May 24, 2023
Journal Article

Insights from a workplace SARS-CoV-2 specimen collection program, with genomes placed into global sequence phylogeny

Abstract

In 2020, the Department of Energy established the National Virtual Biotechnology Laboratory (NVBL) to address key challenges associated with COVID-19. As part of that effort, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) established a capability to collect and analyze specimens from employees who self-reported symptoms consistent with the disease. During the spring and fall of 2021, 36 samples identified as positive for SARS-COV-2 using reverse-transcriptase quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR) were sequenced and genotyped. Here, the relationship between patient age and viral load as measured by Ct values was measured and determined to be only weakly significant. Consensus sequences for each sample were placed into a global phylogeny and transmission dynamics were investigated, revealing that the closest relative for many samples was from outside of Washington state, indicating mixing of viral pools within geographic regions.

Published: May 24, 2023

Citation

Leiser O.P., D.L. Auberry, E. Bakker, W.B. Chrisler, K.M. Engbrecht, H.E. Engelmann, and S.J. Fansler, et al. 2023. Insights from a workplace SARS-CoV-2 specimen collection program, with genomes placed into global sequence phylogeny. PLoS One 18, no. 4:Art. No. e0285042. PNNL-SA-179220. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0285042