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On Edge of Desert, Ben-gurion U. Pushes to Be a Major Biotech Player

November 28, 2005
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Steam pours out of a towering microscope so powerful it can reveal the inner space of cells, as Ohad Medalia uses liquid nitrogen to cool down the instrument. The young Israeli chemist arrived at Ben-Gurion University following a post-doctorate at the Max-Plank Institute of Biochemistry in Germany — and shortly after the wooden crates holding the three-ton, $3 million Transmission Electron Microscope arrived as well.

The microscope is the first of its kind in Israel and one of only seven in the world. Medalia hopes the 3-D images of cells it reveals will provide insight into various types of tumors, cancers and other diseases, such as Alzheimer’s and diabetes.

Medalia is one of a crop of top young Israeli scientists being recruited after their studies and postings abroad to return to Israel for cutting-edge research at the newly established National Institute of Biotechnology in the Negev, or NIBN, associated with Ben-Gurion University in Beersheba.

The NIBN got a major boost Sunday when the Israeli government pledged $30 million toward a $90 million research fund, part of a $3.6 billion, 10-year plan to develop the Negev region.

The remaining $60 million of the fund is being drawn from donations by the institute’s chief benefactor, Swiss banker Edgar de Picciotto, other donors and competitive research funds. De Picciotto said he was motivated to invest in biotech after a personal battle with cancer.

Stoked by government funding, Israel is developing a strong base in biotechnology. Life-science research accounts for about 35 percent of civilian research in Israel, and there are perhaps 500 Israeli companies in the field, with roughly half founded in the past five years. The Economist magazine estimated that $800 million was invested in life sciences in Israel in 2004.

Medalia had job offers in Europe and at other top Israeli institutions. He chose to do his research in a relatively remote region because of the chance to collaborate with colleagues who freely exchange ideas, and because of the investment and commitment of a university determined to make itself and the NIBN into one of the world’s top biotechnology centers.

“I think the opportunity is here. Everyone will agree this is the only academic institution in Israel that’s going up and not down,” Medalia said, as a cell from a mouse’s liver appears on computer screens behind the giant microscope.

As Israel’s most geographically remote and also youngest university, Ben-Gurion in the past has struggled to compete, but they’re now pushing to become a major player in biotech. Ehud Olmert, who currently serves as both trade and finance minister, has been the main Cabinet proponent of getting money to Ben-Gurion as part of larger government efforts to develop the Negev.

Other Israeli universities are not ceding this field to Ben-Gurion. They’re investing in biotech as well, setting up companies connected to the universities to turn the concepts developed on their campuses into marketable products and devices.

The unbridled academic freedom at universities breeds top level research, but universities lack the commercial and multi-disciplinary orientation to develop products from that research, NIBN director Irun Cohen, an internationally renowned immunologist and researcher, explained.

Cohen said the institute is an important venue for turning the best of university research into biotech products.

“The two don’t go together but they need each other — biotechnology creates products based on academic research,” said Cohen, sitting in his office in the Life Sciences building, part of a new complex of sleek science buildings on campus.

A visitor can see Ben-Gurion growing: the campus is dotted with cranes and bulldozers. A large lot has been carved out for a high-tech park that will house some of the biotechnology buildings.

Some of Ben-Gurion’s most driven scientists are recruited to work at the NIBN in a setting where they’re encouraged to focus on research and to produce free from departmental concerns such as tenure and promotions. In order to remain part of the institute, researchers have to show results.

“The idea of the NIBN is to try to institutionalize the research itself, to see it through to the stage where it can be commercialized,” Cohen said.

The institute’s advisory board includes top-name scientists from around the world, including Nobel laureates Sir Aaron Klug of Cambridge University and Aaron Ciechanover of Haifa’s Technion-Israel Institute of Technology. Also on the board is Raymond Dwek of the University of Oxford, who runs one of the largest biochemistry departments in the world.

Among the institute’s cutting-edge researchers are Smadar Cohen, chair of the biotechnology department, and Jonathan Leor from the biomedical engineering department. They have developed a method of creating tissue “scaffolds” to regenerate heart muscle after heart attacks by injecting a biodegradable polymer directly into the damaged cardiac area.

The material forms a scaffold that helps strengthen the heart muscle during recovery and may even help stimulate the growth of new blood vessels. The pair’s research indicates that this leads to a healthier cardiac system after heart attacks and a reduced death rate.

Smadar Cohen sits in her small office crammed with books and scientific papers and chuckles over her idea of introducing the scaffolding into the body through injection rather than surgery.

“It’s the simplest and most important part of the invention,” said Cohen — who, together with the university and Leor, recently signed a deal with one of Israel’s leading drug-development companies to bring the technology to market.

Just down the hallway from Medalia and his powerful microscope sits Eitan Rubin, who is trying to merge systems biology with medical informatics.

Rubin is working with electronic clinical records from Beersheba’s Soroka Hospital, which is proving to be a valuable trove of information on how patients’ health changes and how they respond to treatment. The data can help researchers hone their experiments on live subjects before they even begin to design the most effective experiments possible.

Rubin came to Beersheba after two years at Harvard, where he ran the university’s Bioinformatics Center for Genomics Research. He decided to do his research at NIBN because of the academic energy he found at the institute and at Ben-Gurion University in general.

“There is an excitement of building something new, but within the framework of an established institution,” Rubin said.

“I am the third generation of pioneering spirit,” he said, describing his family history in Israel and his drive to contribute. “Now it’s my turn.”

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