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Home Industry News Natures Laboratory has received funding worth over £180,000 from Innovate UK

Natures Laboratory has received funding worth over £180,000 from Innovate UK

29th March 2022

Natures Laboratory, a Whitby based company, has received funding worth over £180,000 from Innovate UK to develop original ways in which propolis can be used to help meet the global crisis in antibiotic resistance.

The World Health Organisation placed antibiotic resistance in its top ten threats to global public health.

Made from resins in which the bees collect from plants and trees, propolis comes from the Greek meaning ‘Defender of the City’. Bees take the resins back to the hive and process them through their enzymatic system before combining them with wax. Bees use propolis to seal up the hive against infection.

Nature Laboratory’s CEO, James Fearnley, stated: “Natures Laboratory has been researching the role of propolis as a medicine for over 30 years. I feel that our work has for years been like a candle burning in the bright sunlight, nobody recognised its light. But as the problem of antibiotic resistance has grown bigger and darker we are beginning to be seen as a real and potential help for what has seemed like an increasingly dangerous, global and insoluble problem. We have known about the anti-microbial activity of propolis since the 1940’s and our own research in 1998 at University of Oxford confirmed this. During the last 30 years we have, with our university research colleagues in this country and round the world, published over 30 scientific reports about propolis and have made some remarkable discoveries. Our most dramatic discovery came just over a year ago during the COVID lockdown in work we are funding at Leeds Becket University. We discovered that if you combine propolis with antibiotics that have effectively stopped working (like penicillium) they start working again. Exactly why and how this works we are still working on but obviously the potential benefits of combining antibiotics and propolis are enormous. This new Innovate UK Award will help us to build on this work. The Award will fund a two-year project working with Department of Pharmacological Engineering Science at the University of Bradford. We will explore how we can use cutting edge science to develop products locally that can make a real and lasting contribution to a global problem. This is a fantastic opportunity and a validation of 30 years of research work.”

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