Skip to main content Skip to navigation

Joint Warwick and Canadian research into ‘superbugs’

Warwick researchers are working with Canadian scientists on a £2.2 million project to search for new antibiotics which will beat resistance in deadly “superbugs”.

Warwick is part of a transatlantic team funded by the Canada/UK Partnership on Antibiotic Resistance - a collaboration between the UK’s Medical Research Council (MRC) and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR).

The four-year project will support high-quality research into alternatives to existing antibiotics whose effectiveness is being challenged by increasing resistance in bacteria such as E. coli and MRSA.

Professor Chris Dowson, School of Life Sciences, who is leading the project at Warwick, said: “Growing antibiotic resistance to the current generation of antibiotics is of huge concern worldwide. Antibiotics underpin many aspects of healthcare - from cancer treatment through to surgery – but the pace of antibiotic resistance in some bacteria is speeding up. Coupled with that, there is a worrying lack of new antibiotic drugs coming through the pipeline from private drug companies. That’s why public funding for projects like this is so vital.

“Governments need to take responsibility for funding early-stage drug discovery as we face an increasing vacuum of antibiotic research within the pharmaceutical industry.”

Warwick has developed the programme and is leading a UK team including the universities of Birmingham, Sheffield and Newcastle, working alongside the universities of Guelph, McMaster, Laval and British Columbia in Canada, which will focus on increasing understanding of bacterial cell wall growth in a bid to find new targets for new antibiotics.

Dr David Roper from the School of Life Sciences and co-director of the project in the UK said: “Researchers on both sides of the Atlantic will be working in teams together exploring and exploiting aspects of the way in which bacteria synthesise their cell walls as they grow. Many current antibiotics, including penicillin, target this process and we think there are many new aspects to exploit, if we understood the process better.

“Our coordinated research efforts will be to further define the biological elements of how bacteria build their cell walls and discover new chemicals that interfere with that process.

“Research teams in Canada and the UK have unique facilities and expertise to do this and for the first time funding from MRC and CIHR is being used to combine those assets.”

Research at Warwick can take advantage of equipment provided through funding from Advantage West Midlands’ Birmingham Science City, which will also contribute to this programme.