The Scotsman

Uniting to fight disease in pigs

- By BRIAN HENDERSON

Researcher­s and commercial partners have signed an agreement to continue their collaborat­ion on developing pigs resistant to Porcine Reproducti­ve and Respirator­y Syndrome, a disease that costs the industry in excess of $2.5 billion in Europe and the US alone.

Th eros lin institute which famously produced Dolly, the world’s first cloned sheep, and animal genetics company Genus hope the licensing agreement will lead the way to gene-edited, disease-resistant animals being available to pig farmers across the globe.

The agreement, facilitate­d by Edinburgh innovation­s, the university’ s commercial­isation service, Genus, will test multiple generation­s of pigs and press ahead with the studies to gain approval by the US Food and Drug Administra­tion.

PR R Sc a uses breathing problems and death sin young animals and can result in pregnant sows losing their litters. However,tests with the virus and the gene-edited pigs found that the animals did not become infected at all – and the researcher­s said that the animals showed no signs that the change in their DNA had any other impact on their health or well being.

“Animal health is a keystone of animal welfare as well as bringing benefits to food-producing economies and global food security,” said dr john lonsd ale, head of enterprise at Edinburgh Innovation­s.

“This highly specific edit to the animals to ensure disease resistance is a result of decades of work at Roslin and we’re delighted to be helping to improve animal welfare by bringing this technologi­cal breakthrou­gh to market through this partnershi­p with Genus.”

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