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Training Network for the Development of Bacterial ExoPolysaccharides for the treatment of Inflammatory Conditions (TEAM-EPIC)
Date du début: 1 déc. 2011, Date de fin: 30 nov. 2015 PROJET  TERMINÉ 

"The essence of this proposal is to establish a collaborative training network which will develop novel immune-regulatory molecules from Bifidobacterium infantis 35624, for treatment of inflammatory diseases. A multidisciplinary team of four prestigious European partners has been assembled (SME & Coordinator - Alimentary Health Ltd (expert in developing probiotic products); Swiss Institute for Asthma and Allergy Research, (expert in immune-regulation); Vienna Institute of Biotechnology at Universität für Bodenkultur (expert in glycobiology); and University College Cork, Alimentary Pharmabiotics Centre and Department of Microbiology (expert in bioinformatics and glycobiology assembly in probiotic bacteria). Each partner will provide unique critical expertise, through knowledge, personnel and facilities which will be complementary and additive and will provide the synergistic expertise required to successfully deliver on the goal of this project and forge a long-lasting relationship. The end result: a unique opportunity for cross-sector state-of-the-art knowledge transfer and dissemination, through the identification of molecules from B. infantis 35624 with proven efficacy in the treatment of IBS and other inflammatory conditions – expected to have major commercialization, economic and health implications.B. infantis 35624 is a commensal micro-organism, originally isolated from human gastrointestinal tissue, which has demonstrated unique properties in human clinical studies. B. infantis 35624 consumption is associated with significant improvement in the composite score for abdominal pain/discomfort, bloating/distention, and/or bowel movement difficulty compared with placebo in two appropriately designed studies. No other bacterial strain has shown significant improvement in Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) symptoms. The exact mechanisms underpinning the clinical benefit are not known but modulation of the host immune response is strongly believed to play a role."

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