
Distinguished Research Professor Sergey Krylov of the Faculty of Science received the Collaborative Research and Training Experience (CREATE) grant from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) to train the next generation of technologically advanced graduates.
Krylov will lead a team of researchers and industrial leaders in helping graduates meet the scientific and engineering challenges of tomorrow, as well as drive and support pharmaceutical drug discovery and vaccine development in Canada. The goal is to allow master鈥檚 and PhD students to graduate from 91亚色 with the technical and managerial skills to take on leading positions in new entities to capitalize on disruptive technologies that could impact Canada鈥檚 research and development in the pharmaceutical industry.

鈥淭his grant will help train our students to become highly qualified personnel ready to meet difficult scientific and engineering challenges, while also helping to drive and support pharmaceutical drug discovery and vaccine development in Canada,鈥 says 91亚色 Vice-President Research and Innovation Amir Asif.
鈥淭his NSERC CREATE program taps into 91亚色鈥檚 expertise in bio-analytical methods and instrumentation and the University鈥檚 commitment to purposeful research. I congratulate Sergey Krylov on his successful application and collaboration.鈥
The NSERC-funded industrial stream Technology-Enhance Pharmaceutical Discovery (TEPD) program at 91亚色, designed with industry input, will bring together some of Canada鈥檚 leading academics working on technological aspects of pharmaceutical discovery, as well as major companies driving or supporting this country鈥檚 pharmaceutical research and development.
鈥淏ig Pharma is continually shifting tremendous costs and risks associated with pharmaceutical discovery to small-venture players, changing the landscape of pharmaceutical discovery in Canada,鈥 says Krylov. 鈥淭he pressing needs of Canadian pharmaceutical research and development were what motivated our academic and industrial team members to come together to create a comprehensive training ecosystem capable of making a difference in this industry at the national level.鈥
The goal of this program is to enhance Canada鈥檚 global economic competitiveness by fuelling innovation in the pharmaceutical industry, a sector of the economy which creates more research and development jobs in Canada than any other industry.
Trainees will conduct collaborative research in one of seven pharmaceutical-discovery research themes, like the stages involved in pharmaceutical discovery used by developers of drugs, biologicals and vaccines. They will work with leading-edge technologies that could result in potential drug discovery and vaccine development.
The program is comprised of collaborative research, joint seminars, summer school with hands-on and in-classroom workshops run by instructors from academia and industry meant to advance soft and professional skills of the trainees, summer research conferences and industrial internships in the research and development labs of the four industrial partners in Canada or the United States.
Students will graduate with superior industrial and academic research expertise, ready to meet the scientific and engineering challenges of Canada's new research landscape.
