Vitamin D Synthesis Within Osteoblasts Increases Bone Mineral By Regulating Remodelling: Is This The Link Between Vitamin D Status And Fractures?
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$627,082.00
Summary
This project will contribute to understanding mechanism of vitamin D action within bone to modulate bone resorption and offers the exciting prospect of identifying the mechanism by which an adequate vitamin D status can reduce the risk of osteoporotic hip fractures. Thus, this project has great potential to improve community health by being able to recommend vitamin D supplementation made on the basis of maintaining normal bone cell function with psarticular reference to modulating bone resorpti ....This project will contribute to understanding mechanism of vitamin D action within bone to modulate bone resorption and offers the exciting prospect of identifying the mechanism by which an adequate vitamin D status can reduce the risk of osteoporotic hip fractures. Thus, this project has great potential to improve community health by being able to recommend vitamin D supplementation made on the basis of maintaining normal bone cell function with psarticular reference to modulating bone resorption.Read moreRead less
New Projection Neurons Are Added To The Brain Throughout Life – Identifying Their Source And Function.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$505,991.00
Summary
Scientists aim to use our body’s own stem cells to make new nerve cells for brain repair. There are two major types of nerve cell: long range and short range; and until now we did not know how to make new long range nerves. I recently discovered that a special type of brain stem cell, the OPC, makes new long range nerves throughout life. We are building on this discovery by trying to understand the signals that control this process in order to direct OPCs towards nerve regeneration.
Myelin Remodelling: A Novel Form Of Neural Plasticity
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$605,849.00
Summary
Myelin is the insulation of the central nervous system (CNS). We have demonstrated that CNS insulation is not fixed. It changes throughout life. This project aims to find out why this happens. In particular we will investigate the role of dynamic insulation in learning and memory, and examine the role of nervous system activity in promoting the addition of new insulation. This research will provide valuable insight into multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer's dementia and mental health disorders.
Lysosomal Dysfunction As An Inhibitor Of Vitamin B12 Utilisation In Neurodegenerative Diseases
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$554,901.00
Summary
Vitamin B12 is required for red blood cell formation, DNA synthesis and normal neurological function. B12 deficiency contributes to age-related cognitive decline and Alzheimer’s disease. This research will provide important new information regarding the ageing process and the impact that brain changes associated with ageing and Alzheimer's disease have on B12 metabolism. It will provide important information related to the therapeutic potential of B12.
Defining The Function Of ROCK In Establishing A Tumour-promoting Microenvironment
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$611,950.00
Summary
Cancer’s spread from its primary to secondary sites causes most cancer-related deaths. As cancers grow and spread, their internal structure is modified. Immune cells within the cancer begin to behave differently to the same types of cells in normal tissues, promoting its spread. We have discovered that many of these changes are regulated by a protein called ROCK. We plan to study how ROCK controls such a wide range of tumour promoting processes.
NDI1 Therapy For NADH-Ubiquinone Oxidoreductase Deficiency
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$575,762.00
Summary
This study will test a new protein therapy that can act as a surrogate for a deficient or defective enzyme called Mitochondrial Complex 1. The deficiency occurs in newborns with defective genes for the proteins that form the enzyme. The defect causes metabolic malfunction in most organs, with patients needing specialist hospital and parental care, but there is no cure yet. We have successfully tested this in the lab but will now test this in our new animal model of the disease.
Identification Of Novel Targets For Treatment Of Heart Failure
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$486,873.00
Summary
Hearts respond to stimulation by activation of cell surface receptors. We have found that two very closely related receptors have opposing effects on the heart; one is beneficial and the other promotes disease. The planned studies will investigate exactly what explains this difference. This will identify critical factors that protect or damage the heart and is expected to provide suitable targets for drug development.
Identification Of Genes Causing Medulloblastoma By Transposon Mutagenesis.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$621,997.00
Summary
Brain tumours are the most common cause of cancer-related death in children and the tumour medulloblastoma is the most frequent. There is a need to develop new therapeutic approaches to treating medulloblastoma through the development of new drugs to directly target the tumour. This research has identified new genes that are good candidates as drug targets for treating medulloblastoma.
Mechanisms Underlying Efferent Feedback In The Vestibular System
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$491,475.00
Summary
The balance system has a remarkable, but poorly understood capacity for self-repair. An intrinsic feedback mechanism, the Efferent Vestibular System or EVS is thought to play a major role in this self-repair. Surprisingly, we know little about EVS function in animals or humans. We will study the EVS in mice and humans to gain a better understanding of how it works. This information will then drive the design of therapies that improve and restore balance in disease, injury, or ageing.
Immunodominance And Protective Immunity In The Context Of A Complex Host-pathogen System.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$899,832.00
Summary
In experimental infection models with simple organisms, pathogen-specific immune responses recognize only a small fraction of potential epitopes encoded by the genome. This phenomenon is termed immunodominance. We propose the first comprehensive study of immunodominance in humans in response to a complex pathogen, the Plasmodium parasite that causes malaria. This will provide valuable new knowledge of host-pathogen immunity and facilitate rational vaccine design.