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Case Testimony of the Participation of One Particular Laboratory to the European Research Programmes in Life Sciences (4th and 5th Frameworks) Prof. Dr. ir. Jean Swings
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1. Laboratory of Microbiology at Ghent University Research group BCCM/LMG Bacteria Collection 2. Projects in the 4th and 5th EU Research Framework Projects and research teams Life of a project Outputs and excitements Our Italian partners 3. Difficulties & Frustrations 4. How to proceed in the 6th Framework ? Overview
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Laboratory of Microbiology Ghent University http://lmg.rug.ac.be
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GHENT UNIVERSITY - FACULTY OF SCIENCES LABORATORY OF MICROBIOLOGY RESEARCH GROUPS TEACHING TEACHING UNIVERSITY STUDENTS IN BIOLOGY, BIOTECHNOLOGY, BIOCHEMISTRY RESEARCH RESEARCH on CLASSIFICATION, PHYLOGENY, IDENTIFICATION AND TYPING OF BACTERIA, related to ECOLOGY, BIODIVERSITY, BIOTECHNOLOGY Rhizosphere bacteria (N 2 -fixers), plant pathogenic bacteria Bacillus and allied groups Lactic acid bacteria (probiotics) Drinking water systems Antarctic mats, fresh waters, tropical soils Biodegradation of bioplastics, xenobiotics Horizontal gene transfer Bacteria from clinical, veterinary and industrial environments
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GHENT UNIVERSITY - FACULTY OF SCIENCES LABORATORY OF MICROBIOLOGY BCCM™/LMG BACTERIA COLLECTION PRESERVATIONDISTRIBUTION PRESERVATION and DISTRIBUTION of BACTERIAL CULTURES SERVICES RESEARCH Taxonomy, phylogeny, classification, identification and typing of bacteria from clinical, veterinary and industrial environments Data mining Standardization, automation / robotisation Quality control
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GHENT UNIVERSITY - FACULTY OF SCIENCES LABORATORY OF MICROBIOLOGY BACTERIA CULTURE COLLECTION The BCCM™/LMG BACTERIA CULTURE COLLECTION holds 20.000 named strains, representing 1.800 species : Plant pathogenic or plant associated bacteria Plant pathogenic or plant associated bacteria Bacteria of medical or veterinary importance Bacteria of medical or veterinary importance Bacteria of marine origin Bacteria of marine origin Various groups of potential biotechnological interest Various groups of potential biotechnological interest
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Projects in the 4th and 5th EU Research Frameworks 20 projects with partners from 25 countries
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“Micro-organisms are everywhere” Antibiotic resistance Probiotics Microflora of cheeses New bioactive compounds from Antarctic micro-organisms Aquaculture related microbiological problems Bioplastics and biodegradable composites Microbiological characterization of drinking water systems Biodeterioration of cultural heritage
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Setting up a EU project was the most exciting part of it, particularly as a coordinator The initial enthousiasm was very inspiring Project Life
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waiting for evaluation results project execution preparation final reports publications other output 5-6 years meetings
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Kick-off meetings : always euphoric, not to be underestimated Project meetings (+extra meetings) Reports Exchanges of scientists / technicians Scientific successes & failures Publications and presentations New ideas —> new contacts —> new proposals Project Life
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In total the Laboratory of Microbiology, RUG has secured : from EU Frameworks 4 and 5 programmes over 3’000’000 euro
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Publications (total LMG)
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Project publications >50 in peer reviewed international journals
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Succession of projects : an example on bioplastics ECLAIR Bacterial polyester plastics 1990-1993 AIR Biodegradability testing of bioplastics 1993-1997 FAIR Biocomposites 1998-2001 INCO Drinking water treatment using bioplastics 1997-2001
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The end of the project Final report Publications Human contacts often remain Other outputs: - collections of micro-organisms - databases (sequences, properties) - PhD theses
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Excitements Planning phase Approval Kick-off Exchange of materials Putting together the data (puzzle) Publishing together Meeting again at other occasions
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Other positive sides Involvement and training of PhD students & postdocs Personal contacts Interdisciplinarity as a professional enrichment Deepening of own expertise Requirement to collaborate and communicate My participation in the EU evaluation panel on projects, thematic networks & mobility was a very positive experience
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Our Italian Partners
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We greatly appreciate our Italian partners for : scientific excellence trustworthiness enthousiasm loyalty
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Difficulties Several difficulties arose during the execution of some projects, with the coordinator, with the other partners, others (industrial partners, EU), e.g. important cuts in the budget coordinator got ill, was replaced only after months coordinator was not coordinating participants doing less than promised late reports (and thus late reimbursement of costs)
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Frustrations 1. The unacceptable low success rate upon application: so many excellent proposals were turned down 2. Scientists need more flexibility to deal with the scientific problems that arose, but also with the coordination and management problems 3. Unsolved aspects, e.g. how to deal with : intellectual proprietary rights companies or SME’s the aftermath of a project
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Conclusions 1. EU projects were a EU success story 2. The participation in EU projects is seen as a proof of quality of the research group
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And now … to the heart of the matter: How to proceed in the 6th Framework ?
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