Infrastructure award for integrated approach to bioscience researchDecember 07, 1999A key feature of the new infrastructure will be a centralised Technology Facility. This will provide a world class technology base to serve both the Biology Department and the Structural Biology Laboratory of the University's Department of Chemistry, and to foster synergistic and multidisciplinary approaches to research and training. Crucially, this Facility will link basic and more strategic research projects, and enable scientific and technological advances to progress hand in hand. Advances in many areas of bioscience research, notably in the rapidly expanding fields of genomics and structural biology, increasingly rely upon access to state-of-the-art technologies, for example, in gene arrays, bioinformatics, protein chemistry, single molecule detection, multi-photon microscopy, and mass and optical spectroscopies. The creation of the Technology Facility recognises that many of these technological developments, arising in part from the genomics revolution that makes modern biology 'Big Science', require major equipment, the effective use of which depends on highly skilled staff dedicated to its operation. A particular feature of bioscience research at York is an integrated approach to the study of processes in living organisms. As a result, the new Facility will contribute to research that ranges in scale from protein analysis at the atomic level to biodiversity and ecology. It will also contribute to research that has potential applications ranging from the development of novel chemo- and gene-therapy approaches for cancer treatment to the development of plants as biofactories to produce raw materials for industry. In this context, a major new interdisciplinary Centre for Novel Agricultural Products has been launched to build on York's recognised excellence in plant sciences. The Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) currently invests around £12M at the University of York, and welcomes this new JIF award. It has recently awarded a £5M grant for a genomics programme on Arabidopsis as part of its Investigating Gene Function initiative, that will be co-ordinated from the Biology Department at the University. Contact: Dr Monica Winstanley BBSRC Office Tel: 01793 413204 E-mail: mailto:monica.winstanley@bbsrc.ac.uk"> monica.winstanley@bbsrc.ac.uk Professor Dianna Bowles Biology Department, University of York Tel: 01904 434334 E-mail: mailto:djb32@york.ac.uk">djb32@york.ac.uk Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) |
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