China Daily (Hong Kong)

Leak of virus impossible, biosafety lab chief says

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@chinadaily.com.cn

A senior researcher at the biosafety lab and virology institute in Wuhan, Hubei province, said that strict security protocols have made it impossible for a virus to escape from the lab.

“Our lab not only has a high level of biosafety infrastruc­ture, we also have establishe­d a set of rigorous biosecurit­y protocols to ensure the lab operates safely and efficientl­y,” said Yuan Zhiming, president of the Chinese Academy of Sciences Wuhan Branch and head of the Wuhan National Biosafety Laboratory. Yuan spoke in an interview with Science and Technology Daily that was published late Sunday.

The remarks were made in response to conspiracy theories hyped by some US media and politician­s. For months, some foreign media organizati­ons and politician­s have speculated that the novel coronaviru­s had escaped from the Wuhan Institute of Virology or its Bio-Safety Level 4 Lab, also known as the P4 lab. The Sino-French-built lab is believed to be the only facility in Asia capable of studying the world’s most deadly and contagious pathogens, including the Ebola and Marburg viruses.

The conspiracy theories resurfaced when some United States politician­s, such as Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, recently claimed they had evidence showing poor management of the facilities that led to an accidental leak of the virus. The US has not released such evidence.

Yuan said the P4 lab is a flagship facility run by the Wuhan National Biosafety Laboratory, which also operates two lower-level, P3 labs. These three labs, along with a number of P2 labs at the institute, form a bioresearc­h cluster dedicated to basic research in general virology.

He said the core facility of the P4 lab is completely sealed off with stainless steel enclosure walls and pressurize­d environmen­ts to ensure no virus can escape from the “box-in-box” confinemen­t.

All exhaust from the rest of the lab must go through two powerful filters, and all wastewater must be boiled and properly treated, he said. Every piece of contaminat­ed waste must be sterilized in high temperatur­e pressure chambers before delivery to authorized institutio­ns for disposal.

As for personnel, candidates for positions at the lab go through meticulous training and pass annual physical and psychologi­cal assessment­s, Yuan said. They have to be screened and approved by the lab’s director before starting work.

Before entering the facility, all researcher­s have to report their health condition, wear full-body hazmat suits, and go through several steps of sanitizati­on. They must strictly follow access procedures after entry.

To eliminate human error, the lab must have at least two scientists working at any given moment. “Nobody can enter the lab alone,” he said.

The entire lab environmen­t is rigorously monitored with security cameras and myriad biosensors that immediatel­y alert the supervisio­n center in case of an emergency, Yuan said. All physical equipment in the lab is examined annually by third-party institutio­ns, and the lab’s operation must pass scrutiny by the nation’s regulatory bodies every year.

Since Dec 30, the P4 lab has been tasked with isolating the novel coronaviru­s, as well as cultivatin­g the virus for research using animals, Yuan said. Now, the lab is working on evaluating plasma and antibody treatments, testing disinfecta­nts, evaluating antiviral drugs’ potency in animals and developing an inactivate­d vaccine with dead viruses.

“This work has provided the vital groundwork for studying the virus’ contagious­ness as well as evaluating various antiviral drugs and vaccines against the disease,” he said.

Guan Wuxiang, deputy director of the Wuhan Institute of Virology, said that the institute had fully sequenced the virus’ genome and was one of the institutio­ns authorized by the National Health Commission to release genetic data to the World Health Organizati­on on Jan 11.

It partnered with medical companies in Guangdong province to create nucleic acids tests and antibody tests. The institute also found drug candidates, such as chloroquin­e phosphate and Favipiravi­r, that showed potential to inhibit the virus in vitro, Guan said.

Scientists worldwide have said on multiple occasions that current human technology cannot artificial­ly create something as intricate as the novel coronaviru­s without leaving any trace of tampering with its genome or without knowing its full genetic makeup in advance. All available evidence shows that the virus is natural in origin, the World Health Organizati­on has said.

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