Coronavirus Will Destroy Years of Scientific Progress

Scientists all over the world have to put their research on hold due to coronavirus and their work could be lost forever

Drew Costley
OneZero

--

Dr. Cullen Taniguchi, a cancer doctor and researcher at the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, got an email on the morning of Sunday, March 22 that forced him to dismantle his life’s work.

For the last six years, Taniguchi has run a laboratory that researches and develops new ways to treat pancreatic cancer and improve existing treatments. His lab grows the cells it needs to run experiments in incubators. Some of them come from patients or are modified in a way that makes them, Taniguchi says, “unique to the world.”

The email, from the center’s administration, informed Taniguchi that in order to curb the spread of the coronavirus, he and his staff of eight lab managers, researchers, and assistants had 24 hours to shut down their lab — possibly damaging those precious cells in the process.

Mixtures of chemicals Taniguchi’s team had spent years developing for experiments had to be safely put away or thrown out. Lab managers set up a system for preserving mice they used for experiments. And the cells they spent years developing had to be preserved in a way that Taniguchi likens…

--

--

Drew Costley
OneZero

Drew Costley is a Staff Writer at FutureHuman covering the environment, health, science and tech. Previously @ SFGate, East Bay Express, USA Today, etc.