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Three-year UKRI-funded study aims to make laboratory research involving a species of frog more efficient, while using less of them

16 October 2025

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黑料入口 researchers have been awarded a 拢654,625 grant from to tackle a problem that could transform how medical research is conducted, while significantly reducing the number of laboratory animals needed.

The three-year study, led by scientists at the , will examine why African clawed frogs - essential contributors to medical breakthroughs for over 60 years - are experiencing declining productivity in research facilities. By solving this problem, scientists hope to dramatically reduce animal numbers used while accelerating life-saving research.

鈥淲e鈥檙e facing a challenge that affects research worldwide,鈥 said , who leads the project. 鈥淴enopus - known more commonly as the African clawed frog - have helped us understand human development, test new medicines, and make discoveries that have saved countless lives. But we鈥檙e seeing changes that mean researchers need more frogs to achieve the same results. We want to reverse that trend.鈥

African clawed frogs have contributed to major medical advances including the development of treatments for genetic diseases, cancer research, and understanding how organs develop. Their unique biology makes them invaluable for studying human conditions, but recent productivity declines across European laboratories mean research is taking longer and requiring more animals.

The research focuses on three key areas: understanding genetic diversity within laboratory populations, examining how diet and environment affect animal health, and improving housing conditions. The work directly supports the principle that guides all animal research - replacing animal use where possible, reducing numbers needed, and refining practices to improve welfare.

This isn鈥檛 just about research efficiency, it鈥檚 about doing better by the animals that contribute to medical advances. When we improve their health and wellbeing, we need fewer of them while getting better results. It鈥檚 a win-win approach that benefits both animal welfare and human health.鈥

Professor Joy Watts, Associate Dean for Research and Innovation in the Faculty of Science and Health

Professor Joy Watts, Associate Dean for Research and Innovation in the Faculty of Science and Health, emphasised the human impact: 鈥淭his isn鈥檛 just about research efficiency, it鈥檚 about doing better by the animals that contribute to medical advances. When we improve their health and wellbeing, we need fewer of them while getting better results. It鈥檚 a win-win approach that benefits both animal welfare and human health.鈥

Dr Annie Godwin, project co-lead, said: 鈥淲e're essentially asking how can we create the best possible living conditions for these animals? Healthy animals provide more reliable research results, which ultimately helps us help people faster.鈥

The University鈥檚 has already pioneered several welfare improvements and works with over 70 visiting researchers annually. The centre also supports separate research using a related species to help diagnose rare genetic conditions in children - work that has provided life-changing answers to families across the UK. This diagnostic work, which received 拢1.1 million in (MRC) funding earlier this year and , provides crucial answers to families who may otherwise have waited years for a diagnosis. 

The research team will use advanced genetic analysis and health monitoring to identify solutions that can be implemented in research facilities worldwide. Any improvements will be shared freely with the global scientific community.

The study will run for 36 months, with findings expected to improve research practices worldwide. It will be funded by UKRI's .

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