精品国产一区二区桃色

Life in the Lab

'We are doers.
We want to get involved.'

How academic scientists at University of Washington are contributing to diagnostic testing for COVID-19
Laurel Oldach
March 18, 2020

The basic science laboratories at the University of Washington School of Medicine in Seattle are under the same roof as the clinical care facilities but separated by long hallways. Right now, those halls are very quiet, as faculty members with children and those at high risk of contracting COVID-19 have shifted to remote work, and the remaining scientists are avoiding close contact.

“It’s a really weird combination of intense emotional distress and being deserted. Normally, I think, when a place is deserted, it’s empty of emotion, too,” said , the university’s associate dean for research and graduate education.

UWash-response-Thumb.png

But this is a time when normality feels like a distant memory. Gordon is one of many basic scientists helping with an unusual effort: recruiting volunteer scientists to help keep diagnostic labs running during Seattle’s COVID-19 outbreak.

Reassigning basic scientists

Normally, basic scientists and clinical lab workers overlap very little. Because of federal regulations, diagnostic tests must be carried out by government-certified laboratory technicians. However, testing rates for the novel coronavirus SARS-nCoV-2 have lagged badly in the United States compared with other countries. As the number of people with respiratory symptoms has grown, demand for testing has strained the university’s laboratory medicine department.

The shortage was hardware; the interim chair of the department circulated a request for specific PCR machines early in March.

In the past weeks, the lab’s personnel have become overwhelmed. As the university prepared to launch a drive-up testing center, Gordon said, “there was the recognition that the state testing lab, in combination with the university’s testing lab, just didn’t have the capacity — and that outside-the-box thinking was going to be necessary.”

Luckily, the UW community includes a large number of scientists who know their way around a thermocycler. After consulting with faculty and department chairs, the dean of research sent an email on March 12 requesting volunteers under age 40 to help out in the labs at the department of laboratory medicine.

The diagnostic tests themselves must still be performed by certified technicians. But the roughly 150 volunteers — most of whom are graduate students, postdoctoral fellows or junior faculty – can help with ancillary tasks, from restocking shelves to logging samples as they enter the lab.

 “Something that’s very heartwarming is everybody pulling together within the University of Washington to make this happen,” said , the chair of the university’s pharmacology department. “It started with an idea, and it’s expanded very quickly into action.”

More difficult choices ahead for researchers

Gordon said that the advice to stay at home and avoid social contact is difficult for the scientists she knows to follow. “We are doers. We want to get involved,” Gordon said. “But if you put 100 people in a room to get involved, you would be spreading the virus.”

Those who haven’t been called on to volunteer in the clinical lab have other ways to contribute to the outbreak response. “There’s a tremendous outpouring of volunteer energy, but also the need to organize it,” Gordon said.

Recently developed message boards within the UW community are trying to match healthcare workers who need childcare and people at higher risk of infection with delivery needs to people who want to help.

Research labs are also crowdsourcing donations of reagents. The stringent Food and Drug Administration protocols that clinical laboratories follow often specify the manufacturer and type of reagents or consumables that may be used. On Friday, the UW virology department put out an for pipette tips; on Saturday morning, it that donations from academic groups, including an influenza surveillance study, had allowed it to continue diagnostic tests until a manufacturer’s shipment came in.

Meanwhile, faculty members in leadership roles are also trying to keep research programs going, balancing certainty that the drastic social distancing measures will need to continue for at least eight more weeks with the pressure to contribute in some way to scientific understanding of the virus and of other diseases.

“You want to prevent the spread of this virus, but you don’t want someone to lose years of research that may be the cure for something else,” Scott said.

University leaders across the country have done the same cost–benefit calculations and come to different results. Some universities, such as Johns Hopkins, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Cornell, have started to wind down research unrelated to the pandemic. But at the University of Washington, at least for now, a subset of researchers continue to report to work.

“You can’t just run the virology labs. The research enterprise is an organism, and you can’t just shut down all but one organ,” Gordon said on Friday. “By keeping the research labs running to the extent that people feel safe coming in, there’s a feeling that we’re contributing.”

Shortly after publishing this article, ASBMB learned of the death from COVID-19 of University of Washington pathology professor Stephen Schwartz. Our sympathy and deepest condolences are with the UW community at this difficult time.

Enjoy reading ASBMB Today?

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

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鈥檒l send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.

Latest in Science

Science highlights or most popular articles

Understanding the roles of extracellular matrix and vesicles in valvular disease
Profile

Understanding the roles of extracellular matrix and vesicles in valvular disease

Oct. 30, 2025

MOSAIC scholar Cassandra Clift uses mass spectrometry and multiomics to study cardiovascular calcification and collagen dysregulation, bridging her background in bioengineering and biology to investigate extracellular vesicles and heart disease.

Lipid profiles reveal sex differences in type 2 diabetes
Journal News

Lipid profiles reveal sex differences in type 2 diabetes

Oct. 29, 2025

Researchers explored the lipid profiles of individuals with type 2 diabetes and identified potentially useful lipid biomarkers for this condition.

Serum lipids may predict early diabetes risk
Journal News

Serum lipids may predict early diabetes risk

Oct. 29, 2025

Researchers found that levels of two key fatty acids may predict worsening tolerance for glucose, independent of body fat and insulin levels. In turn, these fatty acids may serve as early T2D biomarkers.

Sex and diet shape fat tissue lipid profiles in obesity
Journal News

Sex and diet shape fat tissue lipid profiles in obesity

Oct. 29, 2025

Researchers found that sex hormone levels and diet both influence inflammation and lipid composition in obesity.

Mapping the placenta鈥檚 hormone network
Journal News

Mapping the placenta鈥檚 hormone network

Oct. 21, 2025

Study uncovers how the placenta actively metabolizes not only glucocorticoids but also novel androgens and progesterones, reshaping our understanding of pregnancy and its complications.

Biochemists and molecular biologists sweep major 2025 honors
News

Biochemists and molecular biologists sweep major 2025 honors

Oct. 20, 2025

Recent Nobel, MacArthur and Kimberly Prize honorees highlight the power of biochemistry and molecular biology to drive discovery, including immune tolerance, vaccine design and metabolic disease, and to advance medicine and improve human health.