20 de Janeiro de 2025

 
 

EARA News Digest 2025 - Week 4


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

This week: German researchers quoted on need for animal research#BOARD25 dateBlood vessel discovery in miceTreating burns with fish skin

100+ German researchers state the need for animal research

Researchers across Germany have explained why animal research cannot yet be avoided, in more than 100 quotes collected by the advocacy body Tierversuche verstehen (TVV).

The statements – provided by scientists, animal care staff and heads of department at German research institutes – present a range of views from different research areas, all with a key message: that it is vital to support the replacement, reduction and refinement of animals in biomedical research (the 3Rs), but that animal research will still be needed as well.

Among those quoted, Dr Andreas Lengeling, of the Max Planck Society, and an EARA Board member, said: “Unfortunately, we cannot yet completely replace animal testing in research. However, it can also benefit animal welfare. We need it for the development of new treatments in veterinary medicine and for the training of veterinarians.”

Prof Olivia Massek, at the University of Bremen, said: “To paraphrase Feynman, ‘What I cannot create, I do not understand’: Complex processes such as cognition are not yet fully understood. Animal models are needed to test hypotheses and decipher mechanisms that are not yet accessible in the human system.”

And speaking on the care of the animals, Dr Katja Siegeler, of EARA member RWTH Aachen, said: “Living and conveying a culture of care, with a focus on the appreciation of people and animals, is the central element of my work as an animal welfare officer.”

 

 

#BOARD25 – save the date

The fifth edition of Be Open about Animal Research Day (#BOARD25), the annual EARA social media campaign, will take place this year on Tuesday 3 June during the FELASA 2025 Congress in Athens, Greece. 

We encourage EARA members and non-members from institutions and individuals that are involved in animal research across the world to take part in #BOARD25, and join the 1,000+ institutions that participate each year in showcasing the diverse and inspiring ways that they communicate animal research with the public. 

More details about the campaign, including registration, will be announced soon. Find out what happened for last year's #BOARD24

 

 

Blood vessel discovery in mice for bone health

Researchers have identified the importance of specialised blood vessels, in the bones of mice, that could provide a new understanding of bone deterioration during ageing.

To maintain strength and repair injuries, bones are constantly ‘remodeling’, during a lifetime, through specialised cells that remove mature bone tissue (osteoclasts) and replace it with new tissue (osteoblasts) – a process that is aided by specialised blood vessels, specifically, capillaries.

The research – led by EARA member the Max Planck Institute (MPI) for Molecular Biomedicine, Germany, and also involving EARA members the Karolinska Institute and Uppsala University, both Sweden, and Stanford University, California, USA – used non-invasive techniques to analyse the tibia and femur bones in the legs of mice, and identified a previously unknown capillary, designated type R.

The study found that these capillaries play a vital role in bone remodelling during adulthood as well as when the body ages, by ‘communicating’ with the osteoclasts and osteoblasts.

In addition, the team saw that type R capillaries provide oxygen in low-oxygen environments, allowing bone tissue to survive and function properly.

When this does not happen, it can result in bone diseases such as osteoporosis, and so the finding may shed light on strategies for treatment, as well as for tackling bone deterioration during ageing.

 

 

Treating burns with waste fish skin

A common byproduct of the fishing industry, the skin of bangus fish, can be used as a cost-effective dressing for severe burns and other wounds, according to research from the Philippines.

The study, at Ateneo de Manila University, compared the skins of tilapia fish (pictured, top) and bangus fish (pictured, bottom), known as milkfish outside the Philippines, for their suitability as an artificial skin, that aims to protect exposed tissues and promote growth of new skin cells.

The team saw that sterilised bangus skin was able to completely stop bacterial and fungal growth, as well as maintain its collagen (important for wound healing and overall skin health), just as effectively as tilapia skin.

While tilapia skin has shown promise for treating burns, this is the first time that bangus fish skin has been tested for this purpose.

Bangus fish are commonly sold in the Philippines – with the skin often discarded – and therefore hold the potential to develop a wound dressing that is cheaper, more accessible and environmentally sustainable.

The researchers, Janice Ragaza and Bianca Patrice Go, said in their paper: “Given its abundance and potential collagen content, milkfish skin presents a valuable opportunity to expand the donor pool for fish skin grafting.”

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