Development Of Carbohydrate Based Self-adjuvanting Vaccine Delivery System
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$311,647.00
Summary
The world is in a need for effective vaccines for the treatment/prevention of a range of currently occurring diseases. The aim of this project is to develop sugar/lipid-based delivery systems by revolutionary new chemo-enzymatic technology. Expected outcomes of the project will be numerous biologically active vaccine candidates and novel technologies which will lead to effective therapeutic products.
A Novel Role For MHC Class II In Carbohydrate Presentation
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$703,030.00
Summary
Cells of the immune system swallow up foreign molecules and break them down to smaller fragments. T cells then identify the degraded antigen fragments and coordinate the immune response. In this project we will investigate how the T cells identify carbohydrates.
Novel Analgesic Approaches: Harnessing Functional Interactions Between Sodium Channels And Opioids
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$329,076.00
Summary
Chronic pain is a debilitating condition that affects the life of one five Australians and has significant socioeconomic impact. Currently available pain killers often do not work, or have intolerable side effects. We have discovered that combination treatment with opioids and a novel venom-derived compound discovered by us provides effective pain relief. The aim of this project is to understand the mechanisms underlying this synergistic effect to develop new treatment approaches for pain.
This project will investigate the factors that regulate the development and maintenance of a recently identified population of white blood cells called MAIT cells. MAIT cells are abundant in humans yet poorly understood. A better understanding of how these cells are regulated, and how they can be targeted in diseases, is necessary if we want to ultimately use these cells for immunotherapy.
Improving Synthetic Methodology To Prepare Pre-clinical Analogues Of Human Insulin
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$457,708.00
Summary
The glucose regulatory hormone, insulin, remains the only treatment for type I diabetes and up to 30% of type II diabetes, both of which are among the world’s fastest growing chronic diseases today. Because insulin, if taken orally, would be broken down quickly, it has usually been given by injection. This project will develop novel chemical methods for the efficient preparation of novel insulin therapeutics with improved stability and oral bioavailability for prolonged treatment of patients.
Membrane-active Antibiotics Against Multi-drug Resistant Gram Negative Bacteria
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$942,299.00
Summary
We are now threatened by bacteria that are resistant to ALL antibiotics. However, there is a new paradigm: antibiotics inspired by nature that attack the membrane of bacteria. This project will re-engineer peptides from lugworms, horseshoe crabs, scorpions and spiders that are part of nature’s ancient defence against bacteria, to identify new antibiotics to combat infections in humans.
Quantification Of Antigen Presentation To CD8 T Cells During Virus Infection
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$582,072.00
Summary
Knowledge of how virus-infected cells are detected by the bodyÍs immune system is fundamental to our understanding of virus infections and attempts to improve vaccines. We know that many proteins are displayed during virus infection but until now, the precise details of this display have only been worked out for very few proteins, studied one at a time. In this project we will apply cutting-edge technology to gain the first holistic view of how a virus-infected cell looks to the immune system.
Development Of Next Generation Drugs For Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$632,726.00
Summary
Chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) is one of the four most common types of leukaemia. With current therapies, 15–20% of patients newly diagnosed for CML will die in the next five years, and it is therefore vitally important to discover new treatments. The aim of this project is to develop a new generation of drugs to treat CML based on new approaches (i.e., different type of molecules and different binding site) that can combat the resistance acquired to the current treatments.
Cancer immunotherapy by “checkpoint blockade” boosts the immune response and leads to tumour rejection in some patients. To improve immunotherapy, information will be sought on the capacity of membrane vesicles prepared from dendritic cells (DC) to stimulate immune cells (T cells) in mice and elicit tumour rejection. Experiments are proposed to trace the fate of the vesicles after injection and improve tumour rejection by combination with checkpoint blockade and addition of cytokines.
A Molecular Investigation Into Lipid-reactive Immunity To Combat Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Infection
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$628,152.00
Summary
Tuberculosis (TB) infection currently causes ~1.5 million deaths annually. Due to new survival features acquired by the causative agent (Mycobacterium tuberculosis), traditional TB drugs and vaccines are becoming inefficient. Mycobacterium tuberculosis has a protective lipid-dense cell wall that is targeted by our immune system. We aim to understand the mechanisms of the lipid-mediated immune response to TB in order to develop more effective strategies to combat this disease.