The New Zealand Herald

$7m ‘NZ’s biggest private donation’

Pledge towards new biomedical centre in Wellington will help fund crucial new technology, director says

- Emma Russell

Work finding ground-breaking treatments and informatio­n about diseases such as cancer and asthma will be made easier thanks to a $7.1 million pledge towards building a world-class biomedical research hub in Wellington.

That’s the promise made by the director of the Malaghan Institute, Professor Graham Le Gros, who was “over the moon” with the generosity of the Hugh Green Foundation.

“I think it’s the biggest private donation to a charity in New Zealand ever,” Le Gros told the Herald.

Over a five-year period, funds will go towards building an institute with technology, manufactur­ed in the US, to better investigat­e the inner workings of the cells and tissues of our body in health and disease settings.

Le Gros said the hub would underpin the Malaghan Institute’s immunology research across cancer, asthma and allergy, gut health, brain health and infectious diseases.

“With the rate new findings are evolving, in order to develop research further new technology is crucial.”

He said it would put New Zealand on the global map for immunology research, allowing the institute to partner with world leaders.

The centre — to be named The Hugh Green Cytometry Centre — will also support a range of New Zealand science organisati­ons including in biochemist­ry, molecular biology, chemistry, neuroscien­ce and marine biology, Le Gros said.

The Hugh Green Foundation, a charitable trust, has supported the Malaghan Institute for more than eight years.

The foundation has been focused on helping build the institute’s capability in flow cytometry — a technique used to give vital informatio­n about cells for health research and diagnostic­s.

Recognisin­g the quality of men’s sperm is one area the Malaghan Institute has been honing in on.

For fertility specialist­s like the medical director of Fertility Associates Wellington, Andrew Murray, this research has been instrument­al. “If you think of sperm like a courier driver, we know how many packages are getting delivered but the quality of the cargo has been unclear for a while.”

He said through the Malaghan Institute’s research, measuring the amount of DNA damage to men’s sperm had been a lot easier.

“This is helpful because it clearly outlines the extent of the difficulty for their partner to get pregnant. From there we are able to help men make lifestyle changes to better their chances.”

 ?? Photo / Mark Mitchell ?? The Malaghan Institute of Medical Research’s director, Graham Le Gros.
Photo / Mark Mitchell The Malaghan Institute of Medical Research’s director, Graham Le Gros.

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