Genomic assessment of invasion dynamics of SARS-CoV-2 Omicron BA.1

Abstract

Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) variants of concern (VOCs) now arise in the context of heterogeneous human connectivity and population immunity. Through a large-scale phylodynamic analysis of 115,622 Omicron BA.1 genomes, we identified >6,000 introductions of the antigenically distinct VOC into England and analyzed their local transmission and dispersal history. We find that six of the eight largest English Omicron lineages were already transmitting when Omicron was first reported in southern Africa (22 November 2021). Multiple datasets show that importation of Omicron continued despite subsequent restrictions on travel from southern Africa as a result of export from well-connected secondary locations. Initiation and dispersal of Omicron transmission lineages in England was a two-stage process that can be explained by models of the country’s human geography and hierarchical travel network. Our results enable a comparison of the processes that drive the invasion of Omicron and other VOCs across multiple spatial scales.

Image source: COVID TESTING CENTRE, Denmark Road, Manchester, Dunk, flickr, CC BY 2.0 (as of 8/19/2025), No Changes

Authors

Joseph L.-H. Tsui

John T. McCrone

Ben Lambert

Sumali Bajaj

Rhys P. D. Inward

X, Paolo Bosetti

Rosario Evans Pena

Houriiyah Tegally

Verity Hill

Alexander E. Zarebski

Thomas P. Peacock

Luyang Liu, Neo Wu

Megan Davis

Isaac I. Bogoch

Kamran Khan

Meaghan Kall

Nurin Iwani Binti Abdul Aziz

Rachel Colquhoun

Áine O’Toole

Ben Jackson

Abhishek Dasgupta

Eduan Wilkinson

Tulio de Oliveira

The COVID-19 Genomics UK (COG-UK) consortium

Thomas R. Connor

Nicholas J. Loman

Vittoria Colizza

Christophe Fraser

Erik Volz

Xiang Ji

Bernardo Gutierrez

Meera Chand

Simon Dellicour

Simon Cauchemez

Jayna Raghwani

Marc A. Suchard

Philippe Lemey

Andrew Rambaut

Oliver G. Pybus

Moritz U. G. Kraemer

In Development

Currently in development, launching early 2021.