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Professor David Craik said plants could be like biofactories for producing next-generation pharmaceuticals.
Professor David Craik said plants could be like biofactories for producing next-generation pharmaceuticals.
14 October 2015

Taking medicine in the future could be as simple as eating a sunflower seed or drinking a cup of tea, thanks to an award to a University of Queensland researcher.

, from ¶¶Òõapp¹ÙÍø’s (IMB), will grow medicines in plants after receiving $1 million from the Clive and Vera Ramaciotti Foundations and trustee . He shares the award with collaborator Professor Marilyn Anderson from .

“Our work uses plants as ‘biofactories’ for producing next-generation pharmaceuticals,” Professor Craik said.

“We are thrilled to receive this award. This research has great potential to provide medicines inexpensively to patients in the developed and developing worlds.

“However, it’s seen as ‘blue-sky research’ and falls outside the type of research typically funded by government or industry. So we are particularly grateful to the Ramaciotti Foundations for their support.”

The plant-grown drugs will be based on molecules called cyclic peptides that plants produce naturally.

Professor Craik and Professor Anderson will use the funding to establish the Clive and Vera Ramaciotti Facility for Producing Pharmaceuticals in Plants, which will be based at IMB with a node at .

Perpetual’s National Manager of Philanthropy, Caitriona Fay, said the Ramaciotti Biomedical Research Award and other awards distributed by the Ramaciotti Foundations were very significant.

“The Ramaciotti Foundations are collectively one of the largest private contributors to biomedical research in Australia and have provided essential support to some of our most remarkable scientists since 1970,” she said.

“We are very proud to be the trustee of the Foundations, which showcase the impact philanthropy can have on innovation, which is so important to Australia’s economic future.”

Media: Bronwyn Adams, IMB Communications,  communications@imb.uq.edu.au, +61 (0) 418 575 247, +61 (07) 3346 2134.