Enterprise-Record (Chico)

UK variant hunters lead global race to stay ahead of COVID-19

- By Danica Kirka

LONDON >> On March 4, 2020, when there were just 84 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the U.K., professor Sharon Peacock recognized that the country needed to expand its capacity to analyze the genetic makeup of the virus.

The Cambridge University microbiolo­gist understood that genomic sequencing would be crucial in tracking the disease, controllin­g outbreaks and developing vaccines. So she began working with colleagues around the country to put together a plan.

Within a month, the government had provided 20 million pounds ($28 million) to fund their work.

The initiative helped make Britain a world leader in rapidly analyzing the genetic material from large numbers of COVID-19 infections, generating more than 40% of the genomic sequences identified to date. These days, their top priority is finding new variants that are more dangerous or resistant to vaccines, informatio­n that is critical to helping researcher­s modify the vaccines or develop new ones to combat the everchangi­ng virus.

“They’ve shown the world how you do this,” said Dr. Eric Topol, chair of innovative medicine at Scripps Research in San Diego, California.

Genomic sequencing is essentiall­y the process of mapping the unique genetic makeup of individual organisms — in this case the virus that causes COVID-19. While the technique is used by researcher­s to study everything from cancer to outbreaks of food poisoning and the flu virus, this is the first time authoritie­s are using it to provide real-time surveillan­ce of a global pandemic.

Peacock, 62, heads Britain’s sequencing effort as executive director and chair of the COVID-19 UK Genomics Consortium, known as COG-UK, the group she helped create a year ago.

During the first week of this month, COG-UK sequenced 13,171 viruses, up from 260 during its first 12 days of operation in March last year.

Behind that growth is a system that links the science of genomic sequencing with the resources of Britain’s national health care system.

Positive COVID-19 tests from hospitals and community testing programs around the country are sent to a network of 17 laboratori­es, where scientists extract the genetic material from each swab and analyze it to identify that virus’ unique genetic code. The sequences are then cross-referenced with public health data to better understand how, where and why COVID-19 is spreading.

When mutations in the virus correspond with an otherwise unexplaine­d increase in cases, that’s a clue that a new variant of concern is circulatin­g.

 ?? SUEZ CANAL AUTHORITY VIA AP ?? Tug boats and diggers work to free the Panama-flagged, Japanese-owned Ever Given, which is lodged across the Suez Canal, Sunday.
SUEZ CANAL AUTHORITY VIA AP Tug boats and diggers work to free the Panama-flagged, Japanese-owned Ever Given, which is lodged across the Suez Canal, Sunday.

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