Projects

Experimental studies and applications of cellular processes
Year: 2025 - 2029
The research infrastructure on experimental studies and applications of cellular processes aims at gathering national know-how in the field of cell and molecular biology, and aims at setting up an instrumental capability to develop competence and services in the fields of microbial and mammalian cell processes and their applications. The infrastructure will be built up jointly by the University of Tartu, Tallinn University of Technology, Tallinn University, Estonian University of Life Sciences and the Institute of Chemical Physics and Biophysics. The vision is to become a know-how and service centre to partner health, biotechnology and environment-focused public sector organisations, medical institutions, biotechnology and pharmacological companies. The focus will be on acquiring and setting up relevant instrumental complexes, development and offering of services, popularisation and dissemination of the field in order to ensure sustainability of researchers and future activities.
Estonian Life Science Infrastructure
Year: 2025 - 2029
Leveraging identification of endocrine disruptors using new approach methodologies based on human adult ovarian follicle cells
Year: 2025 - 2028
Reproduction is regulated by the endocrine system and its disturbances by endocrine disruptive chemicals (EDCs) may lead to infertility. As humans are constantly exposed to EDCs through the use of common household items and personal care products, it is important to test chemicals for their potential activity as endocrine disruptors affecting reproductive function. Project MERLON aims to study the effects of EDCs on sexual development and function in order to deliver new approach methodologies (NAMs) for EDC identification. While MERLON targets the vulnerable stages of development from fetal to puberty, MERLON2, with additional partner TalTech, will add one more sensitive window of susceptibility in female reproduction to the project: the adult preovulatory ovarian follicle, where the oocyte maturation takes place. In collaboration with TalTech, it was recently demonstrated that follicular somatic cells (FSCs) lose sensitivity to follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) in the presence of a mixture of 13 EDCs. FSH is crucial for both, the oocyte maturation and for the synthesis of steroid hormones by the FSCs. We have also demonstrated the intricate heterogeneity of somatic cells in the ovarian follicle. The roles that FSC subpopulations play in the adverse effects of EDCs is unknown and unaddressed by the initial MERLON project. MERLON2 will complement the aims of the consortium by developing NAMs based on single cell transcriptomics, automated image analysis and machine learning to understand the effect of EDCs on FSC subpopulations and their sensitivity to FSH. This will increase the research output for MERLON in the number of proposed NAMs and quantitative adverse outcome pathways. As a result of MERLON2 the range of stakeholders will enlarge, increasing the public awareness related to the harmful health effects of EDCs, and proposing new approaches to resolve the complicates issue of testing substances in everyday products for their adverse effects on human fertility.
H-NMR in solid state and complementary applications
Year: 2023 - 2027
We shall custom-engineer MAS and metabolomics NMR and apply it on selected problems, notably Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, COVID, diabetes and cardiovascular conditions, fluor ion batteries, wood chemistry, also universal AI-assisted diagnostics and monitoring. We shall in particular focus on phytochemicals as the fastest and least harmful option to address acute health issues like SARS infection and neurodegenerative diseases. New hardware, based on fast mechanical spinning up to 15 Million RPM, electron spin polarization transfer (DNP), a sophisticated multi-axes sample rotation (DOR) and also 1.2GHz NMR magnets are expected to provide an unprecedented resolution and sensitivity in NMR, rendering it principally more helpful for a significantly wider range of material sciences and biomedical topics. In complex functional cases, the NMR will be arguably more informative and convenient than presently popular methods of plasmon resonance, CryoEM, X-ray or MS.