Sheffield gene therapy centre to create 35 jobs
Published on 14/02/2022
The Gene Therapy Innovation & Manufacturing Centre (GTIMC) has received £1.5m grant funding from the South Yorkshire Renewal Fund towards its facilities being built at a total cost of £14.2m. The GTIMC is expected to create 35 high value jobs.
The University of Sheffield’s Gene Therapy Innovation & Manufacturing Centre (GTIMC) is set to advance scientific discoveries into treatment options for millions of patients with life-threatening diseases that have no known medical cure.
The Gene Therapy Innovation & Manufacturing Centre will aim to develop four clinical therapies to be used in clinical trials and which will be taken forward into standard clinical care within the NHS. It is also expected to contribute an additional £28m of GVA to the region by 2027.
Professor Koen Lamberts, president and vice-chancellor of the University of Sheffield, said: “At the University of Sheffield we focus our research on finding real-world solutions to some of the biggest global challenges.
“The Gene Therapy Innovation and Manufacturing Centre will unlock development pathways for new treatments for people affected by devastating genetic disorders, many of which have no cure.”
“We are delighted that our University is at the forefront of research in this pioneering field of medicine and that this new centre will build on our reputation as an international centre of excellence for gene therapeutics.”
Alongside receiving funding from South Yorkshire Regeneration Fund, the Gene Therapy Innovation & Manufacturing Centre is also receiving LifeArc funding of £6.4m, £3.1m from the University of Sheffield and a £3m donation from The Law Family Charitable Foundation, established by Andrew Law and his wife Zoë.
The GTIMC is planned for a site on the University of Sheffield’s Innovation District close to existing translational research facilities and will contribute to an ongoing programme of regional investment and regeneration.
The centre will include a cutting-edge GMP (good manufacturing practice) facility that will support gene therapy projects emerging from universities across the UK.
The three national hubs, located at the University of Sheffield, Kings College London, and NHS Blood and Transplant in Bristol will operate as a coordinated network, sharing technical skills and resources to enable innovative gene therapy research.