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Scottish research centre receives £5m award

by Glasgow Report
in Science


THE UNIVERSITY of Dundee’s Wellcome Centre for Anti-Infectives Research (WCAIR) has received more than £5m from the Wellcome Trust.

This will aid the advancement in its world-leading research into neglected tropical diseases. 

The award will also support the centre’s objectives of training the next generation of scientists and building the public understanding of science. 

Professor David Horn, interim director of the WCAIR, said: “Since we opened in 2017, everyone here has been dedicated to increasing our knowledge of some of the world’s most devastating diseases and researching new drugs to combat these killers.

The University of Dundee's Life Sciences building
The WCAIR has established itself as a world-leading hub for tropical disease drug discovery since it opened in April 2017.

“Malaria, tuberculosis, Chagas disease, and leishmaniasis bring misery to millions and cause hundreds of thousands of deaths every year. 

“These diseases also disproportionately affect the poor and cost developing economies billions of dollars, so the need for new treatments cannot be overstated.

“The support we have had from Wellcome has allowed us to make significant leaps forward in understanding these illnesses over the past five years and we look forward to building on this.”

It has helped to establish the Hub for Neglected Tropical Diseases Network, a significant part of Wellcome’s new Infectious Disease Health Challenge area.

This will allow the WCAIR to quickly share new innovations and best practice with partners, accelerate drug discovery for infectious tropical diseases and maximise the global impact of its research.

The centre is committed to working with the local community by introducing people throughout the city to the world of science through a series of events, exhibitions, and workshops.

Another of the centre’s key functions is the training of new scientific researchers, with an emphasis placed on those living in countries affected by tropical diseases.

One of those scientists to benefit from a recent placement at the WCAIR is Henry Onyame, a Postgraduate Research Student from the University of Ghana, who has spent eight months working with Dundee experts to learn more about the latest developments in drug discovery.

“Coming to the WCAIR has given me so many opportunities,” he said.

“The range of technology and expertise here has really pushed me – I’ve been learning on the job.

“My lab will be receiving some of the technology I have been using here in Dundee, and it will be a great responsibility to train my colleagues in using it.

“My experience here has been a great privilege and I feel so proud to have received this opportunity. It has helped to transform my expectations and I am so grateful for having had the chance to learn from the people here.”



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