Identification Of The Mechanisms Of Hepatic Fibrogenesis Aid In The Detection And Prediction Of Clinical Outcomes In Paediatric Cholestatic Liver Disease.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$624,429.00
Summary
Biliary Atresia (BA) and Cystic Fibrosis Liver Disease (CFLD) are important causes of childhood cirrhosis. Diagnosis is difficult, treatments problematic, and outcomes suboptimal. In BA, bile duct obstruction in infants rapidly progresses to liver failure. It is the most common indication for liver transplantation in children. CFLD causes significant morbidity/mortality in about 20% of CF children. This proposal investigates the mechanisms of liver fibrosis (scarring) and the role of fibrosis in ....Biliary Atresia (BA) and Cystic Fibrosis Liver Disease (CFLD) are important causes of childhood cirrhosis. Diagnosis is difficult, treatments problematic, and outcomes suboptimal. In BA, bile duct obstruction in infants rapidly progresses to liver failure. It is the most common indication for liver transplantation in children. CFLD causes significant morbidity/mortality in about 20% of CF children. This proposal investigates the mechanisms of liver fibrosis (scarring) and the role of fibrosis in both diagnosis and predicting clinical outcome.Read moreRead less
I am a hepatology scientist investigating the mechanisms associated with the development of hepatic fibrosis and cirrhosis in chronic liver diseases affecting children (cystic fibrosis liver disease and biliary atresia) and adults (haemochromatosis).
Mechanisms Of Hepatic Fibrogenesis In Chronic Liver Disease
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$697,209.00
Summary
Despite advances made in understanding the mechanisms of liver injury, chronic liver disease continues to be one of the most rapidly growing causes of death in subjects aged <65 years. This is the result of uncontrolled wound healing and regeneration leading ultimately to cirrhosis and liver cancer. This research will identify and characterise pathways that control the wound healing response to liver injury, involving the processes of inflammation, scarring and restitution of normal liver mas ....Despite advances made in understanding the mechanisms of liver injury, chronic liver disease continues to be one of the most rapidly growing causes of death in subjects aged <65 years. This is the result of uncontrolled wound healing and regeneration leading ultimately to cirrhosis and liver cancer. This research will identify and characterise pathways that control the wound healing response to liver injury, involving the processes of inflammation, scarring and restitution of normal liver mass.Read moreRead less
Clinical And Psychosocial Changes Over Late Childhood And Adolescence And Early Life Determinants Of Long Term Clinical Outcomes In Cystic Fibrosis
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$1,135,570.00
Summary
Cystic fibrosis is the most common life shortening inherited disease in Caucasians. Lung damage starts in infancy and lung function falls most rapidly in adolescence although why and how this happens and early life determinants are not known. This study takes advantage of a previous study that monitored young children from 3 months to 5 years of life and follows them closely through early adolescence to investigate the protective and risk factors for falling lung function.
Modulating Inflammatory And Fibrogenic Pathways In Kidney Disease Using A Novel Antagonist Of Protease-Activated-Receptor-2
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$581,116.00
Summary
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) now affects 10% of adults in industrialised countries. Current treatments are largely ineffective. Thus developing better CKD treatments will have substantial public health benefit. Three well established and clinically relevant animal models of kidney disease will be used to test the ability of a new experimental anti-inflammatory drug, developed by members of this research team at The University of Queensland, to prevent or lessen the progression of CKD.
Hepatic Fibrogenesis In Paediatric Cholestatic Liver Disease.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$254,250.00
Summary
Liver disease in children causes a significant impact on lifespan and quality of life. The commonest causes of liver disease in children are cholestatic, or diseases related to obstruction of bile flow out of the liver. In ways we are only beginning to understand, obstruction of bile flow stimulates liver scar formation which, if untreated, leads to replacement of normal liver tissue and ultimately to failure of the liver. In infants, the most common and serious cholestatic liver disease is bili ....Liver disease in children causes a significant impact on lifespan and quality of life. The commonest causes of liver disease in children are cholestatic, or diseases related to obstruction of bile flow out of the liver. In ways we are only beginning to understand, obstruction of bile flow stimulates liver scar formation which, if untreated, leads to replacement of normal liver tissue and ultimately to failure of the liver. In infants, the most common and serious cholestatic liver disease is biliary atresia. It develops at, or shortly after birth with progressive destruction of the bile ducts, responsible for transporting bile out of the liver. Without early diagnosis and surgery these infants develop progressive liver scarring leading to liver failure and death or liver transplantation within 1-2 years. It is the commonest reason for liver transplantation in children (55-60%) in the Western world. Even with successful surgery, most, if not all patients will come to liver transplantation over the subsequent 25 years because of ongoing, but slower, scar formation. In older children, diseases like cystic fibrosis cause bile duct blockages leading to progressive liver scarring that is slower and unpredictable, contributing to ill health in up to 20% of patients and death from end stage liver disease or liver transplantation in 5%. Using liver tissue from children with these two disorders we have been able to identify the key cells that control the liver scar process, the Hepatic Stellate Cell. We now need to investigate the role of bile constituents on the scar-forming process in these two diseases. We will utilise a well characterised animal model to investigate the influence of bile constituents on cells isolated from this model and apply these findings back to patient samples to determine their role in paediatric cholestatic liver disease. This will help us to better understand the disease process and importantly, develop more effective and earlier treatment.Read moreRead less
Role Of Chemoattractants In Hepatic Stellate Cell Recruitment And Fibrogenesis In Paediatric Cholestatic Liver Disease.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$589,175.00
Summary
This project investigates how decreased bile flow in children's liver diseases such as cystic fibrosis and biliary atresia, leads to the release of molecules from the liver which cause recruitment of scar-forming cells. This results in cirrhosis (liver scar) and the necessity for liver transplantation. This project will investigate whether some children are more susceptible to liver scarring due to mutations in genes which cause increased release of these recruitment molecules from the liver.
Tissue Ferritin Is A Damage-associated Molecular Pattern (DAMP) In Inflammasome-induced Inflammation Associated With Hepatic Stellate Cell Activation And Fibrogenesis In Chronic Liver Disease.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$783,612.00
Summary
We have generated considerable evidence for a role for tissue ferritin as a mediator of inflammation associated with liver fibrosis (scarring) These highly novel and innovative studies will assist in identifying pathways involved in the proinflammatory phenotype of hepatic stellate cells (scar-forming cells in the liver) in chronic liver disease and thus will greatly aid in understanding how liver scarring occurs in chronic liver disease.
Cellular Cross-talk Between Liver Progenitor Cells And Hepatic Stellate Cells Is Required For Hepatic Fibrogenesis
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$618,517.00
Summary
Deloitte Access Economics data proposes the total economic burden of liver disease in Australia in 2012 was >$50 billion. This study will identify how the liver heals itself by inducing liver cell populations which interact to regenerate damaged liver tissue in chronic liver disease. This knowledge may lead to the development of novel therapeutic interventions for the treatment of liver scarring and liver cancer, and to assist in normal liver regeneration following chronic liver disease.
HLA-G/H2-Bl Is Critical For Regulating Inflammation In The Liver
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$494,050.00
Summary
The key factor to induction of liver fibrosis, progression to cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma is inflammation. Liver transplant and liver regeneration following liver resection are also dramatically impaired by elevation of inflammation. We have identified a potent anti-inflammatory protein, HLA-G, that is critical for regulating post-surgical inflammation in the liver. We will determine if HLA-G can reverse and/or block liver fibrosis and modify HLA-G for improved clinical potential.