The introduction of novel viruses such as influenza and Henipa viruses into the human population from animal reservoirs is often fatal as the virus is not attenuated by adaptation to the host. As we are immunologically naïve, efficient immunity cannot be mounted. T cells mediate the control and clearance of viruses, and can remember past infection or vaccination. Understanding the role of T responses to zoonotic viral infections is needed for development of novel preventative vaccines.
Urinary tract infections are among the most common infectious diseases in humans, with approximately 40% of adult women having experienced at least one. I aim to characterise and compare the dynamics of the innate immune response in the urinary tract, in response to uropathogens and characterise bacterial factors affecting such responses. Understanding immune function provides important new understanding into these disease processes that may result in the development of new treatment approaches.
CD4 T-cell Deficiency And Dysfunction In HIV Patients Receiving Effective Antiretroviral Therapy
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$490,020.00
Summary
Large numbers of people throughout the world will commence antiretroviral treatment for HIV infection over the next 5 years. This treatment partially corrects CD4 T-cell deficiency (the most characteristic immune defect caused by HIV infection) but does not restore the immune system to normal in patients who were very immunodeficient before treatment. This study will determine the cause of residual immune defects in patients receiving antiretroviral drugs with the aim of introducing new therapie ....Large numbers of people throughout the world will commence antiretroviral treatment for HIV infection over the next 5 years. This treatment partially corrects CD4 T-cell deficiency (the most characteristic immune defect caused by HIV infection) but does not restore the immune system to normal in patients who were very immunodeficient before treatment. This study will determine the cause of residual immune defects in patients receiving antiretroviral drugs with the aim of introducing new therapies to correct those defects. Our previous studies have demonstrated that the production of new T-cells in HIV patients receiving antiretroviral durgs is affected by the function of the thymus, but that this does not account for the production of all new T-cells. We will investigate other sites of T-cell production in the body. We have also previously shown that poor recovery of CD4 T-cells in patients successfully treated with antiretroviral drugs is associated with immune activation and that the T-cells do not function adequately, even when CD4 T-cell counts are substantially increased. We will determine whether these abnormalities are the result of a persistent defect in T cell activation by monocytes and-or dendritic cells. The findings of our studies will improve the treatment and life-expectancy of individuals with HIV infection.Read moreRead less
Interactions Between Adaptable Pathogens, Drugs And The Human Host
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$5,727,327.00
Summary
The Centre for Clinical Immunology and Biomedical Statistics (CCIBS) represents a collaboration between Royal Perth Hospital and Murdoch University that has brought together internationally recognised expertise in clinical immunology, experimental biology and innovation in biostatistics and computing. These resources have been applied to a broad range of research issues within the broad framework of HIV and hepatitis C disease and treatment. CCIBS has become a leading centre of research excellen ....The Centre for Clinical Immunology and Biomedical Statistics (CCIBS) represents a collaboration between Royal Perth Hospital and Murdoch University that has brought together internationally recognised expertise in clinical immunology, experimental biology and innovation in biostatistics and computing. These resources have been applied to a broad range of research issues within the broad framework of HIV and hepatitis C disease and treatment. CCIBS has become a leading centre of research excellence internationally, establishing a reputation for innovative approaches to host-viral interactions that are built on a long tradition of research into the population genetics of both human and viral genomes, combined with a willingness to negotiate complex computation and statistical challenges in order to faithfully reflect dynamic biological processes at a population level. An early recognition that large and integrated repositories of genetic and clinical data are fundamental to the research success in the genomic era has also led to the creation of the single most comprehensive repository of HIV genetic sequencing data in the world. The contributions that CCIBS has made to several distinct areas of research, including understanding viral adaptation to host immune responses, the development of genetic testing to predict drug hypersensitivity reactions, and causes of antiretroviral drug-associated toxicities, have been published in prestigious journals including Science, Nature, Nature Immunology, The Lancet, Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences, and The American Journal of Human Genetics, and have also resulted in numerous international collaborations that recognise the unique attributes that CCIBS has been able to bring to the global research effort aimed at understanding fundamental aspects of HIV and hepatitis C biology and treatment.Read moreRead less