Purina Petcare and Texas A&M Partner to Advance Pet Health

Nestlé Purina PetCare Global Research and Texas A&M's School of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences is expecting advancements in pet microbiome.

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Purina and Texas A&M partnership
Nestlé Purina PetCare Global Research and the Gastrointestinal Laboratory at Texas A&M’s School of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences are partnering to uncover breakthroughs in pet microbiome health.Image courtesy of Nestle Purina Petcare Co.

A new partnership between Nestlé Purina PetCare Global Research and Texas A&M University's School of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences anticipates new breakthroughs in the frontier of pet microbiome.

A $2 million Purina PetCare Research Excellence Fund made the partnership possible. The Fund which will run from 2023 through 2028 and support diagnostic and interventional research conducted at the Texas A&M Microbiome Research Laboratory. The fund will also facilitate training of future research leaders about pet microbiome.

In addition to supporting the Microbiome Research Laboratory, Purina has supported a new endowed chair position, the Purina PetCare Endowed Chair for Microbiome Research, at the Texas A&M GI Laboratory. Recipient Jan Suchodolski, MedVet, DrVetMed, PhD, AGAF, DACVM, serves as a professor and associate director for Research at the GI Lab.

Research at the Texas A&M GI laboratory for over 25 years has focused on gastrointestinal function testing, GI pathogens, and intestinal microbial ecology, with an emphasis on how intestinal pathogens upset the balance of the intestinal microbiome and how the application of probiotics and prebiotics can help this imbalance.

Nestlé researchers were among the first in the world to study the interaction of probiotic bacteria with host intestinal cells to activate immune signaling, and Purina was the first pet nutrition company to offer shelf-stable probiotic supplements for dogs and cats to support dietary management of GI conditions and anxious behaviors.

"In recent decades, scientists have learned a great deal about the intestinal microbiome and its role in long-term pet health. This has led to discoveries such as a new way of evaluating the microbiome of individual animals," says Dr. Suchodolski, referring to the PCR-based Microbiome Dysbiosis Index developed by his group at the Gastrointestinal Laboratory. "Through the Purina PetCare Research Excellence Fund, we look forward to seeing how learnings such as these will help us discover new strategies for veterinarians to use in our approach to the management of patients with chronic GI disease and other conditions believed to be associated with dysbiosis."

The shared goals of Purina and the Texas A&M GI laboratory are to understand the intestinal microbiome of dogs and cats and how it relates to overall health. Researchers from Texas A&M and Purina will collaborate to push the field of companion animal microbiome research forward with the goal to develop new diagnostics and nutritional solutions for pets. The Purina PetCare Research Excellence Fund also allows Texas A&M to continue its role as a global expert in the microbiome and build its investment in the training of future research leaders in this space.

"We believe the research projects and training made possible through our Research Excellence Fund and the newly endowed chair at the GI laboratory will shape a future where the veterinary profession has safe, novel tools to diagnose and nutritionally manage a range of pet health conditions that result from microbiome imbalance," says Sheri Smithey, senior vice president, Global Petcare R&D at Purina. "We are confident this Purina PetCare Research Excellence Fund will yield benefits to veterinarians and their patients for many years to come."

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Powder Bulk Solids Staff

Established in 1983, Powder & Bulk Solids (PBS) serves industries that process, handle, and package dry particulate matter, including the food, chemical, and pharmaceutical markets.

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