COVID and beyond: labs unite to boost genomic surveillance globally
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[January 26, 2024]
By Jennifer Rigby
CAMBRIDGE, England (Reuters) - Two laboratories in Britain and South
Africa, which were at the forefront of tracking new coronavirus variants
during the pandemic, have teamed up to keep the focus on genomic
surveillance globally as the COVID emergency recedes.
The teams said they were worried governments and funders may pull back
from such surveillance, despite its potential to better monitor many
infectious diseases, from malaria to cholera.
"One of the big benefits that came from the pandemic was this huge
global investment in infrastructure," said John Sillitoe, director of
the Genomic Surveillance Unit (GSU) at the Wellcome Sanger Institute in
Cambridge, one of the two partners.
In genomic surveillance, scientists first get data about the genetic
material of a virus or organism in a process called sequencing. Then
they analyze the data from several samples to look for similarities and
differences between them, for example to track how the virus is changing
or spreading.
The process has been around for decades, but came to the forefront as
scientists and public health teams tracked the fast-changing coronavirus.
But Sillitoe said he feared assets needed for the process - like
sequencing machines bought in the pandemic - were now "sitting idle" in
some countries, which would be a missed opportunity.
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Scientists work at a laboratory to sequence the novel coronavirus
genomes on the Wellcome Sanger Institute's campus south of
Cambridge, Britain, March 12, 2021. REUTERS/Dylan Martinez
"We have a lot of blind spots, both
on pathogens and on regions," said Tulio de Oliveira, director of
the Centre for Epidemic Response and Innovation at Stellenbosch
University, the other lab in the partnership. During COVID, his team
confirmed the discovery of the Beta and Omicron variants.
De Oliveira, who will also join the GSU as a deputy director, said
the potential for other diseases was huge.
For example, work by the two labs, as well as a global
climate-related disease consortium, has doubled the number of
sequences available for dengue, chikungunya, and malaria-carrying
mosquitoes in just the last year, he said.
The labs will work together to share resources as well as supporting
partners in disease surveillance globally with expertise and
materials, alongside wider World Health Organization-led efforts, de
Oliveira and Sillitoe said.
(Reporting by Jennifer Rigby; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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