Zarna; Trivedi, Pinal; Gandhi, Monika; Pandya, Labdhi; Patel, Komal; Savaliya, Nitin; Bagatharia, Snehal; Kumar, Sachin; Joshi, Chaitanya title: Genomic Variations in SARS-CoV-2 Genomes From Gujarat: Underlying Role of Variants in Disease Epidemiology date: 2021-03-19 journal: Front Genet DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2021.586569 sha: c2c081066584515f36102c2eb88ebab756b7e768 doc_id: 841405 cord_uid: 6z9j1m3z Humanity has seen numerous pandemics during its course of evolution. The list includes several incidents from the past, such as measles, Ebola, severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), and Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS), etc. The latest edition to this is coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), caused by the novel coronavirus, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). As of August 18, 2020, COVID-19 has affected over 21 million people from 180 + countries with 0.7 million deaths across the globe. Genomic technologies have enabled us to understand the genomic constitution of pathogens, their virulence, evolution, and rate of mutation, etc. To date, more than 83,000 viral genomes have been deposited in public repositories, such as GISAID and NCBI. While we are writing this, India is the third most affected country by COVID-19, with 2.7 million cases and > 53,000 deaths. Gujarat is the 11th highest affected state with a 3.48% death rate compared to the national average of 1.91%. In this study, a total of 502 SARS-CoV-2 genomes from Gujarat were sequenced and analyzed to understand its phylogenetic distribution and variants against global and national sequences. Further variants were analyzed from diseased and recovered patients from Gujarat and the world to understand its role in pathogenesis. Among the missense mutations present in the Gujarat SARS-CoV-2 genomes, C28854T (Ser194Leu) had an allele frequency of 47.62 and 7.25% in deceased patients from the Gujarat and global datasets, respectively. In contrast, the allele frequency of 35.16 and 3.20% was observed in recovered patients from the Gujarat and global datasets, respectively. It is a deleterious mutation present in the nucleocapsid (N) gene and is significantly associated with mortality in Gujarat patients with a p-value of 0.067 and in the global dataset with a p-value of 0.000924. The other deleterious variant identified in deceased patients from Gujarat (p-value of 0.355) and the world (p-value of 2.43E-06) is G25563T, which is located in Orf3a and plays a potential role in viral pathogenesis. SARS-CoV-2 genomes from Gujarat are forming distinct clusters under the GH clade of GISAID. This study will shed light on the viral haplotype in SARS-CoV-2 samples from Gujarat, India. As per the recent situation report-209 released by the World Health Organisation (WHO), as accessed on August 18, 2020, the total confirmed positive cases of COVID-19 across the globe are 21,294,845 resulting in 761,779 deaths. In many countries, such as China, Spain, Australia, Japan, South Korea, and the United States, the second wave of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infections has started (Evenett and Winters, 2020; Leung et al., 2020; Strzelecki, 2020; Xu and Li, 2020) . India is the third most affected country by coronavirus disease 2019 after the United States and Brazil, with 2,771,958 cases and 53,046 deaths, respectively. Gujarat is located in the western part of India. It is the 11th highest affected state in India, with 80,942 cases and 2,820 deaths as per the https://www.covid19india.org/. However, the death rate in the state of Gujarat is 3.48% with a recovery rate of 78.83%, which is 5% higher than the existing recovery rate in India. Therefore, understanding the pathogen evolution and virulence through genome sequencing will be key to understanding its diversity, variation, and its effect on pathogenesis and disease severity. Global repositories, such as the GISAID and NCBI databases, are flooded with SARS-CoV-2 genomes with an average of 381 genomes per day being added from across the globe. SARS-CoV-2 genome size is 29-30.6 kb. The genome includes 10 genes that encode 4 structural and 16 non-structural proteins (NSPs). Structural proteins are encoded by the four structural genes, including spike (S), envelope (E), membrane (M), and nucleocapsid (N) genes. The ORF1ab is the largest gene in SARS-CoV-2, which encodes the pp1ab protein and 15 NSPs. The ORF1a gene encodes for pp1a protein, which also contains 10 NSPs (Du et al., 2009; Shereen et al., 2020) . In the present study, the whole genome of 502 SARS-CoV-2 from Gujarat has been sequenced and analyzed against 2,121 SARS-CoV-2 genomes across the globe with known patient status. The overall dataset comprises 361 confirmed positive COVID-19 patients, which included 122 female and 239 male patients from Gujarat, India. Furthermore, a total of 502 viral genomes were sequenced from 361 samples based on the dominant and recessive allelic frequencies. These genomes were studied against a total of 79,518 complete viral genome sequences as accessed on August 18, 2020 to characterize their clades and variant distribution. Further statistical tools were applied to understand the differences in the variants with respect to disease epidemiology. In the absence of clinically approved drugs and other possible therapies in treating COVID-19, tracking pathogen evolution through whole genome sequencing is instrumental in understanding the progression of the pandemic locally as well as globally. This will further help in devising better strategies for vaccine development, identifying potential drug targets, and understanding host-pathogen interactions. Nasopharyngeal and oropharyngeal swabs from a total of 361 individuals who tested positive for COVID-19 from 46 locations representing 20 districts of Gujarat were collected after obtaining informed consent and appropriate ethics approval. The numbers of samples from these locations were selected on the basis of disease spread and incidence rate in Gujarat. The details of samples collected from each location are shown in Supplementary Table 1 . Samples were transported as per standard operating procedures as prescribed by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR, New Delhi; SoP No. ICMR-NIV/2019-nCoV/Specimens_01) to a research laboratory and further stored at −20 • C till processed. Total genomic RNA from the samples was isolated using the QIAamp Viral RNA Mini Kit (Cat. No. 52904; Qiagen, Germany) following the prescribed biosafety procedure. cDNA from the extracted RNA was made using the SuperScript TM III Reverse Transcriptase first strand kit (Cat. No. 18080093; Thermo Fisher Scientific, United States) as per the procedures prescribed. SARS-CoV-2 genome was amplified by using the Ion AmpliSeq SARS-CoV-2 Research Panel (Thermo Fisher Scientific, United States) that consists of two pools with amplicons ranging from 125 to 275 bp in length and covering >99% of the SARS-CoV-2 genome, including all serotypes. Amplicon libraries were prepared using the Ion AmpliSeq TM Library Kit Plus (Cat. No. A35907; Thermo Fisher Scientific, United States). These libraries were quantified using the Ion Library TaqMan TM Quantitation Kit (Cat. No. 4468802; Thermo Fisher Scientific, United States) . The quality of the library was checked using the DNA high sensitivity assay kit on Bio-analyser 2100 (Agilent Technologies, United States) and was sequenced on the Ion S5 Plus sequencing platform using a 530 chip. The quality of data was assessed using the FASTQC v. 0.11.5 (Andrews, 2010) toolkit. All raw data sequences were processed using the PRINSEQ-lite v.0.20.4 (Schmieder and Edwards, 2011) program for filtering the data. All sequences were trimmed from the right to where the average quality of 5 bp window was lower than QV25, 5 bp from the left end was trimmed, and sequences with length lower than 50 bp and sequences with average quality QV25 were removed. Quality filtered data were assembled using reference-based mapping with CLC Genomics Workbench 12. Mapping was done using stringent parameters with a length fraction of 0.99 and a similarity fraction of 0.9. Mapping tracks were used to call and annotate variants. Variants were called using Ion Torrent variant caller with a minimum allele frequency of 30% with a minimum coverage of 10 reads considered. For comparative analysis with the global dataset, 79,518 complete viral genomes and 1,821 viral genome isolates from India were downloaded from the GISAID flu server 1 . Considering haplotypes (a, b) based on allelic frequency, a total of 502 genomes were sequenced from a total of 361 patients as mentioned in Supplementary Table 2 . A total of 502 SARS-CoV-2 whole genomes were sequenced and analyzed for their phylogenetic distribution at different locations from Gujarat. The reference genome, Wuhan/Hu-1/2019 (EPI_ISL_402125), sampled on December 31, 2019, from Wuhan, China was downloaded from the GISAID flu server. Additionally, three viral genomes from the seafood market from Wuhan, China were included in the phylogenetic analysis (EPI_ISL_406798, EPI_ISL_402124, and EPI_ISL_406801). The multiple sequence alignment was performed using MAFFT (Katoh and Standley, 2013) implemented via a phylodynamic analysis pipeline provided by Augur 2 . The subsequent alignment output files were checked, visualized, and verified using PhyloSuite . Afterward, the maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree was built using the Augur tree implementation pipeline with the IQ-TREE 2 (Minh et al., 2020) with default parameters. The selected metadata information plotted in the time-resolved phylogenetic tree was constructed using TreeTime (Sagulenko et al., 2018) and annotated and visualized in the FigTree (Rambaut, 2018) . The non-parametric chi-square test of significance was used to check the difference of variables, such as the effect on age, gender, and mutations on mortality for the Gujarat, India, and global datasets for the deceased versus recovered patients. Samples were collected based on COVID-19 incidence rate across Gujarat from 16 different originating laboratories representing 46 different geographical locations from 20 districts of Gujarat, India as mentioned in Supplementary Table 1. The geographical distributions of the top three locations of viral isolates are represented by Ahmedabad (n = 172), Vadodara (n = 92), and Surat (n = 86), respectively. A total of 502 viral genomes from 361 patients have been sequenced in the study from which 122 were from females, whereas 239 were from males. These patients were from 1 to 86 years old group with an average age of 47.91 years. Most of the COVID-19 positive patients had symptoms of fever, diarrhea, cough, and breathing problems, whereas some of them had comorbid conditions, such as hypertension, diabetes, etc. The final outcomes of these patients were classified as deceased, recovered, hospitalized, or unknown status for further data analysis based on the available metadata. These details are presented in Supplementary Table 2 . Chi-square test was performed to test the effect of gender and age group for the Gujarat and global datasets. The female patients (at p-value of 2.7E-08) in the Gujarat dataset were observed to be at a significantly higher death rate than those in the global dataset in deceased and recovered patients. The genomic dataset was further divided into different age groups of up to 40, 41-60, and over 60 years. The results indicated a significantly higher mortality rate at the age groups of 41-60 (at p-value of 0.03783) and over 60 years in the Gujarat dataset (at p-value of 0.2084) than at the age groups in the global dataset. Life expectancy in India is 68.7 years as per the National Health Profile 2019 report released by the Central Bureau of Health Intelligence (CBHI), Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Government of India. The mutation frequency profile of the Gujarat genome with the mutation spectrum is highlighted in Figure 1 including synonymous and missense mutations. Out of 361 patients, 141 had mixed infections. Mixed infections were judged by the frequency of heterozygous mutations. The heterozygous mutation was considered only if it was supported by forward and reverse reads of an amplicon. Genomes were observed for heterozygous allele frequencies and were manually divided into two genomes. As a result, from 141 patients, a total of 282 viral genomes were classified as two different haplotypes and annotated with suffixes "a" and "b." All major alleles having read frequency ranging from 60 to 80% were included in the "a" haplotype, whereas minor alleles having read frequency ranging from 20 to 40% were included in the "b" haplotype as provided in Supplementary Table 2 . Phylogenetic analysis of 502 genomes was done as per the definitions of the PANGOLIN lineage and GISAID clades. The overall lineages distribution highlighted the dominant occurrence of B.1.36 (n = 214), B.1 (n = 182), A (n = 18), B.6 (n = 12), B.1.1 (n = 9), and B (n = 4), whereas clade distribution highlighted the dominant prevalence of GH (n = 278), G (n = 180), O (n = 18), S (n = 18), GR (n = 7), and L (n = 1) as mentioned in Supplementary Table 3 . While none of the genomes from Gujarat belonged to clade V, in the global perspective, the distribution of the GISAID clades as of 18th August 2020 from viral genome sequences indicates the dominance of GR clade (32.14%), G clade (23.72%), GH clade (22.66%), S clade (6.73%), L clade (5.13%), V clade (6.17%), and O clade (3.45%). The maximum likelihood time-resolved phylogeny tree in Figure 2 was constructed using the TreeTime pipeline and Augur bioinformatics pipeline and annotated and visualized in the FigTree (Hadfield et al., 2018; Rambaut, 2018; Mercatelli and Giorgi, 2020) . Similarly, genomes classified into GISAID clades across the globe and Gujarat are highlighted in Figure 3 . To understand the significance of the mutations in the SARS-CoV-2 genome isolates from the Gujarat, India, and global dataset, we have analyzed and compared the mutation profile of the 502 viral isolates from Gujarat along with the global dataset of 79,518 viral genomes and 1,821 viral genomes from India obtained from the GISAID server. A total of 27,455 mutations were observed in the global viral genome sequences (n = 79,518) of SARS-CoV-2 from GISAID wherein 3,478 mutations were observed from viral genomes from the Indian isolates (n = 1,821), whereas 752 mutations were observed in genomes sequenced from the Gujarat isolates (n = 502). Out of these mutations, 111 mutations were novel to viral isolates from the Gujarat genomes, and 1,164 were novel to the Indian genomes. The bar chart displaying the comparative mutation analysis is represented as Figure 4 , with a frequency of >5% from the global, Indian, and Gujarat viral genomes including missense and synonymous mutations. A Venn diagram represents the overall mutations shared between viral genome sequences analyzed from the global, Indian, and Gujarat isolates as given in Figure 5 . A comparison of the mutation profile analysis with p-value significance, Sorting Intolerant from Tolerant (SIFT) score functional effect, frequency >5%, and absolute count of the number of genomes with prevalence is represented in Table 1 . Further, frequencies of all the mutations were calculated by subtracting variants of the Gujarat genomes from the Indian and global genomes with statistical significance. Mutations (C241T, C3037T, A23403G, and C14408T) were dominant with frequency (>60%) in all the genomes (Gujarat, India, and global), whereas mutations (G11083T, C13730T, C28311T, C6312A, C313T, C5700A, G29868A, and C23929T) dominated (>19%) in the Indian genomes compared with the Gujarat and global genomes. The multi-nucleotide variant (MNV) GGG28881AAC is dominant in Indian (35.25%) and global genomes (32.72%), but in the context of Gujarat, it is present with a frequency of 2.19%. The mutations G25563T, C26735T, and C18877T (>55%), followed by C2836T, C22444T, and C28854T (>40%), followed by G21724T, C29750T, C18568T, G4300T, and A2292C (>13%) in viral genomes were sequenced from Gujarat. The detailed mutation frequency profile is provided as Supplementary Table 4 . With reference to viral isolates from India, GGG28881AAC, G11083T, C28311T, C6312A, C23929T, and C13730T were found to be occurring at greater than 19% frequencies (p-value <0.001). Mutations G11083T and C6312A lie in the region of Orf1a encoding Nsp6, whereas mutation GGG28881AAC is present in the N gene. Further, deceased versus recovered patient mutation profile analysis of the known patient's status dataset from Gujarat and global is represented in Figure 6 and Supplementary Tables 5, 6. Similarly, comparison of missense mutation profile of deceased versus recovered patients with genome count, frequency >5%, and p-value for the global dataset is represented in Table 2 and for the Gujarat dataset in Table 3 ; additionally, metadata for deceased and recovered patients is provided as Supplementary Tables 7, 8 . The statistical significance association of gender and age of the deceased and recovered patients from the Gujarat and global dataset patients in both datasets was considered for analysis. Similarly, for age group 41-60 years, it highlighted the higher observation of death rate in patients with known status as given in Table 4 . India is a densely populated country and needs to tackle the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic through management strategies and the stringent implementation of policies. The genome sequencing efforts have been enormously useful in understanding the pathogenic and adaptive behavior of viruses in the Indian population. The epidemiological approach-based method in a resource-poor setting, such as Telangana and Andhra Pradesh states, revealed that the case-fatality ratios spanned 0.05% at ages 5-17 years to 16.6% at ages ≥85 years (Laxminarayan et al., 2020) . Similarly, immune response, food habits, and gut-microbiome dynamics might also play key roles in the SARS-CoV-2 viral outbreak that should further help in identifying host-related responses and better control strategies (Bajaj and Purohit, 2020; Shastri et al., 2020) . Furthermore, to understand virus pathogenesis dynamics in the populations of Gujarat, genome sequencing of the SARS-COV-2 clinical positive samples was carried out. SARS-CoV-2 viral genome analysis from Gujarat highlights the distinct genomic attributes, geographical distribution, age composition, and gender classification. These features also highlight unique genomic patterns in terms of synonymous and missense variants associated with the prevalence of dominant clades and lineages with distinct geographical locations in Gujarat. Our research study highlights the most comprehensive genomic resources available so far from Gujarat, India. Therefore, identifying variants specific to the deceased and recovered patients would certainly aid in better treatment and COVID-19 containment strategy. The fatality rate compared with different geographical locations may point toward the higher virulence profile of certain viral strains with lethal genetic mutations, but this remains to be clinically unestablished. Perhaps the onset of clinical features in symptomatic patients helps in prioritizing the diagnosis and testing strategy. The first case report of complete genome sequence information from India is from a patient in Kerala with a direct travel history to Wuhan, China. Similarly, other isolates from India cluster with Iran, Italy, Spain, England, United States, and Belgium, and probably similar isolates are transmitting in India and may have variable mutation profile (Mondal et al., 2020; Potdar et al., 2020; Yadav et al., 2020) . The dominance of a particular lineage or clade at a particular location merely does not establish the biological function of the virus type isolate in terms of higher death rate but the epidemiological factors, such as clinically diagnosed co-morbidity, age, gender, or asymptomatic transmission, that are the most likely influencing factor in transmission. Sampling biases could certainly influence the prediction models, but it would narrow down to particular types of isolates and unique mutations that can further be experimentally validated to establish their clinical significance. The geographical distribution of the viral isolates is denoted in the phylogeny with the maximum SARS-CoV-2 positive samples sequenced from Ahmedabad (n = 172), followed by Vadodara (n = 92), Surat (n = 86), and Gandhinagar (n = 30). The distribution of dominant lineages in Ahmedabad is steered by occurrences of B.1.36 (n = 75), B.1 (n = 55), and B.6 (n = 2). The concept of lineages, clades, haplotypes, or genotypes is slightly perplexing and overlapping in terms of definitions with respect to different repositories and analytics. Therefore, it is most important to define mutations in the isolates that determine their unique position in phylogeny in terms of geographical distribution, age, gender, and locations of the genotypes, etc. Phylogenetic distribution of the viral genomes across different geographical locations along with metadata information should help in the evaluation of the posterior distribution, virulence, divergence times, and evolutionary rates in viral populations (Drummond and Rambaut, 2007) . The recurrent mutations occurring independently multiple times in the viral genomes are hallmarks of convergent evolution in viral genomes with significance in host adaptability, spread, and transmission, even though contested in terms of mechanisms driving the pathogenicity and virulence across different hosts and specifically to human populations across different geographical locations (Grifoni et al., 2020; van Dorp et al., 2020) . In the context of the globally prevalent mutations across different geographical locations, we have analyzed viral genome isolates with the most frequent mutations present in the patients from those who have suffered casualties. The higher death rate, especially in Ahmedabad, India, became a cause of serious concern and remains elusive to be identified with enough scientific evidence. We have identified differentially dominant and statistically significant mutations prevalent in the viral genome isolates in Gujarat, India. The dominant mutations in the deceased patients represented by the change in A23403G were observed at a frequency of 98.41% in the Gujarat genomes (p-value of 0.1640) and 74.28% in the global genomes with known patient status (p-value of 0.5223). These missense mutations are found to be observed in the spike protein of the SARS-CoV-2 genome. The wellknown function of the viral spike protein is in mediating the infection by interacting with the angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) receptor (Li et al., 2005; Chu et al., 2020; Guan et al., 2020; Guo et al., 2020) of the human host species. Another mutation, C14408T with a frequency of 96.83%, is present in the Orf1b gene encoding RNA-directed RNA polymerase (RDRP) non-structural protein (nsp12) with a p-value of 0.1440 in deceased versus recovered patients from Gujarat, while also being observed to be statistically significant in the global dataset with a p-value of 8.28E-05 with a frequency of 88.77%. The comparative analysis of the deceased patients (n = 63) and recovered patients (n = 256) in Gujarat as highlighted in Figure 6 is represented by a Venn diagram. In contrast, the functional role of the RDRP enzyme activity is necessary for the viral genome replication and transcription of most RNA viruses (Imbert et al., 2006; Velazquez-Salinas et al., 2020) . The MNV GGG28881AAC that is a missense mutation with a change in ArgGly203LysArg in the N gene is a deleterious mutation and is dominant in global viral genomes with a frequency in deceased (39.45%) and recovered patients (31.38%). The exclusive dominant mutations present in the population of Gujarat were G25563T and C28854T in the Orf3a and N genes, respectively. The Orf3a gene encodes a protein involved in the regulation of inflammation, antiviral responses, and apoptosis. Mutation in these regions alters the functional profile of the nuclear factor-kβ (NF-kβ) activation and nucleotide-binding domain leucine-rich repeat containing (NLRP3) inflammasome. One of the main features of Orf3a protein is having the presence of a cysteine-rich domain, which participates in the enzymatic nucleophilic substitution reactions. This protein is expressed abundantly in infected and transfected cells, which localizes to the intracellular and plasma membranes and induces apoptosis in transfected and infected cells (Issa et al., 2020) . This enzyme mediates the extensive proteolytic processing of two overlapping replicase polyproteins, pp1a and pp1ab, to yield the corresponding functional polypeptides that are essential for coronavirus replication and transcription processes (Kohlmeier and Woodland, 2009; Benvenuto et al., 2020) . While in the case of mutation at position C28311T leading to change of amino acid proline to leucine, the enzyme lies in the N gene that has a role in virion assembly and release and plays a significant role in the formation of replication-transcription complexes (Alsaadi and Jones, 2019; Liu, 2019; Wu et al., 2020; Yin, 2020) . Similarly, the N protein is a highly basic protein that could modulate viral RNA synthesis (Millet and Whittaker, 2015; Hassan et al., 2020; Sarif Hassan et al., 2020) . The SIFT scores of these mutations were determined and also signify the functional effect change in whether an amino acid substitution affects protein function or not in terms of the deleterious effect or benign tolerated (Vaser et al., 2016) . The predicted SIFT score of the mutation G25563T in the Orf3a and C28854T in the N gene was classified to be deleterious in nature. Similarly, a comparison analysis of the global (n = 79,518), India (n = 1,821), and Gujarat datasets (n = 502), where the "n" is the number of genomes included in the analysis, indicates the overall dominance of C241T, C3037T, A23403G, C14408T, and G25563T. Furthermore, it is suggestive of the comparative dominant mutation profile, including non-synonymous and missense mutations. The analysis of the dataset from the global deceased (n = 276) and recovered patients (n = 1,845) with known status from the metadata information available on the GISAID server with the complete genome sequences considered in the analysis indicates the dominance of the missense mutations at A23403G, C14408T, C1059T, and G25563T. The overall comparison of the mutation profile of the patient dataset of deceased and recovered samples is highlighted in Figure 7 , from global and Gujarat. Mutation in the N gene at C28854T and mutation in the Orf3a gene at G25563T were found to be dominant among deceased patients from Gujarat. Moreover, C28854T is forming a distinct sub-cluster under 20A (A2a as per the old classification of the next strain) clade, highlighted in Figure 8 . The same is proposed as a new sub-clade 20D in the next strain and GHJ in GISAID. This sub-clade is also present in genomes sequenced from Bangladesh and Saudi Arabia. Both these proteins play significant roles in viral replication and pathogenesis (Luan et al., 2020; Pachetti et al., 2020; Peter and Schug, 2020) . The association of the mutations with the viral transmission and mortality rate remains a mystifying puzzle for the global scientific community. The identification and validation of these mutations should pave the way forward for the development of treatment and diagnostics of coronavirus disease. The evading host immune response and defense mechanism sufficiently improve the adaptive behavior of the pathogenic species, thus making them highly contagious. Further, laboratory and experimental studies need to be carried out to validate the exact role of this particular mutation with respect to the molecular pathways and interactions in the biological systems despite being a strong possible mutation candidate found in the Gujarat region. The genomics-based approach has been a useful resource to identify and characterize virulence, pathogenicity, and host adaptability. Further, identification and characterization of the frequently mutated positions in the SARS-CoV-2 genome will certainly help in the deeper understanding of the infection biology of coronaviruses, development of vaccines and therapeutics, and potential drug repurpose candidates using predictive computational biology and experimental validations. The present study highlights the genome sequencing, haplotyping, and mutation profile of the 502 SARS-CoV-2 viral genome isolates from 46 different locations representing 20 districts across Gujarat, India. Furthermore, we have reported significant variants associated with mortality in the Gujarat and global viral genomes. As the pandemic is progressing, the virus is also diverging into different clades. This also provides adaptive advantages to viruses in the progression of the disease and its pandemic potential. In this study, we have reported a distinct cluster of coronavirus under 20A clade of Nextstrain and proposed it as 20D as per the next strain analysis or GHJ as per the GISAID analysis, predominantly present in the Gujarat genomes. Understanding the SARS-CoV-2 genome and tracking its evolution will help in devising better strategies for the development of diagnosis, treatment, and vaccine candidates in response to the global pandemic. The raw data generated in this study have been submitted to the NCBI BioProject (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bioproject) under accession number PRJNA625669. Supplementary Dataset to this manuscript are also available at Mendeley Data with DOI: 10.17632/pc38m6mwxt.1 (https://data.mendeley.com/ datasets/pc38m6mwxt/draft?a=1aa66c2a-5b93-456f-816c-3f26a4 82dc2a). All datasets of COVID-19 are also provided on GBRC-COVID portal (http://covid.gbrc.org.in/). The studies involving human participants were reviewed and approved by Institutional Ethical Committee of GBRC and respective government medical colleges. MJ, SB, and CJ conceptualized the work plan and guided it for analysis of primary data, interpretation of data, and editing of the manuscript. AP, DK, AA, and MJ retrieved and analyzed the data and generated the tables and figures under supervision of CJ. MJ, DK, and AP wrote the manuscript. MP, JR, ZP, PT, and MG did the sample processing and RNA isolation. 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The authors are also thankful to the clinical staff for extending support in the sample collection. The authors would like to acknowledge Dr. Manish Kumar, IIT-Gandhinagar for critically reviewing and providing essential inputs in the writing of the manuscript and Dr. Raghawendra Kumar and Mr. Zuber Saiyed for providing additional support to the genome assembly of viral genomes. The authors gratefully acknowledge the authors from the originating laboratories responsible for obtaining the specimens, as well as the submitting laboratories where the genome data were generated and shared via GISAID, on which this research is based for comparison of the Indian and global genome analyses. All submitters of data may be contacted directly via www.gisaid.org. The Supplementary Material for this article can be found online at: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fgene. The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.Copyright © 2021 Joshi, Puvar, Kumar, Ansari, Pandya, Raval, Patel, Trivedi, Gandhi, Pandya, Patel, Savaliya, Bagatharia, Kumar and Joshi. This is an openaccess article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.