The Herald

Cutting-edge research will improve livestock

- JOHN MACKENZIE CEO, Roslin Innovation Centre

ALOT has changed at The Roslin Institute in the last 20 years. From the days of Dolly the sheep until now, a “Silicon Valley” of animal health is emerging on the University of Edinburgh’s Easter Bush Campus. The newly opened Roslin Innovation Centre is a business gateway to help accelerate the commercial­isation of research happening within and around Europe’s largest concentrat­ion of animal health scientists.

It is this rare combinatio­n of animal health discovery research adjacent to commercial innovation that is providing the campus with the infrastruc­ture to allow the crossferti­lisation of ideas and scientific breakthrou­gh here in Scotland. Traditiona­lly, the Roslin Institute has its roots in scientific discovery but by working together with commercial partners it is making scientific research and discovery commercial­ly viable.

The research taking place at Roslin is focused on enhancing and improving animal production, health and welfare. Scientists are finding solutions to enhance the sustainabi­lity of livestock farming in rural communitie­s and increase the productivi­ty of agricultur­e.

This doesn’t just make life easier for the farmers but improves the welfare of the animals. By reducing sickness, understand­ing animal behaviour and understand­ing what makes them happy, scientists can markedly improve animal welfare and help to enrich the environmen­t.

Roslin is one of only a handful of sites in the world with the capacity for genome editing in livestock and for running animal trials. Not to be confused with genetic modificati­on, genome editing doesn’t introduce any foreign DNA into the animal.

The institute recently announced it had made pigs that appear to be completely immune to Porcine Reproducti­ve and Respirator­y

Research at Roslin is focused on enhancing and improving animal production, health and welfare

Syndrome Virus (PRRSV), one of the major infectious diseases of the pig industry. This work on genome editing helps reduce infectious diseases among pigs, thereby improving their welfare, and results in less wastage for farmers and enables more pigs to go to market, which is an economic and environmen­tal benefit.

Another by-product of all this research is data. Scientists can analyse every aspect of the animalenvi­ronment interactio­n through the aid of microchips that constantly send data from the animals back to the lab using the “Internet of Things” devices. This data is giving scientists more informatio­n than ever before on the health, growth and behaviours of farm animals.

To implement the use of routine monitoring data more widely, the University of Edinburgh is leading a programme on Data Driven Innovation as part of Edinburgh’s City Region Deal. This is a merging of data science and scientific research using high-speed analytics, giving scientists the ability to capture flows of data and understand what it is telling them. Big data projects like this are going to dominate all aspects of scientific research in the next decade.

The research and animal trials taking place at Roslin are enabling scientists to produce livestock animals with greater resilience to devastatin­g diseases.

All this scientific research will not happen overnight, more has to be done and there are scientific breakthrou­ghs still to be made. Yet, with this perfect mix of academia and industry, the campus is an internatio­nal asset in animal health and veterinary science, ensuring the world’s growing world population has access to safe food and healthy animals.

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