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UK funding (1 771 629 £) : Réseau de bioprocédés : BioProNET Ukri01/03/2014 UK Research and Innovation, Royaume Uni

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Réseau de bioprocédés : BioProNET

Abstract Biologics are complex molecules made by cellular processes and such biological products have major economic and social value for the UK and globally. Biologics encompass a range of molecules of therapeutic (e.g. biopharmaceutical molecules such as insulin and antibodies like Herceptin) and non-therapeutic (e.g. diagnostics, industrial enzymes, drug screening, crystallization / structural studies) use. The UK has been especially innovative in developing processes for commercial scale production (bioprocessing) of therapeutic proteins (biopharmaceuticals) in particular, that have the potential to treat otherwise intractable diseases. The area also directly employs a large work force in the UK and has direct social and economic impacts on the UK. However, the continued development and commercialization of such biologics requires further step-changing innovation if the full potential return to the UK is to be realised. Bioprocessing presents an economic success story and sales of biopharmaceuticals are estimated to be >$320B by 2020. The economic value and ever-increasing importance of these molecules in healthcare adds significantly to healthcare costs and, in the case of biopharmaceuticals in particular, there is pressure to design, develop and manufacture biopharmaceuticals more efficiently, predictably, and affordably. This proposal sets out to develop a vibrant academic-led UK network (BioProNET) of expertise that will bring together academics, industrialists and other interested groups to integrate the expertise of practitioners working on production (bioprocessing) of biologics of therapeutic use as well as those of non-therapeutic use. The Network will focus on biological processes that underpin the development, engineering, manufacturing and monitoring of functionally active biologics to address production of molecules of greater design complexity. The vision and perspectives of multiple scientific disciplines, including life scientists, biochemical engineers, chemists, physicists, mathematicians, computational scientists, and social scientists will be applied to the research challenges of biological process in the manufacture of biologics, both products of therapeutic use (e.g. biopharmaceuticals) and those of non-therapeutic use (e.g. biosensors, drug development and screening, diagnostics). Within the network we will consider the social, environmental and economic implications of development of the area and whether the sustainability of manufacturing of biologics can be improved. The Network shall maintain the UK bioprocessing sector (by harnessing the breadth of knowledge held in the different communities that will be brought together to develop and extend beyond today's systems into those that will be needed to compete on the world stage over the next 25 years) at the international forefront, whilst establishing step-changing and innovative solutions for the production of the next generation of biologics. By enhancing cost effectiveness of bioprocessing, the sector will move towards more affordable biologics/biopharmaceuticals for sustainable and healthier lifestyles.
Category Research Grant
Reference BB/L013770/1
Status Closed
Funded period start 01/03/2014
Funded period end 31/08/2019
Funded value £1 771 629,00
Source https://gtr.ukri.org/projects?ref=BB%2FL013770%2F1

Participating Organisations

University of Kent
EPSRC
Centre for Process Innovation (CPI)
Covance Clinical and Periapproval Services Limited
ALGAECYTES LIMITED
University of Aberdeen
University of Warwick
Johns Hopkins University
Varicon Aqua Solutions Ltd
Pall Life Sciences
University College Oxford
Mologic
Bath ASU
University of Bath
MRC-Technology
Lonza Group
Glythera Ltd
Oxford Nanopore Technologies
PUBLIC HEALTH ENGLAND
MicroSynbiotiX
Knowledge Transfer Network
Arecor
University of Birmingham
Teesside University
Austrian Centre for Applied Biotechnology
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON
UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH
GlaxoSmithKline (GSK)
Swansea University
Accelyo Ltd
Novo Nordisk
University of Nottingham
Protein Technologies Ltd
UCB SA
Imperial College London
Jeol UK Ltd
UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER
Bio-Shape Ltd
FUJIFILM
Cobra Biologics
University of Cambridge
Loughborough University
TotalLab Ltd
Actavis
University of Sheffield
Sanofi
Biopro Control Tech Limited
Lancaster University
Protein Ark
University of York
University of Leeds
Crystec Pharma
Recipharm
Croda Europe Ltd
Hyaltech
Plymouth Marine Laboratory
BioServe
Delft University of Technology (TU Delft)
Astrazeneca
Recyclatech Group Ltd
Durham University
Johnson Matthey
UCB Pharma
SAL Scientific

Cette annonce se réfère à une date antérieure et ne reflète pas nécessairement l’état actuel. L’état actuel est présenté à la page suivante : University of Kent, Canterbury, Royaume Uni.