CDC weputara njikọ aka na genomics viral nke mba

CDC weputara njikọ aka na genomics viral nke mba
CDC launched a consortium

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, CDC, launched a consortium to kick off a national network of sequencing laboratories which will speed the release of SARS-CoV-2 sequence data into the public domain. Rapid release of open coronavirus sequence data will help guide Covid-19 public health response, drive innovation and discovery, and advance understanding of this and future pandemics.

a SARS-CoV-2 Sequencing for Public Health Emergency Response, Epidemiology and Surveillance (SPHERES) consortium, which will greatly expand the use of whole genome sequencing (WGS) of the COVID-19 virus. SPHERES will provide consistent, real-time sequence data to the public health response teams investigating cases and clusters of COVID-19 across the country.

This new consortium will help them better understand how the virus is spreading, both nationally and in their local communities. Better data, in turn, will help public health officials interrupt chains of transmission, prevent new cases of illness, and protect and save lives.

“The U.S. is the world’s leader in advanced rapid genome sequencing. This coordinated effort across our public, private, clinical, and academic public health laboratories will play a vital role in understanding the transmission, evolution, and treatment of SARS-CoV-2. I am confident that our finest, most skilled minds are working together to help us save lives today and tomorrow,” said CDC Director Robert Redfield, M.D.

Tracking the COVID-19 virus as it evolves

Genomic sequence data can give unprecedented insight into the biology of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, and help define the changing landscape of the pandemic. By sequencing viruses from across the United States, CDC and other public health authorities can monitor important changes in the virus and use this information to guide contact tracing, public health mitigation efforts, and infection control strategies.

The SPHERES consortium is an ambitious effort to coordinate SARS-CoV-2 genome sequencing nationally, organizing dozens of smaller, individual efforts into a single, distributed network of laboratories, institutions and corporations. The consortium combines the expertise, technology, and resources of 40 state and local public health departments, several large clinical laboratories, and over two dozen collaborating institutions across the federal government, academia, and the private sector.

SPHERES will establish best practices and consensus data standards, accelerate open data sharing, and establish a pool of resources and expertise to help bring cutting-edge technology to the national COVID-19 response.

SPHERES data open, shared

Consortium members share a commitment to rapid open sequence sharing. They plan to submit all useful sequence data into public repositories at the National Library of Medicine’s National Center for Biotechnology Information (NLM/NCBI), the Global Initiative on Sharing Avian Influenza Data (GISAID), and other public sequence repositories. This will help ensure that that viral sequence data from across the United States is rapidly available for public health decision making and freely accessible to researchers everywhere.

Consortium members include:

Federal agencies and laboratories

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Office of Advanced Molecular Detections

Gonlọ nyocha Mba nke Argonne

Defense Health Agency, Global Infectious Ọrịa Nyocha

Food na ọgwụ ọjọọ nchịkwa

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Los Alamos National Laboratory

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Office of Genomics and Advanced Technology

National Institute of Standards and Technology

National Library of Medicine’s National Center for Biotechnology Information

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

State/local public health laboratories

Arizona

California

Delaware

District of Columbia

Florida

Hawaii

Maine

Maryland

Massachusetts

Michigan

Minnesota

North Carolina

North Dakota

Nevada

New Mexico

New York

Utah

Virginia

Washington

Wisconsin

Wyoming

Instlọ akwụkwọ agụmakwụkwọ

Mahadum Baylor

Cornell University

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

Ugwu Ugwu Saịnaị Ugwu

New York University

Mahadum Northern Arizona

Mahadum nke Buffalo

Mahadum California, Berkeley

Mahadum California, Davis

Mahadum California, Irvine

Mahadum California, Los Angeles

Mahadum California, San Francisco

Mahadum California, Santa Cruz

University of Chicago

Mahadum Maryland

Mahadum nke Minnesota

Mahadum nke Nebraska

Mahadum nke New Mexico

Mahadum Washington

Mahadum Yale

Mmekọrịta

Abbott Diagnostics

mmmmmmmmmmmmm

Agba Genomics

Gingko Bioworks

IDbyDNA

Na-Ajụjụ-Tel

Ụlọ ọrụ LabCorp

One Codex

Teknụzụ Oxford Nanopore

Science Sciences nke Pacific

qiagen

Nchọpụta nyocha

Verily Life Sciences

Names of corporations are provided for information purposes only, and their inclusion here does not constitute an endorsement of the corporations or any of their commercial products or services by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Non-profit public health or research institutes

Association of Public Health Laboratories

Bill na Melinda Gates Foundation

Ulo Oru

Chan Zuckerberg BioHub

Craig Venter Institute

Public Health Alliance for Genomic Epidemiology

Nyocha Scripps

Labolọ nyocha ahụ nke Jackson

Translational Genomics Research Institute – North

Walder Foundation

For the past six years, CDC’s Office of Advanced Molecular Detection program has invested in federal and state public health laboratories to expand the use of pathogen genomics and other advanced laboratory technologies for infectious disease surveillance and outbreak response. The current consortium investment aims to save lives in the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic and prepare the United States and the world for future pandemic response.

To learn more about genomic sequencing or CDC’s work in advanced molecular detection, visit https://www.cdc.gov/amd/

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