<![CDATA[Newsroom University of Manchester]]> /about/news/ en Wed, 05 Feb 2025 14:03:49 +0100 Mon, 20 Jan 2025 15:18:17 +0100 <![CDATA[Newsroom University of Manchester]]> https://content.presspage.com/clients/150_1369.jpg /about/news/ 144 The University of Manchester partners in 青瓜视频8.2 million initiative to accelerate diagnostic innovation /about/news/the-university-of-manchester-partners-in-initiative-to-accelerate-diagnostic-innovation/ /about/news/the-university-of-manchester-partners-in-initiative-to-accelerate-diagnostic-innovation/684756Professor Alan Dickson from the Manchester Institute of Biotechnology (MIB) will Co-Lead the Centre for Advanced Diagnostics Development and Application (CADDA), a new collaborative project.The project, led by the University of Kent, and including The University of Manchester, and University College London (UCL), will address the development gap in the diagnostics innovation ecosystem.

Accelerating Innovation in Diagnostics

Diagnostics play a vital role in healthcare, informing approximately 70% of clinical decisions. From detecting diseases to enabling precision medicine, diagnostics have the potential to save lives, reduce healthcare costs, and improve global health outcomes. The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the importance of rapid diagnostic innovation, showcasing how timely diagnostics can mitigate public health crises and support economic resilience.

However, over 80% of UK companies developing diagnostics are small and medium enterprises (SMEs), which often face significant barriers in accessing the technical expertise, resources, and infrastructure needed to bring new products to market. CADDA seeks to address these challenges by fostering a collaborative, multidisciplinary environment that bridges academia, industry, the NHS, and regulatory bodies.

A National Effort with Global Impact

The CADDA initiative will harness the strengths of leading institutions in the North and South of England to ensure benefits are distributed across the UK. By providing SMEs with access to essential knowledge, infrastructure, and resources, CADDA will help overcome the fragmentation in the diagnostics sector that often delays innovation and increases costs.

Key stakeholders, including national and local NHS trusts, will be integrated into every aspect of the project to ensure that new diagnostic tools are clinically relevant, ethically sound, and compliant with regulatory standards. This coordinated approach will deliver diagnostics that meet the highest quality standards while addressing urgent healthcare needs.

Broader Benefits for Society and the Economy

In addition to advancing healthcare, CADDA will enhance animal health, strengthen biosecurity, and drive economic benefits for the UK. By enabling SMEs to overcome barriers to innovation, CADDA will support regional growth and position the UK as a global leader in diagnostic development.

Professor Mark Smales, from the University of Kent and co-Director of CADDA, highlighted the initiative青瓜视频檚 transformative potential: 青瓜视频淭hrough coalescing and harnessing the breadth of world class expertise in the UK across universities and research institutes, industry, SMEs, clinicians/end users, regulators and investors, we will be able to bring high quality innovative diagnostics faster to market; our medical community will be able to diagnose medical issues and save lives; and animal health and security will be enhanced. This will collectively provide wider societal and economic benefits to the UK.青瓜视频

Professor Kathy Kotiadis, also from the University of Kent and co-Director of CADDA, added: 青瓜视频淲e are excited to support the business development needs of the diagnostics sector. SMEs often face significant barriers to expansion due to limited access to expertise and information, hindering their ability to introduce new diagnostics to the market, a gap CADDA will fill.青瓜视频

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Mon, 20 Jan 2025 10:00:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/91e51294-ca65-4480-9208-909ba4018e75/500_cadda-stockimage.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/91e51294-ca65-4480-9208-909ba4018e75/cadda-stockimage.jpg?10000
Innovative enzyme breakthrough could transform drug and chemical manufacturing /about/news/innovative-enzyme-breakthrough-could-transform-drug-and-chemical-manufacturing/ /about/news/innovative-enzyme-breakthrough-could-transform-drug-and-chemical-manufacturing/684557Researchers from the Manchester Institute of Biotechnology and Department of Chemistry at The University of Manchester have described a novel enzyme that could significantly change the way essential chemicals and medicines are made.Published today (15 January 2025) in Nature, this breakthrough centres on a process called nucleophilic aromatic substitution (SNAr), a class of transformation that is widely used across the chemical industries including pharmaceuticals and agrochemicals. This enzymatic process offers a greener, more efficient alternative to traditional chemical synthesis.

Catalysing chemistry

SNAr reactions are crucial in manufacturing many valuable products such as medicines and agrochemicals. However, conventional methods for carrying out these reactions come with major challenges. They often require harsh conditions like high temperatures and environmentally harmful solvents. Established methods of performing SNAr chemistry often produce compounds as isomeric 青瓜视频 two or more compounds that have the same chemical formula but different arrangements of the atoms 青瓜视频 mixtures, necessitating the use of expensive and time-consuming purification steps. To overcome these hurdles, a team of researchers, led by and , have used directed evolution to develop a new enzyme capable of catalysing SNAr processes. This new enzyme, named SNAr1.3, performs a range of SNAr reactions with high efficiency and selectivity under mild reaction conditions. Unlike traditional chemical methods, this enzyme operates in water-based solutions at moderate temperatures, reducing the environmental impact and energy required.

How It Works

As there is no known natural enzyme that could catalyse SNAr reactions, the team initially discovered that an enzyme previously developed in their laboratory for a different chemical transformation could also perform SNAr chemistry, albeit with modest efficiency and selectivity. By using automated directed evolution, the researchers were able to further engineer this enzyme to have the desired characteristics. The team evaluated over 4,000 clones before identifying an enzyme SNAr1.3 that contains six mutations and is 160-fold more active than the parent enzyme. This enzyme efficiently promotes a wide variety of SNAr processes and can generate target products in a single mirror-image form, which is crucial for applications in the pharmaceutical sector.

The Benefits of SNAr1.3

SNAr1.3 has a number of features that make it an attractive option for chemical production:

  • Efficiency: the enzyme can perform over 4,000 reaction cycles without losing effectiveness, making it highly productive.
  • Precision: it creates molecules in a single mirror-image form, which is critical for the safety and effectiveness of medicines.
  • Versatility: SNAr1.3 works with a wide range of chemical building blocks, enabling the creation of complex structures like quaternary carbon centres青瓜视频攁 common feature in advanced drugs.
  • Sustainability: operating under mild, water-based conditions, the enzyme reduces the need for harmful chemicals and energy-intensive processes, making it an environmentally friendly alternative.

The team青瓜视频檚 work also sheds light on the enzyme青瓜视频檚 inner workings. Using advanced analytic techniques, they uncovered how SNAr1.3青瓜视频檚 unique structure allows it to bind and position chemicals precisely, enabling its exceptional performance. These insights provide a blueprint for designing even more powerful enzymes in the future.

A Greener Future for Industry

The development of SNAr1.3 highlights the potential of biocatalysis and provides a template for future development. As the world moves towards net zero, and industry is looking for ways to improve efficiency and reduce their environmental impact, biotechnology could be the answer to these pressing challenges.

青瓜视频淭his is a landmark achievement in biocatalysis,青瓜视频 said Igor Larrosa, Professor and Chair in Organic Chemistry at The University of Manchester. 青瓜视频淚t demonstrates how we can harness and even improve on nature青瓜视频檚 tools to address some of the toughest challenges in modern chemistry.青瓜视频

What青瓜视频檚 Next?

While SNAr1.3 is already showing immense promise, the researchers believe this is just the beginning. With further refinement, the enzyme could be adapted for even more complex reactions, making it a valuable tool in drug development, agricultural chemicals, and materials science.

青瓜视频淭he possibilities are just starting to emerge,青瓜视频 said Anthony. 青瓜视频淏y combining modern protein design with high-throughput testing, we青瓜视频檙e optimistic about creating a new generation of enzymes that can revolutionise SNAr chemistry.青瓜视频

This groundbreaking research offers a glimpse into a future where manufacturing essential products is cleaner, cheaper, and more efficient. For industries looking to reduce their environmental impact while maintaining high standards of quality, SNAr1.3 represents a promising solution.

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Leading scientists call for global conversation about mirror bacteria /about/news/leading-scientists-call-for-global-conversation-about-mirror-bacteria/ /about/news/leading-scientists-call-for-global-conversation-about-mirror-bacteria/681114For all press inquiries, including requests to speak with authors, please email press@mbdialogues.org. To view additional press materials as they become available, see this folder.

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A group of leading international scientists is calling for a global conversation about the potential creation of "mirror bacteria"青瓜视频攁 hypothetical form of life with biological molecules that are the mirror images of those found in nature.

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A group of leading international scientists is calling for a global conversation about the potential creation of "mirror bacteria"青瓜视频攁 hypothetical form of life built with biological molecules that are the opposite of those found in nature.

In a new report published today in the journal , the researchers, including Professor Patrick Cai, a world leader in synthetic genomics and biosecurity, from The University of Manchester, explain that these mirrored organisms would differ fundamentally from all known life and could pose risks to ecosystems and human health if not carefully managed.

Driven by scientific curiosity, some researchers around the world are beginning to explore the possibility of creating mirror bacteria, and although the capability to engineer such life forms is likely decades away and would require major technological breakthroughs, the researchers are calling for a broad discussion among the global research community, policymakers, research funders, industry, civil society, and the public now to ensure a safe path forward.

Professor Cai said: 青瓜视频淲hile mirror bacteria are still a theoretical concept and something that we likely won青瓜视频檛 see for a few decades, we have an opportunity here to consider and pre-empt risks before they arise.

青瓜视频淭hese bacteria could potentially evade immune defences, resist natural predators, and disrupt ecosystems. By raising awareness now, we hope to guide research in a way that prioritises safety for people, animals, and the environment."

The analysis is conducted by 38 scientists from nine countries including leading experts in immunology, plant pathology, ecology, evolutionary biology, biosecurity, and planetary sciences. The publication in is accompanied by a detailed 300-page .

The analysis concluded that mirror bacteria could broadly evade many immune defences of humans, animals, and potentially plants.

It also suggests that mirror bacteria could evade natural predators like viruses and microbes, which typically control bacterial populations. If they were to spread, these bacteria could move between different ecosystems and put humans, animals, and plants at continuous risk of infection.

The scientists emphasise that while speculative, these possibilities merit careful consideration to ensure scientific progress aligns with public safety.

Professor Cai added: 青瓜视频淎t this stage, it青瓜视频檚 also important to clarify that some related technologies, such as mirror-image DNA and proteins, hold immense potential for advancing science and medicine. Similarly, synthetic cell research, which does not directly lead to mirror bacteria, is critical to advancing basic science. We do not recommend restricting any of these areas of research. I hope this is the starter of many discussions engaging broader communities and stakeholders soon. We look forward to hosting a forum here in Manchester in autumn 2025.青瓜视频

Going forward, the researchers plan to host a series of events to scrutinise their findings and encourage open discussion about the report. For now, they recommend halting any efforts toward the creation of mirror bacteria and urge funding bodies not to support such work. They also propose examining the governance of enabling technologies to ensure they are managed responsibly.

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