Petri seeks grant for biocontainment
lab
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| Dr.
William Petri |
By Fariss Samarrai
The
University is applying for a $14 million grant from the National
Institutes of Health to establish a regional biocontainment laboratory
at the School
of Medicine.
The
lab would allow U.Va. researchers to conduct advanced research
on infectious and emerging diseases and immunology. The facilitys
status as a regional biocontainment laboratory under the federal
grant would qualify it for use by visiting scientists from other
universities and research institutes in the event of a biodefense
emergency.
The
University has a long history of strength in infectious disease
research, with many research projects currently ongoing,
said Dr. William Petri, chief of U.Va.s Division
of Infectious Diseases and International Health and a professor
of medicine, microbiology and pathology. This grant will
allow us to respond to new NIH biodefense research initiatives
and to establish a lab that will be as good as any in the country
in an increasingly important area of research.
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This
grant will allow us to respond to new NIH biodefense research
initiatives and to establish a lab ... as good as any in
the country in an increasingly important area of research.
Dr.
William Petri, Chief, Division of Infectious Diseases
and International Health
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Since
the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and the subsequent use
of anthrax as a terrorist weapon,
the
National Institutes of Health have dramatically increased funding
for research in infectious and emerging diseases. More than $1
billion in new funding is available, including $150 million to
establish new lab space and regional biocontainment laboratories
for bio-defense research.
The
lab at U.Va. would serve a federally designated region that includes
Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Washington, D.C. and
West Virginia. Scientists at universities and federal labs throughout
the region would interact and collaborate on biodefense research
projects.
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| Architects
rendering of the Medical Research Building 6, where the biocontainment
lab would be located. |
The
University needs $14 million in additional funds to begin construction
on its new $60 million Medical Research Building 6, which would
house the regional biocontainment laboratory. In November, Virginia
voters passed a bond referendum that will provide $24 million
for construction of the building. The University also is raising
funds from private sources. The regional biocontainment laboratory
would form a quadrangle with Medical Research Buildings 4 and
5 and could be completed as early as 2006 if federal funding is
obtained.
Currently,
the University conducts research at three federally established
levels Biosecurity Levels 1, 2 and 3. BSL1 is basic lab
work on common and safe organisms. Level 2 involves work with
organisms such as salmonella and staph, which have the potential
to make people sick but are not dangerous under normal laboratory
conditions. Level 3 involves agents such as anthrax and Francisella
tularensis, bacteria that can be lethal but are fully manageable
under strictly controlled laboratory conditions. Such agents also
have been developed as biological weapons by terrorists and rogue
nations.
The
University currently has one BSL3 lab where researchers investigate
the characteristics of anthrax and Francisella tularensis as well
as their potential effect on human health. With further funding,
U.Va. scientists will deepen and broaden their studies, looking
for new therapies and drugs to treat infections and for new ways
to make effective vaccines. U.Va. scientists also are investigating
the use of anti-inflammatory drugs patented by the University
to protect against the toxins produced during anthrax infection.
A
new state-of-the art BSL3 lab would allow U.Va. researchers to
further investigate these and other agents and to attract additional
federal funding for medical and biodefense research. The 6,900
square feet of BSL3 lab space will be in two highly secure sites
in the regional biocontainment lab.
The
lab would help the University recruit top scientists and increase
our collaborative work with researchers around Grounds and in
the region, said Petri. This would be the optimal
setting to bring together infectious disease researchers, allergists
and immunologists for vaccine and drug development, and for a
greater understanding of how various agents cause disease.
NIH
plans to award six grants for regional biocontainment laboratories
throughout the U.S. Twenty-seven institutions are applying for
the grants; U.Va. appears to be the only institution in Virginia
applying.
Because
NIH requires grant applicants to notify the public whenever a
regional biocontainment laboratory is proposed, the University
is placing an advertisement in local newspapers notifying residents
that information about the lab is available from the School of
Medicines Office of Research.
The
biocontainment lab, like all labs at U.Va., would be overseen
by the Universitys Institutional Biosafety Committee, which
ensures that research laboratories follow all federally established
guidelines and regulations for biological research. The committee
includes members of the Universitys research community and
two Charlottesville-Albemarle citizens unaffiliated with the University.
This
lab will allow the University to serve and respond to a national
need for biodefense research, said Mark Ross, a member of
the biosafety committee and a chemist with the Charlottesville
biotechnology company MDS Proteomics. I have complete confidence
that the University of Virginia will run this lab according to
all federal regulations and protocols, and will produce important
findings in this critical area of research.
The
grant application is available for review in the deans office
at the medical school. For more details, call Dr. William Petri
at 924-5621.
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