The ODIN collaboration will make it easy for researchers and companies to create the building blocks that are important for developing future medicines – for example, developing new platforms and techniques for testing the specificity and unintended effects of medicine – which do not have much commercial value by themselves. Although ODIN’s open results cannot be patented, everyone is free to customize and, based on that, develop products that can be commercially protected.
According to Rasmus Beedholm-Ebsen, Special Advisor Life Sciences at Invest in Denmark, and located in Aarhus, the Open Discovery Innovation Network is a testament of the close interplay between public and private partners across science, education and regulatory affairs present in Denmark. Aarhus University has a long tradition for both interdisciplinary and industry collaboration. Rasmus Beedholm-Ebsen is therefore not surprised that such a collaboration as ODIN, which is the first of this type in Denmark, originates from Aarhus University.
Experiences from initiatives abroad, such as the Structural Genomics Consortium in Oxford, indicate great potential for such projects.
All participants are free to offer solutions or ideas to qualify projects. Participation is voluntary, so only projects that appeal to both parties take off. Once this happens, the grant from the Foundation will fund research capacity in the form of employing postdoctoral fellows, PhD students and others.