͵͵

News

Researchers retool genomics labs
to provide COVID-19 testing

Laurel Oldach
March 30, 2020

Researchers at San Francisco’s Innovative Genomics Institute that they are opening a COVID-19 testing center that will provide at least 1,200 tests each day for patients in San Francisco. The IGI is one of several academic institutes whose laboratories are switching focus to contribute to the COVID-19 response.
 

Innovative Genomics Institute
Postdoctoral fellows Enrique Shao and Jenny Hamilton work in a converted diagnostics lab, now being used for COVID-19 testing, at the Innovative Genomics Institute in San Francisco.

Labs that conduct high-throughput genome sequencing at IGI, Boston’s and San Francisco’s Chan-Zuckerberg have retooled recently to provide clinical testing for SARS-nCoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. These overhauls by volunteer scientists and administrators are adding capacity for thousands of tests and rapid turnaround time to help public health departments determine how many people are infected.

Jennifer Doudna, a professor at the University of California Berkeley and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator, founded and leads the IGI.

“Imagine setting that up — a process that would normally take months to years — in a couple weeks. It’s really extraordinary,” Doudna said in an IGI press release.

Doudna and colleague Fyodor Urnov, also a UC Berkeley professor and a technical director at the IGI, put out a call for volunteers in mid-March after hearing about the diagnostic testing effort at the neighboring Biohub. Within hours, 800 members of San Francisco’s biomedical research community, mainly graduate students and postdocs, responded.

Jenny Hamilton, a postdoctoral fellow in Doudna’s UC Berkeley lab, led the technical team that transformed the genomics core into a clinical testing laboratory, and validated the test results, in just two weeks.

“The room that we’re using was previously part of a genomics core facility on campus, and because of that it had some robotics for high-throughput experiments already installed,’ Hamilton said. “Because the campus is shut down and nobody’s doing high-throughput sequencing experiments right now, we’ve been able to quickly reconfigure the room.”

Using liquid-handling robots and reagents bought and donated from multiple sources, Hamilton and her team set up and validated a mostly automated pipeline for extracting RNA from patient samples and conducting a standard reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, or RT-PCR, assay for SARS-nCoV-2. Advisers from industry helped the researchers program the robotic pipeline.

Some widely used reagents, such as disinfectant and qPCR master mix,  have been difficult to come by. According to Alexandra Amen, another postdoc in the Doudna lab who helped run the lab-conversion effort, “The hardest thing is sourcing materials that are in low supply.”

As testing gets underway, volunteer researchers will operate the diagnostic lab, testing samples collected from patients at UC Berkeley’s medical center and other hospitals in San Francisco’s East Bay. They hope to return results of 1,200 to 4,000 tests daily within 24 hours, improving on turnaround times that can take three days to a week. As for funding, the team said through a spokesperson, “We hope to fund the IGI’s testing lab through donations to enable us to serve those without insurance.”

Ordinarily, the institute focuses on genome engineering. Its research programs work to isolate new CRISPR systems from microbes, improve genome editing tools, genetically engineer crops and diagnose human diseases.

“All of our laboratories do PCR every day,” Doudna stated in the IGI release. “But for this test we need to go above and beyond to ensure we can provide accurate detection.”

Researchers didn’t know initially whether the effort was entirely legal. Clinical laboratories must be licensed by state and federal governments to ensure that they report valid results. But given the COVID-19 public health emergency, the IGI release stated, the , the U.S. and the have relaxed some restrictions on who may test for and report new cases of the novel coronavirus.

Enjoy reading ASBMB Today?

Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition weekly.

Learn more
Laurel Oldach

Laurel Oldach is a former science writer for the ASBMB.

Get the latest from ASBMB Today

Enter your email address, and we’ll send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.

Latest in Science

Science highlights or most popular articles

Guiding grocery carts to shape healthy habits
Award

Guiding grocery carts to shape healthy habits

Nov. 21, 2024

Robert “Nate” Helsley will receive the Walter A. Shaw Young Investigator in Lipid Research Award at the 2025 ASBMB Annual Meeting, April 12–15 in Chicago.

Quantifying how proteins in microbe and host interact
Journal News

Quantifying how proteins in microbe and host interact

Nov. 20, 2024

“To develop better vaccines, we need new methods and a better understanding of the antibody responses that develop in immune individuals,” author Johan Malmström said.

Leading the charge for gender equity
Award

Leading the charge for gender equity

Nov. 19, 2024

Nicole Woitowich will receive the ASBMB Emerging Leadership Award at the 2025 ASBMB Annual meeting, April 12–15 in Chicago.

CRISPR gene editing: Moving closer to home
News

CRISPR gene editing: Moving closer to home

Nov. 17, 2024

With the first medical therapy approved, there’s a lot going on in the genome editing field, including the discovery of CRISPR-like DNA-snippers called Fanzors in an odd menagerie of eukaryotic critters.

Finding a missing piece for neurodegenerative disease research
News

Finding a missing piece for neurodegenerative disease research

Nov. 16, 2024

Ursula Jakob and a team at the University of Michigan have found that the molecule polyphosphate could be what scientists call the “mystery density” inside fibrils associated with Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and related conditions.

From the journals: JLR
Journal News

From the journals: JLR

Nov. 15, 2024

Enzymes as a therapeutic target for liver disease. Role of AMPK in chronic liver disease Zebrafish as a model for retinal dysfunction. Read about the recent JLR papers on these topics.