'Covid-19 unmasked: understanding the outbreak' is a panel discussion from the 2020 New Zealand International Science Festival.
University of Otago virologists and public health experts join William Ray for a coronavirus discussion at the 2020 New Zealand International Science Festival.
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Studying SARS-CoV2
Miguel Quiñones-Mateu is a virologist in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology at the University of Otago.
He runs a secure Physical Containment lab (PC3) at the university, where researchers can safely isolate and grow SARS-CoV-2, the virus responsible for COVID-19, using samples taken from infected individuals.
He says he began work before New Zealand had its first case of covid-19, which made sourcing material difficult.
"But once we isolated the virus and we had it," he says, "then we started sharing the genetic material. ... It opened the door for projects like the vaccine initiative we're involved in."
"If we didn't have that opportunity of working with the virus, we wouldn't be where we are."
Race to develop vaccines
Vernon Ward is a virologist at the University of Otago. He is involved in the Oxford vaccine trial, which is one of the leading covid-19 vaccine possibilities that has just gone to stage 3 clinical trials.
He says the project is an international collaboration that involves experts around the world.
"There are many different labs working on this. No one country can do it by themselves."
"There's a huge amount of collaboration between the different parties," says Vernon
"One of my colleagues was asked if this was a race and he pointed out it's not a race between all the developers; it's actually a race against the virus."
Tracking the spread of the virus
University of Otago virologist Jemma Geoghegan is involved in sequencing samples of the coronavirus and by comparing mutations she is helping map the spread of the disease.
Jemma says that when a virus makes copies of itself it makes mistakes, which are mutations. These mutations then get passed on.
"If we look at the virus genome from all the cases then what we can do is reconstruct a family tree or evolutionary tree."
"We can use that to track who infected who," says Jemma, "and develop really accurate contact networks."
Jemma and colleagues at ESR sequence the genomes of covid-19 samples collected from returning travellers who are in managed isolation or in quarantine.
The rate at which coronavirus mutates…