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Top UK laboratories adjust as Wellcome Trust cuts core funding

World-leading research institutes are switching focus and seeking new funds as core funding for Wellcome centres dries up

Published on
January 15, 2024
Last updated
January 15, 2024
Volunteers help with the demolition of the 'Monumental Construction' - a 45ft (14 metre) cardboard building created by French visual artist Olivier Grossetete to illustrate Top UK laboratories adjust as Wellcome Trust cuts core funding
Source: Alamy

Some of the UK鈥檚 most prestigious life science laboratories are having to聽review their research strategies to聽adjust to聽reduced funding as聽the Wellcome Trust winds down its long-established system of聽institutional funding.

Under a聽revamp of the biomedical research charity鈥檚 funding, the Wellcome Trust is聽ending its ongoing support for its research centres with funding directed towards new 鈥渄iscovery research platforms鈥, of聽which eight were .

The changes are likely to affect the , which received about 拢25聽million a聽year in core funding. Many of the centres are now having to cope without this funding stream after their core grants ran out at the end of 2023, with senior scientists anxiously seeking replacement funds from other sources, 探花视频 has been told.

One of those affected is the Gurdon Institute, a research laboratory at the University of Cambridge that focuses on cancer and developmental biology. It was founded in 1989 and renamed in 2004 after Sir John Gurdon, the biologist who would go on to win the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2012, whose research group is based there.

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It is believed that about 拢2聽million of the Gurdon鈥檚 annual budget 鈥 which was 拢15.6 million in the 鈥 came from Wellcome鈥檚 core support funding, with the lab鈥檚 income also heavily dependent on competitively won grants from the charity.

Ben Simons, the centre鈥檚 director, said that the Gurdon Institute had been 鈥済enerously supported by Wellcome as one of its UK centres鈥, and that the charity had, over the past 30 years, helped to 鈥渆nable a visionary programme in developmental and disease biology鈥.

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鈥淔ollowing the decision of Wellcome to move away from a centre funding model, the institute has taken the opportunity to refresh its research strategy while retaining the collaborative ethos that has nurtured innovation, discovery and translation, and attracted the brightest talent from across the globe,鈥 said Professor Simons.

He added that 鈥渨ith the enthusiastic support and investment of the university, the Gurdon Institute will evolve its research emphasis towards human developmental and disease biology, capitalising on new advances in the field, and leveraging existing strengths across the biological and biomedical campus as well as its affiliated institutions鈥.

Other Wellcome centres, which received , include the Wellcome Trust Centre for Mitochondrial Research at Newcastle University, the Wellcome Centre for Anti-Infectives Research at the University of Dundee and the Wellcome Centre for Integrative Parasitology at the University of Glasgow, with institutes also based at the University of Exeter, King鈥檚 College London, UCL and the University of Oxford. Some of these centres鈥 core funding is believed to expire in the next 12 to 18聽months, with talks under way to extend funding with the charity.

A Wellcome spokesperson told THE that the charity was 鈥渋mmensely proud to have supported 15 Wellcome centres, including the Wellcome/CRUK Gurdon Institute, which have produced remarkable and world-leading research鈥.

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鈥淭hese awards were due to come to an end this year. Our grants are provided over agreed time frames, and we work very closely with researchers when awards approach their end,鈥 the spokesperson said.

The charity, which , added that 鈥渋n聽line with our current strategy, Wellcome is funding more targeted opportunities that will unlock new possibilities for researchers and have the most impact for the wider, global community鈥.

jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com

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