Wellcome Centre for Anti-Infectives Research (WCAIR)

Our centre brings together the Drug Discovery Unit, the Mode of Action group and the Parasitology research groups providing an integrated pathway from discovery science to pre-clinical candidate selection.

scientist in lab holding a syringe

The vision for the Wellcome Centre for Anti-Infectives Research (WCAIR) is to help tackle the urgent unmet medical need and lack of drug discovery research for neglected tropical diseases (NTDs). This will be achieved by creating a world-leading hub for NTD drug discovery and being the collaborator of choice for academics, pharma and product development partnerships (PDPs) in the translation of discovery science into drug candidates.

WCAIR consolidates the existing world-leading NTD drug discovery expertise within the Division of Biological Chemistry and Drug Discovery bringing together the Drug Discovery Unit, the Mode of Action group and the Parasitology research groups providing an integrated pathway from discovery science to pre-clinical candidate selection.

WCAIR themes

Drug Discovery

WCAIR will deliver high-quality pre-clinical drug candidates for NTDs with an initial focus on visceral leishmaniasis (VL) and Chagas’ disease (CD). To deliver solutions to the unmet medical and patient need research will address current key hindrances to timely drug development for NTDs creating new paradigms for NTD drug discovery. These include:

  • Innovate drug discovery approaches for VL and CD, including developing in silico and animal models that have improved prediction of Pharmacokinetic/Pharmacodynamic relationships and clinical efficacy.
  • Increased exploitation of novel drug targets, through structure-based drug discovery.
  • Develop tool compounds with known pharmacology to enable further understanding of parasite biology.
  • Improve the efficiency of drug discovery by establishing groups to facilitate compound scale up, compound purification and formatting.

Training

Develop and deliver a comprehensive training programme in drug discovery with an emphasis on capacity building in disease endemic countries.  A key component will be providing trainees with the opportunity to learn through working alongside researchers at WCAIR. If you would like to know more about the training programme please contact Susan Farrell.

Public engagement

Activities will be aimed at enhancing public awareness of the impact and need for new medicines for NTDs and developing the public’s understanding of the drug discovery process and why it is important. One aspect of WCAIR's PE activities will be working with Dr Sarah Cook and the LifeSpace Science Art Research Gallery based in the School of Life Sciences. WCAIR will commission artists to work with our researchers to develop new pieces of art which help the public engage with our research. For further information and opportunities to partner with WCAIR  on PE activities please contact Ali Floyd.

Partnerships

WCAIR has many existing global collaborators, including:

  • GSK’s kinetoplastid Discovery Performance Unit (DPU) (Tres Cantos, Spain; drug discovery),
  • John Kelly and Simon Croft (London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine; animal disease models
  • Louis Maes (University of Antwerp; animal disease models),
  • Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi, Geneva; general drug discovery and clinical development)
  • Medicines for Malaria Venture (clinical development of a potent oral anti-malarial candidate drug)

Watch Dr Charles Mowbray, Discovery Director at DNDi explain why DNDi have partnered with the Drug Discovery Unit and GSK to discover new pre-clinical drug candidates targeting two parasitic neglected tropical diseases, leishmaniasis and Chagas disease. 

The Centre is interested in forging new collaborations with partners which can help us contribute to our vision. If you would like to explore opportunities for working with WCAIR then please contact the Centre Manager, Catharine Goddard.

Director

Deputy Director

Academic staff

person

Regius Professor of Life Sciences and Interim Dean

Professor Sir Michael is an expert on the biochemistry of protozoan parasites, the molecular details of infection in general and on drug discovery for infectious and non-infectious diseases. He serves on the boards of the Medicines for Malaria Venture and UK Biobank and previously of the Wellcome Trust.

[email protected]

+44 (0)1382 384219

Mike Ferguson
View Professor Sir Michael Ferguson

person

Principal Investigator/Senior Lecturer, Head of Pathogen Biology, Deputy Head of Drug Discovery Unit and Division of Biological Chemistry and Drug Discovery

Drug discovery for infectious diseases, development of cell-based screening cascades and understanding of persisters in infectious diseases

[email protected]

+44 (0)1382 386211

Portrait photo of Manu de Rycker
View Dr Manu De Rycker

Key contacts

Name Role Email
Professor David Gray Public Engagement Champion [email protected]
Dr Catharine Goddard Centre Manager [email protected]
Suze Farrell Training Manager [email protected]
Dr Charlotte Green Business Development Manager [email protected]

Other key contacts

Administrator

 

Stories

News

School of Life Sciences Professor Susan Wyllie and colleagues have been recognized by Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative (DNDi) as part of the team awarded DNDi 2024 Project of the Year in pre-clinical research

Published on 6 November 2024