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sublineage

Sublineage is a term used in evolutionary biology and virology to describe a lineage that is nested within a broader lineage, representing a more recent branch on the evolutionary tree. In a phylogenetic context, a sublineage shares a recent common ancestor with its parent lineage but has diverged enough to be distinguished by unique sets of mutations. The concept fits within the hierarchical classification of lineages and clades used to summarize relationships among organisms or viral genomes.

In practice, sublineages are defined using genomic data and phylogenetic analysis. They are identified when a

In the context of SARS-CoV-2, for example, the Omicron lineage has produced multiple sublineages, including BA.1,

See also: phylogeny, lineage, clade, PANGO nomenclature, evolutionary biology.

population
accumulates
characteristic
mutations
and
forms
a
distinct,
coherent
cluster
that
can
be
traced
back
to
a
parent
lineage.
Sublineages
help
scientists
track
evolution,
transmission
patterns,
and
the
emergence
of
phenotypic
changes,
such
as
altered
transmissibility
or
antigenicity
in
viruses.
BA.2,
BA.4,
BA.5,
and
their
descendants.
Public
health
surveillance
often
reports
data
at
the
sublineage
level
to
monitor
which
branches
are
circulating
and
whether
they
differ
in
clinical
impact
or
vaccine
sensitivity.
However,
sublineages
are
defined
by
genetic
relationships
rather
than
by
a
fixed
set
of
traits,
and
definitions
can
shift
as
new
data
become
available.