Scientists around the world have been racing to learn more about the new omicron strain of SARS-CoV-2, which the World Health Organization first declared a “variant of concern” on Nov. 26. Officials cautioned that it would take several weeks before they’d know whether the recently emerged coronavirus variant is more contagious and causes more or less serious COVID-19 than delta and other earlier variants, and whether current vaccines can ward it off.
Peter Kasson is a virologist and biophysicist at the University of Virginia who studies how viruses such as SARS-CoV-2 enter cells and what can be done to stop them. In a piece for , republished below, he explains what lab-based scientists are doing to help answer the outstanding questions about omicron.