Joining efforts in research on antibiotic resistance

Research on antibiotic resistance will broaden significantly when the Center forAntibiotic Resistance Research (CARe) in Gothenburg expands. Bacterial resistance toantibiotics is one of the most serious global health threats.

Photo collage of Joakim Larsson, University of Gothenburg, Michaela Wenzel, Chalmers, Ann-Marie Wennberg, Sahlgrenska University Hospital and Kristina Jonäng, Region Västra Götaland. Photo: GU, Chalmers, SU, VGR.
Joakim Larsson, University of Gothenburg, Michaela Wenzel, Chalmers, Ann-Marie Wennberg, Sahlgrenska University Hospital and Kristina Jonäng, Region Västra Götaland. Photo: GU, Chalmers, SU, VGR.

Over a million people die annually as a direct result of infections caused by resistant bacteria. Lack of effective antibiotics jeopardizes much of modern health care. Attempts to keep pace with resistance development by inventing new types of antibiotics have, at the same time, largely failed for several decades in a row.


To address this complex challenge, CARe at the University of Gothenburg has been conducting research since 2016. From January 1, 2023, the Center will have a broader base of partners and funders, also including Chalmers University of Technology, Sahlgrenska University Hospital and Region Västra Götaland.


Stronger and more extensive

With this new start, CARe will comprise nearly 150 researchers from more than 20 departments across the academic partners. Professor Joakim Larsson of the Department of Infectious Diseases, Universit of Gothenburg, is the Center’s Director.

“CARe members include, for example, doctors, microbiologists, molecular biologists, chemists, technologists, engineers, environmental scientists, mathematicians, economists, political scientists, architects, and philosophers. In various ways, they all contribute their specific expertise. Extending the
collaboration further across more disciplinary boundaries will transform the Center’s ability to make animpact”, he says.

At Chalmers, some ten active research groups will be active in CARe after the expansion. Dr. MichaelaWenzel, who leads a research group in chemical biology, will be the Center’s Deputy Director.

“Developing new technologies and innovations to meet society’s acute needs is soundly established in Chalmers' vision. Current innovative methods of tackling antibiotic resistance make use of groundbreaking nanoscience, materials science, artificial intelligence, and molecular biotechnology, for instance. We, the researchers at Chalmers, are glad to be able to use our expertise and technology platforms to help build an even stronger center,” she says.

In an international comparison, Sweden’s has a favourable antibiotic resistance situation. This is not acoincidence. Long-term, active work ensuring rational use of antibiotics and proper hospital hygienehave made a crucial difference. At the same time, we are affected by the resistance development in therest of the world.


Patient benefits and innovation

Ann-Marie Wennberg is the Director of the Sahlgrenska University Hospital and professor at the University of Gothenburg.

“Close collaboration between health care and academia means that research results can yield tangible benefits for patients more rapidly. That’s one reason why Sahlgrenska University Hospital thinks this collaboration is so important. Along with our partners, our ambition is to tackle one of the biggest global health challenges: antibiotic resistance,” she says.

Region Västra Götaland is involved through the Regional Development Board, which co-funds initiatives to boost innovativeness, and to promote growth and sustainable development, in Västra Götaland. Kristina Jonäng is Chair of the Board.

“We hope the investment will boost Region Västra Götaland’s attractiveness and benefit innovation and entrepreneurship in infectious diseases and antibiotic resistance. With CARe, West Sweden's position is strengthened in terms of sustainably meeting a global health and social challenge,” she says.

The new Center, funded jointly by the four parties, is based at the University of Gothenburg. OnThursday, Vice-Chancellor Eva Wiberg made the formal decision to allow a new operational period (2023–2028) for the expanded centre.


Contact

Joakim Larsson, University of Gothenburg, Director of CARe
Phone 0709 62 10 68, email: joakim.larsson@fysiologi.gu.se

Michaela Wenzel, Chalmers, Deputy Director CARe
Phone 031 772 20 74, e-mail: wenzelm@chalmers.se

Or visit CARe: www.gu.se/en/care

Michaela Wenzel
  • Associate Professor, Chemical Biology, Life Sciences