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publication date: Mar 6, 2012
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author/source: University of Dundee
The University of Dundee has received over £10 million from the
Wellcome Trust in the fight against some of the world's most neglected
parasitic diseases, including support for a multi-million pound partnership
with GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) to discover new drug treatments.
The Drug Discovery Unit at Dundee will work with GSK's Kinetoplastids Discovery Performance Unit (DPU) at the company's Tres Cantos Medicines Development Campus in Spain.
The goal of the collaboration is to develop safe and affordable treatments for Chagas disease, leishmaniasis and African sleeping sickness. These are neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) which kill tens of thousands of people across the developing world every year and are caused, in some cases, by parasites called kinetoplastids.
The partnership's aim is to deliver at least one treatment against one of the diseases in the next five years. It is being supported by a grant of £8.6million from the Wellcome Trust
"These parasitic diseases, which afflict millions of people worldwide, are collectively responsible for about 150,000 deaths every year in Asia, Africa and Latin America. The drugs currently used to treat patients are often difficult to administer, have toxic side effects and are not always effective due to drug resistance" said Professor Alan Fairlamb, an international expert on parasite biochemistry, based in the Drug Discovery Unit at Dundee.
"Better, safer drugs are needed that are cheap and easy to administer, because most of these patients are living in poverty without access to hospitals or clinics."
Significant progress has been made in Dundee towards the development of a new treatment for African sleeping sickness in particular over the past five years, and there have been promising results in identifying potential treatments for leishmaniasis.
"Currently we have a portfolio of discovery projects in various stages of development in African sleeping sickness and visceral leishmaniasis", said Professor Mike Ferguson. "We have several types of compounds with promising activity in animal models. The next step is to chemically modify these molecules to find the optimal balance of drug-like properties for clinical trials".
Now the expert teams at Dundee and GSK will work together to expand their activities in an integrated, multidisciplinary effort to find effective treatments for the three diseases.
"Having an industry-experienced, multidisciplinary drug discovery team housed alongside world leaders in the biology of these parasites is a major strength of the Drug Discovery Unit and is rare in a UK university," explained Professor Paul Wyatt, Head of the DDU.
"We are very pleased to have GSK as a valued partner in the project. The support from the Wellcome Trust has enabled us to create a powerful team by combining DDU's and GSK's considerable expertise and infrastructure, to accelerate progress towards discovering new drugs for these terrible diseases. We have already forged a very productive partnership and look forward to an exciting and successful future."
The funding comes in addition to a recent award of £1.5million by the Wellcome Trust to Professor Fairlamb to investigate Chagas disease.
Dr Ted Bianco, Director of Technology Transfer at the Wellcome Trust, said, "This significant award from the Wellcome Trust recognises the University's distinguished track record in the area of neglected tropical diseases and its strategic approach to translational research. The partnership with GSK is an exciting and timely development that brings together complementary skills from academia and industry. I applaud both parties for their commitment to global health."
GSK has a long-standing commitment to developing new and better treatments for NTDs through collaborative partnerships and global information sharing programmes.
The company is a founding member of the WIPO Re:Search consortium which brings together eight leading pharmaceutical companies in collaboration with multiple non-profit research organizations under the auspices of WIPO - a UN body - to help accelerate the development of new and better treatments against neglected tropical diseases (NTDs). GSK continues to invest in its own active R&D programme for diseases that most affect developing countries, including NTDs. This R&D portfolio currently includes projects for Chagas', dengue, human African trypanosomiasis and leishmaniasis. Earlier this year GSK joined a new global partnership of other major pharmaceutical companies and leading organisations including the World Health Organization and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation in a new united effort to control or eliminate 10 NTDs by the end of the decade.
LIFE SCIENCES AT DUNDEE
With more than 1000 scientists, research students and support staff form 58 countries and external funding in excess of £30 million per year, the College of Life Sciences at the University of Dundee is one of the largest and most productive Life Sciences research institutes in Europe. Consistently voted one of ‘the best places for a life scientist to work' by The Scientist magazine, the College has an international reputation for its basic and translational research and was recognised in the 2011 Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council Excellence with Impact Awards for `Greatest Delivery of Impact'.
The University of Dundee is the central hub for a multi-million pound biotechnology sector in the east of Scotland, which now accounts for 16% of the local economy.
University researchers collaborate with many of world's major pharmaceutical companies in the fight against diseases such as cancer, diabetes, inherited skin diseases, Huntington's disease and rheumatoid arthritis.
The University's Drug Discovery Unit is actively developing drugs for the treatment of neglected tropical diseases, including Chagas' disease, leishmaniasis, African sleeping sickness and malaria, and translating innovative drug targets in oncology, eczema, Alzheimer's disease, anti-bacterials and anti-virals.
For further information visit www.lifesci.dundee.ac.uk or www.drugdiscovery.dundee.ac.uk
About the Wellcome Trust
The Wellcome Trust is a global charitable foundation dedicated to achieving extraordinary improvements in human and animal health. It supports the brightest minds in biomedical research and the medical humanities. The Trust's breadth of support includes public engagement, education and the application of research to improve health. It is independent of both political and commercial interests.
GlaxoSmithKline - one of the world's leading research-based pharmaceutical and healthcare companies - is committed to improving the quality of human life by enabling people to do more, feel better and live longer.
For further information please visit www.gsk.com
The Drug Discovery Unit at Dundee will work with GSK's Kinetoplastids Discovery Performance Unit (DPU) at the company's Tres Cantos Medicines Development Campus in Spain.
The goal of the collaboration is to develop safe and affordable treatments for Chagas disease, leishmaniasis and African sleeping sickness. These are neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) which kill tens of thousands of people across the developing world every year and are caused, in some cases, by parasites called kinetoplastids.
The partnership's aim is to deliver at least one treatment against one of the diseases in the next five years. It is being supported by a grant of £8.6million from the Wellcome Trust
"These parasitic diseases, which afflict millions of people worldwide, are collectively responsible for about 150,000 deaths every year in Asia, Africa and Latin America. The drugs currently used to treat patients are often difficult to administer, have toxic side effects and are not always effective due to drug resistance" said Professor Alan Fairlamb, an international expert on parasite biochemistry, based in the Drug Discovery Unit at Dundee.
"Better, safer drugs are needed that are cheap and easy to administer, because most of these patients are living in poverty without access to hospitals or clinics."
Significant progress has been made in Dundee towards the development of a new treatment for African sleeping sickness in particular over the past five years, and there have been promising results in identifying potential treatments for leishmaniasis.
"Currently we have a portfolio of discovery projects in various stages of development in African sleeping sickness and visceral leishmaniasis", said Professor Mike Ferguson. "We have several types of compounds with promising activity in animal models. The next step is to chemically modify these molecules to find the optimal balance of drug-like properties for clinical trials".
Now the expert teams at Dundee and GSK will work together to expand their activities in an integrated, multidisciplinary effort to find effective treatments for the three diseases.
"Having an industry-experienced, multidisciplinary drug discovery team housed alongside world leaders in the biology of these parasites is a major strength of the Drug Discovery Unit and is rare in a UK university," explained Professor Paul Wyatt, Head of the DDU.
"We are very pleased to have GSK as a valued partner in the project. The support from the Wellcome Trust has enabled us to create a powerful team by combining DDU's and GSK's considerable expertise and infrastructure, to accelerate progress towards discovering new drugs for these terrible diseases. We have already forged a very productive partnership and look forward to an exciting and successful future."
The funding comes in addition to a recent award of £1.5million by the Wellcome Trust to Professor Fairlamb to investigate Chagas disease.
Dr Ted Bianco, Director of Technology Transfer at the Wellcome Trust, said, "This significant award from the Wellcome Trust recognises the University's distinguished track record in the area of neglected tropical diseases and its strategic approach to translational research. The partnership with GSK is an exciting and timely development that brings together complementary skills from academia and industry. I applaud both parties for their commitment to global health."
GSK has a long-standing commitment to developing new and better treatments for NTDs through collaborative partnerships and global information sharing programmes.
The company is a founding member of the WIPO Re:Search consortium which brings together eight leading pharmaceutical companies in collaboration with multiple non-profit research organizations under the auspices of WIPO - a UN body - to help accelerate the development of new and better treatments against neglected tropical diseases (NTDs). GSK continues to invest in its own active R&D programme for diseases that most affect developing countries, including NTDs. This R&D portfolio currently includes projects for Chagas', dengue, human African trypanosomiasis and leishmaniasis. Earlier this year GSK joined a new global partnership of other major pharmaceutical companies and leading organisations including the World Health Organization and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation in a new united effort to control or eliminate 10 NTDs by the end of the decade.
LIFE SCIENCES AT DUNDEE
With more than 1000 scientists, research students and support staff form 58 countries and external funding in excess of £30 million per year, the College of Life Sciences at the University of Dundee is one of the largest and most productive Life Sciences research institutes in Europe. Consistently voted one of ‘the best places for a life scientist to work' by The Scientist magazine, the College has an international reputation for its basic and translational research and was recognised in the 2011 Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council Excellence with Impact Awards for `Greatest Delivery of Impact'.
The University of Dundee is the central hub for a multi-million pound biotechnology sector in the east of Scotland, which now accounts for 16% of the local economy.
University researchers collaborate with many of world's major pharmaceutical companies in the fight against diseases such as cancer, diabetes, inherited skin diseases, Huntington's disease and rheumatoid arthritis.
The University's Drug Discovery Unit is actively developing drugs for the treatment of neglected tropical diseases, including Chagas' disease, leishmaniasis, African sleeping sickness and malaria, and translating innovative drug targets in oncology, eczema, Alzheimer's disease, anti-bacterials and anti-virals.
For further information visit www.lifesci.dundee.ac.uk or www.drugdiscovery.dundee.ac.uk
About the Wellcome Trust
The Wellcome Trust is a global charitable foundation dedicated to achieving extraordinary improvements in human and animal health. It supports the brightest minds in biomedical research and the medical humanities. The Trust's breadth of support includes public engagement, education and the application of research to improve health. It is independent of both political and commercial interests.
GlaxoSmithKline - one of the world's leading research-based pharmaceutical and healthcare companies - is committed to improving the quality of human life by enabling people to do more, feel better and live longer.
For further information please visit www.gsk.com
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