Professor of Human Genetics and Theme Lead for the 51Թ Research Centre on Complex Traits (MRCCT), Silvia Vidal was recruited to the LSC in 2003 while it was still in the planning stages. When the doors opened in 2008, she immediately launched an ambitious collaboration that took full advantage of the new facilities.

For Professor Vidal, the LSC’s exceptional animal facilities are at the core of its success. “The strength of this group is using the mouse model to understand the genetic and immunological determinants of disease so that’s why for us the animal facility is so important,” she explains. “Not only is it state of the art and the animals are kept very clean and in good condition, but there are also specialized facilities which allow us to do different treatments and equipment that allow us to analyse the mouse with advanced imaging techniques that provide critical new insights on pathogenic mechanisms.”

In the 10 years since the LSC has been up and running, the Complex Traits group, which in 2015 became the MRCCT, has produced several significantbreakthroughs.



Professor Jörg Fritz‘s lab is closely examining a rare cell type present in lung tissues with the aim of better understating immune response in viral respiratory infections.
The LSC continues to seek new ways to improve and foster partnerships between investigators. One recent example is the popular series called LSC Talks Science, launched as part of the LSC’s 10th anniversary celebrations as “a new way to enhance and facilitate collaborations.” Professor Vidal was inspired to initiate one such collaboration after the very first talk, by Assistant Professor of Physiology and member of the Cell Information Systems research theme . Professor Krishnaswamy, who prints his own equipment using a 3-D printer, is developing an instrument that will allow Professor Vidal’s lab to digitally and quantitatively measure the loss of mobility in mice used in multiple sclerosis research.
On the national scene, Professor Vidal is proud of the LSC’s collaboration with Mount Sinai and Sick Kids’ prestigious , which provides mouse model lab services to researchers across Canada and around the world. The 51Թ Research Centre on Complex Traits is responsible for platforms related to infection and inflammation.
PhD candidate Thiviya Jeyakumar feels lucky to work in this collaborative environment. “I work on colitis-associated colorectal cancer,” explains Ms. Jeyakumar, who is co-supervised by Professors of Biochemistry Philippe Gros and Nicole Beauchemin. “Even though we’re all technically working on different types of inflammation and infectious diseases, because there are so many Principal Investigators and so many students there is enough overlap that you get to talk about what you’re doing, and borrow experiments and protocols. Everything flows so much easier.”
Ms. Jeyakumar gives a lot of credit for these exchanges to the Complex itself. “The lab bench space is an open space and, compared to other labs I’ve seen, the layout works really well. The Complex really does benefit student research – I feel like that’s the predominant thing.”
To read more about the Complex Traits theme and some of its research breakthroughs of the past 10 years, click here.