A year of SARS-CoV-2 research

This post may be premature but I feel like writing down some thoughts about the roller coaster that this year has been. At the start of the year, with the number of reported cases rising in Europe the EMBL and our institute (EMBL-EBI) decided to send everyone home as precautionary measure. As most of our group is computational, this has meant we have been working from home for most of this year. Early on, somewhat frustrated by not being able to help, I emailed a few people that could be working on the virus. Nevan Krogan replied saying our help would be useful and we joined the global effort to contribute to solving this crisis. Science at science fiction speedOver the course of 9 months we took part in 4 projects, some of these being the most thrilling science I have ever taken part in. We condensed what would easily be a 3 to 5 years research project into something done in 3-4 months, involving typically 10-20 research groups with a few key people helping to direct the research. We were collecting data, analysing and suggesting new experiments in the span of days with some of the best scientists in the world. Contributing to the direction of this level of resources has been an amazing experience that I wish every scientist could try at least once in their life. These projects were all geared towards studying how SARS-CoV-2 takes control of its target cells to be able to suggest human targeting drugs that could counter the infection. Several of the compounds identified...
Source: Evolution of Cellular Networks - Category: Cytology Tags: academia Source Type: blogs