NSTC

The National Swine Testing Center (NSTC) is funded by the NIH to collaboratively evaluate emerging and translational technologies in a swine model.

Opportunities for collaborative research are available to investigators across disciplines nationwide. The NSTC provides infrastructure and expertise in support of genome editing projects involving basic research as well as translational preclinical research.

The NSTC is supported by the NIH Office of the Director.

The National Swine Testing Center is supported by Grant #U42OD035738 from the NIH Office of Research Infrastructure Programs through the Office of the Director. This funding allows the NSTC to provide its services on a subsidized, cost-recovery basis.

Serving the Research Community

The National Swine Testing Center (NSTC) works with the National Swine Resource and Research Center (NSRRC) to generate and maintain critically needed swine models of human health and disease.  In many cases, this will involve introducing human disease alleles into pigs to create a disease model (and an editing target) for investigators to evaluate reagents and delivery approaches.

 

The NSTC will also serve as a resource to evaluate the safety and targeting efficiency of emerging technologies and delivery reagents.  Toward that goal, the NSTC provides, or will develop, the assays and methods required to perform genome-editing and other translational projects in pigs. The pig resources available to investigators represent all ages, from fetal (to allow for in utero therapies) to post-pubertal stages. The NSTC will work with investigators to perform pilot studies, when needed, and to design projects that provide statistical power (sufficient animal numbers and sex distribution). In addition, the NSTC will provide training to investigators and their staff to facilitate the transfer of new techniques to other researchers working in pig models.