Differential roles of gene family members in development of a cell lineage. This project aims to investigate how a family of genes influence cells in the testis to become mature sperm. Testicular cells regulate gene activity via the Snail family of proteins during sperm development, and interruption of their activities reduces fertility in mice and fruit flies. The project aims to use genetic, cell biological and biochemical studies in Drosophila and mice to compare different Snail family protei ....Differential roles of gene family members in development of a cell lineage. This project aims to investigate how a family of genes influence cells in the testis to become mature sperm. Testicular cells regulate gene activity via the Snail family of proteins during sperm development, and interruption of their activities reduces fertility in mice and fruit flies. The project aims to use genetic, cell biological and biochemical studies in Drosophila and mice to compare different Snail family proteins in spermatogenesis. The outcomes will define the different roles of highly similar proteins from the same family in differentiation of a single cell lineage. This is important in generating functional tissues using in vitro laboratory approaches or understanding how normal development and developmental disorders arise.Read moreRead less
Unravelling the complexities of cell death pathways . This project aims to test if cells can flexibly rewire their cell death pathways to ensure that the absence or inhibition of one type of cell death can be compensated through the triggering of another. The project expects to generate new knowledge in the area of programed cell death, and more specifically will address why cells have multiple programmed ways to die. Expected outcomes of this project include the provision of unprecedented insig ....Unravelling the complexities of cell death pathways . This project aims to test if cells can flexibly rewire their cell death pathways to ensure that the absence or inhibition of one type of cell death can be compensated through the triggering of another. The project expects to generate new knowledge in the area of programed cell death, and more specifically will address why cells have multiple programmed ways to die. Expected outcomes of this project include the provision of unprecedented insights into the molecular regulation of how cells orchestrate and integrate cell death pathways. This should provide significant benefits, such as providing the knowledge base needed to improve our abilities to manipulate cell death both in basic research and commercial applications of cell death.Read moreRead less
Mechanism and function of cell asymmetry during cell death. This project aims to investigate how dying cells rearrange their cellular contents to aid their removal.
More than 200 billions cells die daily in the human body. It is critical that dying cells are rapidly cleared as their buildup can interfere with normal tissue functions. This project will use a suite of contemporary molecular/cell biological approaches to study a newly identified process that occurs during cell death. Expected outc ....Mechanism and function of cell asymmetry during cell death. This project aims to investigate how dying cells rearrange their cellular contents to aid their removal.
More than 200 billions cells die daily in the human body. It is critical that dying cells are rapidly cleared as their buildup can interfere with normal tissue functions. This project will use a suite of contemporary molecular/cell biological approaches to study a newly identified process that occurs during cell death. Expected outcomes include a paradigm-shift in understanding the process of cell clearance.
This project is expected to generate fundamental new knowledge of the mechanisms by which dying cells are efficiently removed from tissues. This should provide significant benefits to the cell death and general cell biology fields.Read moreRead less
Mechanism and function of dying cell disassembly. This project aims to elucidate the molecular machinery that disassembles dying cells, and the role of this process in cell clearance. Billions of cells in the body die daily as part of normal turnover. Dying cells must be rapidly removed, as their accumulation can interfere with normal tissue functions. To efficiently clear dead cells, dying cells can disassemble into smaller fragments that neighbouring cells engulf. Understanding the mechanistic ....Mechanism and function of dying cell disassembly. This project aims to elucidate the molecular machinery that disassembles dying cells, and the role of this process in cell clearance. Billions of cells in the body die daily as part of normal turnover. Dying cells must be rapidly removed, as their accumulation can interfere with normal tissue functions. To efficiently clear dead cells, dying cells can disassemble into smaller fragments that neighbouring cells engulf. Understanding the mechanistic basis and function of dying cell disassembly is expected to generate knowledge of the downstream consequence of cell death. This breakthrough will be important in many fields of research including cell biology and biochemistry, and generate basic knowledge that can ultimately be applied in medical science to understand or treat pathological conditions associated with cell death.Read moreRead less
Mechanisms by which Beclin1 regulates intestinal homeostasis. This project aims to investigate if Beclin1, a protein which has an important and well-accepted role in promoting cell survival through the program of autophagy, has an alternate job mediating trafficking within a cell. Using novel mouse models and innovative techniques, the project aims to demonstrate the physiological importance of this alternate role for Beclin1. Expected outcomes include enhancing Australia's international researc ....Mechanisms by which Beclin1 regulates intestinal homeostasis. This project aims to investigate if Beclin1, a protein which has an important and well-accepted role in promoting cell survival through the program of autophagy, has an alternate job mediating trafficking within a cell. Using novel mouse models and innovative techniques, the project aims to demonstrate the physiological importance of this alternate role for Beclin1. Expected outcomes include enhancing Australia's international research standing, and providing research training for young scientists. Benefits include generation of new knowledge and a rethink of the basis for normal development and diseases where Beclin1 has been implicated.Read moreRead less
How do unconventional T cells die? Mammalian cells die via several different mechanisms, each of which is tightly controlled at a molecular level. The choice of death pathway depends on the trigger and cell type. This project will investigate the mechanisms controlling death of T cells, including conventional T cells, and unconventional T cells, such as mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells, in normal conditions and during inflammation. It combines methods we developed to study MAIT cells ....How do unconventional T cells die? Mammalian cells die via several different mechanisms, each of which is tightly controlled at a molecular level. The choice of death pathway depends on the trigger and cell type. This project will investigate the mechanisms controlling death of T cells, including conventional T cells, and unconventional T cells, such as mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells, in normal conditions and during inflammation. It combines methods we developed to study MAIT cells in vivo with expertise in cell death analysis. This project is expected to elucidate the complex mechanisms controlling T cell survival/death and increase our fundamental understanding of cell death mechanisms of activated T cells.Read moreRead less
Investigating Wnt signaling during human nephron commitment and patterning. Aims: To use gene edited stem cell lines that display cell location, identity and cell state to map human kidney tissue formation in the laboratory. By monitoring how each cell responds to those around it across time and space, we will for the first time map the formation of kidney tissue in the dish.
Significance: Understanding how stem cells form a tissue will help us to improve and control the process. This is key to ....Investigating Wnt signaling during human nephron commitment and patterning. Aims: To use gene edited stem cell lines that display cell location, identity and cell state to map human kidney tissue formation in the laboratory. By monitoring how each cell responds to those around it across time and space, we will for the first time map the formation of kidney tissue in the dish.
Significance: Understanding how stem cells form a tissue will help us to improve and control the process. This is key to advancing tissue engineering.
Expected outcomes: The proposal will pioneer state-of-the-art imaging, gene editing and machine learning approaches, generating models of human development that are currently unavailable.
Benefits: This understanding will guide the development of novel approaches to tissue engineering.
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Formation and clearance of endothelial cell-derived exophers. This project aims to investigate how cells that line the blood vessels release cellular wastes and their subsequent removal by immune cells.
It is critical that cellular waste are removed in a timely manner as their accumulation inside the cell can interfere with normal cell functions. The intended outcome of the project is to generate fundamental new knowledge of the mechanisms by which cellular waste are efficiently removed.
Exp ....Formation and clearance of endothelial cell-derived exophers. This project aims to investigate how cells that line the blood vessels release cellular wastes and their subsequent removal by immune cells.
It is critical that cellular waste are removed in a timely manner as their accumulation inside the cell can interfere with normal cell functions. The intended outcome of the project is to generate fundamental new knowledge of the mechanisms by which cellular waste are efficiently removed.
Expected outcomes encompass a paradigm-shift in understanding how cells that line the blood vessels dispose unwanted cellular contents. This should provide significant benefits including understanding how these specialised cells maintain the integrity of blood vessels and communicate with immune cells.Read moreRead less
Control of cell fate decisions in neurogenesis: use of embryonic stem cells to investigate key signalling systems and gene expression programs. Human embryonic stem cells (hESC) have the potential to provide an unlimited source of specific subtypes of human neurons for basic studies in neuroscience and biomedical applications. The use of hESC is limited at present by a lack of control over lineage commitment during differentiation in vitro. This project will use engineered reporter hESC lines t ....Control of cell fate decisions in neurogenesis: use of embryonic stem cells to investigate key signalling systems and gene expression programs. Human embryonic stem cells (hESC) have the potential to provide an unlimited source of specific subtypes of human neurons for basic studies in neuroscience and biomedical applications. The use of hESC is limited at present by a lack of control over lineage commitment during differentiation in vitro. This project will use engineered reporter hESC lines to investigate which cell signalling pathways and gene expression programs are involved in controlling cell fate. The project will result in improved protocols for hESC differentiation allowing enrichment of cultures with specific neuronal subtypes, and significant advances in the understanding of neuronal lineage commitment and maturation during brain development. Read moreRead less
How are sperm mitochondria eliminated after fertilisation . The fact that mitochondria are inherited exclusively through the maternal germ-line is fundamental feature of sexual reproduction in all but a few organisms. This uni-parental inheritance is thought to prevent genetic conflict between different mitochondrial genomes. The mechanisms controlling uniparental inheritance involve eliminating the sperm mitochondria soon after fertilisation. We will investigate 2 possible mechanisms, (1) acti .... How are sperm mitochondria eliminated after fertilisation . The fact that mitochondria are inherited exclusively through the maternal germ-line is fundamental feature of sexual reproduction in all but a few organisms. This uni-parental inheritance is thought to prevent genetic conflict between different mitochondrial genomes. The mechanisms controlling uniparental inheritance involve eliminating the sperm mitochondria soon after fertilisation. We will investigate 2 possible mechanisms, (1) active destruction and (2) passive dilution. The results will help explain how heteroplasmy is avoided in order to maintain the fitness of organisms including animals and humans. The results will have long term insights into improving breeding in agriculture and in the prevention of mitochondrial genetic disease.Read moreRead less