Thursday 16 August

UK Biological Resource Centre Network

 

Culture Collections holds four of the biological resource centres (BRCs) that make up the UK Biological Resource Centre Network (UKBRCN). The network meets annually and this year’s meeting was held at the National Collection of Industrial, Food and Marine Bacteria (NCIMB) in Aberdeen, Scotland.

The group aims to support biological resource centres, including culture collections and their users, on topics such as the Nagoya Protocol and funding. It also aims to foster active collaborative links within the biological resource community.

Key objectives

  • Co-ordinate engagement with users and common stakeholders (editorial boards, grant funding authorities, UK government)
  • Share best practice regarding quality and compliance, ensuring that users of living genetic resources and collection are within the law (Nagoya Protocol)
  • Provide expert responses and solutions to the problems faced by those working with and harnessing biological resource
  • Raise awareness of the value of culture collections to the scientific community by providing information and training
  • Co-ordinate grant applications in key areas of research to enhance scientific procedures and services of the UK’s biological resource centres

The UK has a thriving medical and life sciences research and development community and BRCs play an important role in providing researchers with a wide range of authentic biological cultures for their research. Over a hundred thousand strains of microbial cultures and human and animal cell lines are available from the partner collections for research and development in fields such as food and brewing, biological controls, medical research and manufacture, and for testing a wide of a range of products including drugs, vaccines, biotherapeutics, antibiotics, neutraceuticals and paints.

Biodiversity of UKBRCN holdings (after Adl et al. 2012)

 

To keep up to date with its development, and for news and developments from the individual partner collections, follow the UKBRCN on Twitter @uk_brcn.