Dr. Irene Marco-Rius, Dr. Nicolò Accanto, and Dr. Benedetta Bolognesi (IBEC), and Dr. Klaas-Jan Tielrooij (ICN2) have each received a prestigious ERC Proof of Concept grant. The researchers will receive €150 000 each, to explore the commercial and social potential of their existing research.

ERC Proof of Concept Grant Recipients from the BIST Community: (left to right) Irene Marco-Rius, Nicolò Accanto, Benedetta Bolognesi, Klaas-Jan Tielrooij.
Benedetta Bolognesi, Irene Marco-Rius and Nicolò Accanto, group leaders at the Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia (IBEC), and Klaas-Jan Tielrooij, group leader at the Catalan Institute of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology (ICN2), have each been awarded an ERC Proof of Concept (PoC) Grant. These prestigious grants are awarded by the European Research Council (ERC) to explore the commercial and social potential of research projects that have previously received ERC funding. Applicants use this funding to verify the practical feasibility of scientific concepts, explore business opportunities, or prepare patent applications.
In total, 300 Proof of Concept projects have been funded in 2025 under the €45 million Horizon Europe programme. In this current call, these four researchers from the BIST Community will aim to develop effective treatments for diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s, to facilitate advances towards personalised medicine, to unlock new possibilities for neuroscience laboratories, and to develop a new measurement method using graphene-based detectors.
AMALIA: A scalable platform to accelerate the discovery of small anti-amyloid molecules
Led by Benedetta Bolognesi, leader of the Protein Phase Transitions in Health and Disease group at IBEC, the AMALIA project addresses one of today’s greatest biomedical challenges: developing effective treatments for diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s, which are driven by the formation of protein aggregates known as amyloids. Despite decades of research, the initial events that trigger this aggregation process are still extremely difficult to study, and there are currently no scalable assays capable of systematically evaluating amyloid nucleation.
AMALIA proposes a dual, massively scalable screening platform combining two complementary assays. The first is aimed at identifying molecules that can stabilise the native structure of globular proteins, thereby preventing their aggregation. The second is designed to detect inhibitors of amyloid nucleation in both folded and intrinsically disordered proteins.
As part of this proof of concept based on the Glam-MAP project, the team will miniaturise and automate these assays to optimise them and carry out multi-target pilot screening. This will demonstrate their ability to operate in parallel on different amyloid targets. AMALIA is conceived as a platform technology that goes beyond a single project or target: a tool that eliminates the need for purified proteins and enables parallel discovery campaigns on multiple amyloid targets. This approach offers unprecedented speed and scalability. The aim of AMALIA is to transform the search for anti-amyloid therapies and contribute to reducing the enormous health and economic impact of these diseases.
“I’m thrilled that with AMALIA we are bringing the speed and scalability of platform technologies to amyloid drug discovery – building a pipeline designed not to deliver just one drug, but to enable multiple therapeutic programs in parallel.”, says Bolognesi.
CAMP: A magnetic resonance platform for high-sensitivity metabolic analysis in rare diseases
Led by Irene Marco-Rius, who heads the Molecular Imaging for Precision Medicine group at IBEC, the CAMP project seeks to commercialise technology combining microfluidics and hyperpolarised magnetic resonance. This development is based on technology generated by the LIFETIME project, which focuses on paediatric liver cancer models.
CAMP will enable the simultaneous analysis of up to 30 samples by integrating microfluidic chips with magnetic resonance technology, significantly increasing sensitivity. This combination reduces the number of cells required per sample by over 50%, which is highly relevant for rare diseases such as hepatoblastoma, where available material is limited. The team will validate the system in preclinical and clinical settings, and define a robust intellectual property and commercialisation strategy.
The platform could provide deeper, more accurate and more reproducible metabolic analyses, facilitating significant advances towards personalised medicine.
“Boosting throughput is key to taking hyperpolarised magnetic resonance beyond specialised labs; CAMP will make it possible,” explains Marco-Rius.
NeuroBRIDGE: Technology for studying the brain during natural behaviours
Led by Nicolò Accanto, head of IBEC’s Nonlinear Photonics for Neuroscience group, the NeuroBRIDGE project aims to transform two-photon microscopy — an essential neuroscientific technique for visualising and manipulating neuronal activity in vivo, with cellular resolution. Currently, most two-photon microscopes cannot be used to study neural circuits during natural behavioural tasks.
To overcome this barrier, Accanto and his team have developed a miniaturised, fibre-optic-based microscope that enables high-resolution studies to be conducted under free-moving conditions. With NeuroBRIDGE, the team seeks to turn this innovation into a widely compatible, accessible product.
Project objectives include designing modules compatible with a wide variety of commercial microscopes, validating their adaptability in different laboratories and infrastructures, and demonstrating their usefulness through experiments in natural behavioural paradigms.
This technology will enable existing microscopes to be transformed into platforms for free-moving studies, greatly expanding the range of possible experiments and opening up new opportunities for understanding the brain and neurological disorders.
“Advancing our understanding of the brain is not just about creating powerful technologies; it’s about making them accessible. NeuroBRIDGE seeks to remove barriers and unlock new possibilities for neuroscience laboratories worldwide,” states Accanto.
THICOHERENTERA: Advance a high-precision industrial measurement technology
Klaas-Jan Tielrooij, head of the ICN2 Ultrafast Dynamics in Nanoscale Systems group at ICN2, leads THICOHERENTERA, which will explore the commercial potential of a new method for measuring the thickness of thin films using graphene-based detectors.
The project addresses the need to ensure that materials used in everyday products and infrastructure perform as expected. This requires non-destructive quality control techniques, ideally without physical contact. A clear example is the accurate measurement of layers such as car paint and protective coatings on wind turbines.
The project proposes a new approach to contactless industrial quality control based on low-energy terahertz light. This type of radiation is very safe and does not damage materials. When combined with a graphene detector, this technology enables the precise measurement of layer thicknesses without interrupting the manufacturing process. Unlike existing systems, it does not rely on complex or costly laser technologies, facilitating its future industrial deployment.
With the support of this ERC Grant, the team led by Prof. Tielrooij will develop compact prototypes for real-world applications and explore business models to facilitate the future commercialisation of the technology.
Learn more:
IBEC news
ICN2 news
ERC press release