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Research consortium with CMESS lead in final round for “Cluster of Excellence“ grant

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The pre-proposal for a Cluster of Excellence (CoE) grant on the topic “Microbiomes drive Planetary Health” has qualified for the next round of the application process. Michael Wagner, deputy head of CMESS and group leader in the Division of Microbial Ecology (DOME), is the coordinating Director of Research for the project. The proposal aims to establish a research cluster dedicated to the most pressing and fundamental questions in microbiome research. A total of 30 principal investigators – including nearly all CMESS group leaders – from seven Austrian research institutions are involved in the application: The Austrian Institute of Technology (AIT), the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA), the Medical University of Graz, the CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, the Technical University Vienna, the Johannes Kepler University Linz – and the University of Vienna as lead research institution. Out of 35 pre-proposals, eleven research consortia have been selected to submit a full proposal by autumn.

The concept of “Planetary Health” describes the health of human civilisation and the natural systems in which it is embedded. Microbiomes are a core element of global health. They form the basis of the biosphere, control the Earth’s material cycles, and can both accelerate and mitigate global change. Microorganisms colonise plants, animals and also humans as symbionts and influence their health in many ways. However, despite the many similarities between ecologically and medically relevant microbiomes, researchers from these fields rarely collaborate. The goal of this consortium is to understand environmentally and host-associated microbiomes functionally and mechanistically in order to identify better the many services they provide and to be able to influence them - in the interest of planetary health - more efficiently. In order to be able to achieve this transformative goal, the Cluster of Excellence aims at exploiting new synergies by dissolving the boundaries between environmental and medical microbiome research in Austria.

The CoE grants aim to fund pioneering large-scale projects in basic research in order to raise the respective research fields in Austria to a top international level. In terms of size, they exceed all previous grants from the Austrian Science Fund (FWF). Up to 70 million euros will be available to the research teams over a period of 10 years. The final decisions on the research clusters will be made in spring 2023 after a review of the full proposals and a hearing in March 2023. In June 2023, the first consortia will be able to start working on their projects.