NBAF-focused research already underway at K-State U, ahead of level-4 biolab opening

In terms of transition, we have to understand that there are a wide variety of pathogens out there — pathogens that we know about and, unfortunately, pathogens that we don’t know about — that are a constant threat to agriculture in the United States,” Higgs said. “Because of that, the U.S. cannot afford a period of time in which research at Plum Island is stopped and then NBAF is opened. It’s not going to be an instantaneous thing like turning off one light switch and then turning on another one. The transition process has to phased, and with these state of Kansas funds, the BRI will help to ensure continuity of U.S. preparedness.”

Of the eight diseases NBAF is proposed to study, research projects are approved in the BRI with the following four and are ongoing with the last two:

  • African swine fever, an arthropod-borne disease that causes high fever and high death rates in pigs.
  • Classical swine fever, a disease causes fever, skin lesions, convulsion and death in pigs
  • Rift Valley fever, a mosquito-borne disease that can cause abortions in livestock and fatal human infections
  • Japanese encephalitis, a mosquito-borne disease that can cause reproductive problems in pigs and fever, neck stiffness, seizures, brain infections and death in humans

Higgs said the BRI will never conduct research on foot-and-mouth disease, the Nipah virus or the Hendra virus — three diseases NBAF will research. Similarly, NBAF will not conduct research on plant or foodborne pathogens, and is not likely to conduct research on poultry and avian diseases — all research focuses of the BRI.

The BRI is the first nonfederal laboratory ever to receive federal approval to conduct research on African swine fever and classical swine fever. A collaborative project between Kansas State University and the Arthropod-Borne Animal Disease Research Unit at the BRI on wild-type Rift fever virus in livestock is believed to be the first such project in the U.S. since the late 1980s, Higgs said. In the last 20 years, such research had to be performed in foreign laboratories, even if supported by U.S. funds.

The BRI, Plum Island’s USDA researchers and the Department of Homeland Security are very engaged and working together closely during this time to ensure that the transfer of agents at each step on the transition process is a well-regulated, safe and secure process,” Higgs said.

Additionally, Larry Barrett, director of the Plum Island Animal Disease Center and the recently appointed acting director of the Office of National Laboratories, visited the BRI in 2014 to discuss the transition process as well as research, education and training opportunities for Kansas State University, Manhattan Technical College and Cloud County Community College. These institutions and others will help Homeland Security develop NBAF’s workforce.

In addition to research, the state’s funding also has supported:

  • Placing one of the university’s veterinary medicine students at the Plum Island lab for three years and another at the Australian Animal Health Laboratory
  • Collaboration with Plum Island and high-containment laboratories in England and Germany
  • Developing a curriculum and academic credit course materials for education and training in biosafety, biosecurity and transboundary animal diseases, as well as supporting the College of Veterinary Medicine’s Summer Undergraduate Research Program

The release notes that NBAF will be Homeland Security’s premier foreign animal disease research lab. It will research high-consequence livestock diseases that threaten animal and human health. The $1.25 billion lab will be on the northeast edge of K-State Manhattan, Kansas campus. When completed, NBAF is anticipated to have about 400 employees and generate $3.5 billion into the Kansas economy in the first twenty years of operation. NBAF is anticipated to begin operations in 2022 or 2023. Construction of the facility’s central utility plant is more than 90 percent complete.