December 30th 2024

EARA News Digest 2025 - Week 1


Welcome to your Monday morning update, from EARA, on the latest news in biomedical science, policy and openness on animal research. 

This week: First natural mouse strain to study Covid-19Top EARA News Digest stories 2024EARA video highlights 2024NTS training workshop - open for bookings

Lab mouse strain 'poised to transform' Covid-19 research

US researchers are hopeful that research on Covid-19 can be greatly improved, using an existing strain of lab mouse that is highly susceptible to the disease.

Laboratory mice used in Covid-19 studies must often be genetically modified so that they better reflect what happens in human infection.

However, in a significant development, a mouse strain called CAST/Eij, derived from wild mice, which are already bred at EARA member, The Jackson Laboratory (JAX), have been identified that are genetically ‘clean’, making them as close to the natural mouse genome as possible.

This makes them suitable for studying Covid-19 in a way that is more relevant to the human condition, as the mice have more genetic diversity that better reflects real life.

Researchers at JAX, in Bar Harbor, Maine, and the Trudeau Institute, in Saranac Lake, New York, found that CAST mice developed severe (or acute) Covid-19 after infection - such as more severe lung damage - compared to the other strains that only had mild symptoms.

It is hoped that this strain will now be an important tool in developing Covid-19 vaccines as new coronavirus variants emerge.

Nadia Rosenthal, at JAX, said: “CAST mice stand poised to transform Covid-19 research and prepare us for future challenges. Equally important, the work reinforces the critical role of genetic diversity in science.”

 

 

EARA News Digest – the top stories of 2024

Here is a selection of the most-read research stories in the EARA News Digest this year:
  • In April, a study at NERF (a centre at EARA members VIB and KU Leuven, Belgium), uncovered, usnig mice, how the spinal cord can learn and memorise responses to possible threats, without needing the brain. This offers new insights into how to treat spinal cord injuries in future.
  • Back in June, researchers led by EARA members the Max Delbrück Center and Charité Berlin, Germany, used gene editing to correct an exaggerated immune response that is a key feature of the rare childhood disease FHL (Familial hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis).
  • At Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands, researchers developed an ‘organ-on-chip’ model, based on human blood vessels, to improve the study of the effect of snake venom on the body, hopefully leading to less reliance on the use of animals which have been used to study the effects of snakebites.
  • Later in the year, research from EARA member Uppsala University, Sweden, revealed a ‘three-in-one’ antibody treatment that successfully treated mice with cancer. The treatment could precisely target and deliver drugs to cancer cells, but also simultaneously activate the immune system.
  • Reports on the EARA Patient Discovery initiative from around Europe were also well received. In July, people with Parkinson’s learnt more about biomedical research on the condition, involving the use of monkeys, at an event at EARA member the Biomedical Primate Research Centre (BPRC), Netherlands (pictured). The initiative aims to bring better engagement between patients and researchers and the visitors were given a guided tour, presentations and practical demonstrations. One person said: “I came in with some reservations, but all respect for how they do it here!" Similar events were also held at EARA members NOVA Medical School, Lisbon, Portugal, and in Basel, Switzerland, at Novartis.

 

 

Animal research openness  – EARA video highlights 2024

Once again researchers have taken the opportunity this year to speak openly about their use of animals in research through our #TransparencyThursday Q&A (see all episodes on our YouTube channel).

Among the researchers featured was Esperanza Domingo Gil (pictured), at the University of Bremen, Germany, who explained why she uses monkeys to understand the process of attention in the brain.

Explaining the importance of this type of research, she said: “My hope is that basic research such as this can unravel these very exciting mysteries of the brain, so that in the future, other researchers can build upon our findings to help heal the brain when disease or age take over.”

Another Q&A episode featured malaria researcher Miguel Prudêncio, at EARA member the Gulbenkian Institute for Molecular Medicine (GIMM), Portugal. Miguel - who featured prominently in the Portuguese media during the Covid-19 pandemic - also shared his top tips for communicating science with the public.

And as part of the EARA annual Be Open about Animal Research Day (#BOARD24), which took place in May, several EARA member institutions contributed Q&A videos, including a group of researchers from the Spanish National Centre for Biotechnology (CNB); Georgios Petrellis, from the University of Liège, Belgium; Magdalena Lorenowicz from the Biomedical Primate Research Centre (BPRC), Netherlands; and Susana Santos at ICVS, Portugal. While from around the world there the Philippine Association for Labaratory Animal Science (PALAS) supported our campaign.

Meanwhile, at the start of the year, Svilen Georgiev, at the University Medical Center Göttingen, Germany, featured in an episode of the EARA #LetsTalkSciComm series, where he discussed his podcast, Neuroscience and Beyond – a public platform for researchers to discuss their work in neuroscience, animal welfare, ethics and other relevant topics.

In 2024, EARA also introduced a new format of monthly news round-up videos, to allow viewers to catch up with the most popular stories in animal research news, media and policy from the EARA News Digest.

Please get in touch with us if you would like to take part in any of our video series in 2025.

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