Targeted Alpha Therapy For Metastatic Breast Cancer Using Alpha-Herceptin
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$332,420.00
Summary
The specific aim of this proposal is to demonstrate, in non-human primates, proof–of-concept of a patented new platform vaccine technology (scrambled antigen vaccine or SAVINE) designed to encode all the protein sequences of an infectious agent, in this case HIV-1. These are arranged as equal-sized, overlapping fragments such that all potential T cell epitopes that are needed to induce broad T-cell-mediated immunity are maintained. The synthetically designed vaccine uses consensus sequences of H ....The specific aim of this proposal is to demonstrate, in non-human primates, proof–of-concept of a patented new platform vaccine technology (scrambled antigen vaccine or SAVINE) designed to encode all the protein sequences of an infectious agent, in this case HIV-1. These are arranged as equal-sized, overlapping fragments such that all potential T cell epitopes that are needed to induce broad T-cell-mediated immunity are maintained. The synthetically designed vaccine uses consensus sequences of HIV-1 to provide universal coverage of the major HIV-1 strains for a global population. The synthetic systematically designed HIV-1 vaccine will be delivered using our newly developed prime-boost immunisation regime that induces particularly high levels of cell-mediated immunity.Read moreRead less
Novel Nanoparticle Composites For Molecular Probes In Diagnostic Imaging
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$170,716.00
Summary
Isotope labelled protein probes, eg. antibodies, are a valuable imaging tool in investigating patient disease. Their biological specificity is their great strength, however, detection sensitivity often limits their use. A novel nanoparticle developed at ANU can increase this signal by a million-fold in comparison with conventional methods of labelling. This approach suits a range of probes and will accommodate many of the isotopes already used in patient diagnostics and therapy.
PET Imaging Agents For The Differential Diagnosis Of Hypoxic Tumors
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$585,429.00
Summary
Choosing the best type of treatment from the ever increasing arsenal of chemotherapeutic agents against cancer is of critical importance. Tumor hypoxia requires specialized treatment and patient selection. Current PET imaging agents cannot differentiate between severely and mildly hypoxic tumors. We have found a new agent that can detect mildly hypoxic tumors and the aim of this grant application is to further develop this radiotracer to improve image quality and reliability of the diagnosis.