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York Biotech Campus welcomes university research project on mosquito disease control

Research institutions united as academics welcome opportunity to use specialist facilities

York Biotech Campus is welcoming University of York to the site this month as mosquito-borne disease research begins. (Image: Aberfield / Getty)

York Biotech Campus has welcomed the city’s university to the leading hub for regional bioscience development.

Space has been taken on the site to conduct research that aims to control mosquito-borne disease. The University of York will occupy 2,750 sq ft of space for the research project, which includes two controlled-environment rooms and ancillary space.

Vector-borne disease – diseases that are transmitted by insects such as mosquitos and ticks – represent 17 per cent of all infectious diseases worldwide, and very few have effective vaccines. To provide new methods for controlling mosquito-borne diseases, academics will be conducting research into reducing the size of the mosquito population that transmits them, and also ways to make mosquitoes less able to transmit disease.

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It signifies a major collaboration between the two leading research institutions, with the campus working closely with the university to modify the laboratories to the requirements necessary for the studies to take place.

Luke Alphey, professor of genetics at University of York, will be leading the project and moved onto site this month. There will be between 15 to 20 people working on the project, based either at York Biotech Campus or the university.

There are plans to recruit a further 12 people over the next six months, with roles available for everyone from new graduates to senior post-docs with a focus on insects, molecular biology and cell culture.

Prof Alphey said: “The research we will deliver is vital for reducing the risk of infection from mosquitos, and we’re so pleased to be based at the campus to facilitate this. The university has limited space for our type of research, so to complete the work we needed to look beyond it, and York Biotech Campus was able to provide us with the specialist facilities we required.