Country for PR: United States
Contributor: PR Newswire New York
Thursday, March 26 2020 - 03:00
AsiaNet
Berkeley Lights Announces the Global Emerging Pathogen Antibody Discovery Consortium (GEPAD) to Attack COVID-19 and Other Viruses
EMERYVILLE, California, March 26, 2020 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

  -- In collaboration with Vanderbilt University Medical Center, La Jolla 
Institute for Immunology and Emory University, viral neutralization workflows 
on the Berkeley Lights platform are under accelerated development in response 
to the Coronavirus outbreak

Today Berkeley Lights, Inc., announced the Global Emerging Pathogen Antibody 
Discovery Consortium (GEPAD) with founding members Dr. James Crowe and Dr. 
Robert Carnahan at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Dr. Erica Ollman 
Saphire at La Jolla Institute for Immunology and Dr. Frances Eun-Hyung Lee at 
Emory University with the aim to accelerate the discovery of neutralizing 
antibodies from patient blood samples. Processing precious blood samples and 
fragile cells can be challenging with traditional technologies. The consortium 
will leverage Berkeley Lights' Beacon platform for antibody discovery using the 
blood of recovering patients as the foundation for therapeutics, with COVID-19 
as a first target.

Logo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1078159/Berkeley_Lights_Logo.jpg

While researchers around the world are quickly characterizing the SARS-CoV-2 
virus, the ability to screen single B cells expressing a SARS-CoV-2 
neutralizing antibody remains a significant and time-consuming challenge. The 
body has billions of B cells.  After a patient recovers from SAR-CoV-2, they 
generate many B cells specific for the virus; however, some B cells will make 
antibodies that just bind to the virus but are not protective. Hence, finding 
the special B cells that eliminate or neutralize the virus is exceedingly rare. 
It is like finding a "needle in a haystack". The existing technologies can only 
search for binders, not neutralizers – so researchers are forced to sequence 
and re-express the antibody from non-specific B cells wasting significant time 
and resources.  The Beacon system and the viral neutralization assay is 
designed to address this problem by directly screening single cells for 
neutralizing function in a single day. 

The primary goal of the GEPAD Consortium is to enable the quickest therapeutic 
response to emerging pathogens. The GEPAD Consortium is requesting that anyone 
interested in this viral neutralization workflow and advancing the state of the 
art reach out and join them in forming a defensive barrier worldwide against 
diseases caused by emerging pathogens. Members will be enabled to rapidly 
discover potential treatments using small volume blood samples from recovering 
patients—both acute and convalescent. The consortium is rapidly iterating and 
improving the viral neutralization workflow executing on the Berkeley Lights 
platform and hopes that more collaborators will come forward to participate in 
fighting this epidemic and be better prepared for the next one.

"We have long sought to study the antiviral capacity of antibodies secreted by 
single human B cells, but the instruments and protocols for doing those studies 
didn't exist. Partnering with Berkeley Lights on developing innovative 
approaches to this single-cell biology task is now becoming a reality," said 
Dr. James Crowe, MD, Director of the Vanderbilt Vaccine Center.

"We have developed a specialized survival media for plasma cells and envision 
the use of it for rapid upfront selection of a rare target monoclonal 
antibody," said Dr. Lee. "Berkeley Lights together with this consortium will 
make this method a reality for COVID-19 neutralizing antibodies. We hope this 
helps in this pandemic to save lives." 

"There's an opportunity here to quickly mobilize something that could protect 
frontline workers or treat those who have been infected," explained Dr. 
Saphire. "Vaccines aren't available yet. Providing some immediate immunity 
using antibodies could be lifesaving for those who haven't been vaccinated or 
can't be vaccinated, or if the eventual vaccines aren't completely protective."

"COVID-19 is a serious threat to our health, our way of life, and the world 
economy," said Dr. Eric Hobbs, CEO of Berkeley Lights. "We are committed to 
doing our part by developing assays and workflows that researchers and 
therapeutic developers can use to rapidly discover antibodies that are key to 
treatments."  

About Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) is one of the nation's largest 
academic medical centers. As part of its research enterprise, in partnership 
with the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, the Vanderbilt Vaccine 
Center is participating in the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's 
(DARPA's) Pandemic Protection Platform (P3) program, a five-year cooperative 
agreement to develop protective antibody treatments that can be rushed to 
health care providers within 60 days after the outbreak of viral diseases 
anywhere in the world.

About La Jolla Institute for Immunology 
La Jolla Institute for Immunology is dedicated to understanding the intricacies 
and power of the immune system so that we may apply that knowledge to promote 
human health and prevent a wide range of diseases. Since its founding in 1988 
as an independent, nonprofit research organization, the Institute has made 
numerous advances leading towards its goal: life without disease(R).

About Emory University
Emory University is one of the world's leading research universities. Its 
mission is to create, preserve, teach and apply knowledge in the service of 
humanity. The Emory effort is led by Dr. Lee of the Pulmonary, Allergy, 
Critical Care & Sleep Division, The Lowance Center for Human Immunology and the 
Emory Vaccine Center.  She contributes culture methods developed in her lab 
that greatly improve the survival of B cells and plasma cells thereby 
facilitating the isolation of extremely rare cells producing the antibodies of 
interest.  Dr. Lee's work is supported by NIH, the Lowance Center, Gates 
Foundation, and the Georgia Research Alliance.

About Berkeley Lights
Here at Berkeley Lights, we think cells are awesome! Cells are capable of 
manufacturing cures for diseases, fibers for clothing, energy in the form of 
biofuels, and food proteins for nutrition. So the question is, if nature is 
capable of manufacturing the products we need in a scalable way, why aren't we 
doing more of this? Well, the answer is that with the solutions available 
today, it is hard. It takes a long time to find the right cell for a specific 
job, costs lots of money, and if you have picked a suboptimal cell line, has a 
very low process yield. Berkeley Lights has the complete solution to find the 
best cells by functionally screening and recovering individual cells for 
antibody discovery, cell line development, T cell analysis, and synthetic 
biology. Our proprietary technology, including the Beacon® and Lightning™ 
platforms accelerate the rate you can discover and develop cell-based products 
in a fraction of the time and at a fraction of the cost of conventional, legacy 
research methods. Using our tools and solutions, scientists can find the best 
cells, the first time they look. For more information, visit 
www.berkeleylights.com. 
 
Berkeley Lights' Beacon and Lightning systems and Culture Station instrument 
are: 

For Research Use Only. Not for use in diagnostic procedures. 

Source - Berkeley Lights 

CONTACT: berkeleylights@bulleitgroup.com OR For inquiries regarding the GEPAD 
Consortium, please reach out to blicommunications@berkeleylights.com 
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