Regulation Of Immune And Inflammatory Responses By Short Chain Fatty Acids And GPR43
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$549,092.00
Summary
Innate immune mechanisms provide essential signals that determine the outcome of immune responses. The identity of these innate mechanisms may provide opportunities for manipulating immune responses, or controlling inflammatory responses. This proposal centers around a new and little-studied receptor, GPR43, which binds products of bacterial metabolism. This molecular pathway may explain how diet affect immune responses.
Natural Killer (NK) Cells And Development Of Atherosclerosis: Cellular And Molecular Mechanisms
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$729,571.00
Summary
Atherosclerosis, the accumulation of fat and white cells in the blood vessel wall is the major cause of heart attacks, stroke and death. Cholesterol lowering drugs reduce the risk by only 40%. Targeting cells that promote inflammation is one approach to further reduce risk. We have shown that a specific cell type called a natural killer (NK) cells contributes greatly to development of atherosclerosis. Our aim is to understand how these cells promote development of atherosclerosis.
Isolation And Pre-clinical Evaluation Of Small Molecule Anti-inflammatory Compounds From Hookworms
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$320,891.00
Summary
This project will harness the unique ability of hookworm small molecules (<10 kDa) to modulate inflammation, and exploit these properties to develop novel modalities to treat inflammatory bowel diseases, using millennia of host-parasite coevolution as a guide. The excretory/secretory and somatic extracts will be assessed for their anti-inflammatory properties using TNBS mouse model. Compounds will be separated using HPLC and identified using MS and NMR spectroscopy.
Protease Activated Receptor 2 Antagonist In Inflammatory Disease
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$621,347.00
Summary
The immune response to infection involves a network of proteins that produce an inflammatory response. Sometimes this response is prolonged or uncontrolled and can lead to a large number of inflammatory and other diseases. We have discovered a class of drugs that can bind to a particular protein on the surface of human cells and control this inflammatory response. This property has the potential to treat a wide range of inflammatory and other diseases in humans.
Evaluation Of Orally Active Anti-inflammatory C5a Receptor Antagonists In A Transgenic Rat Motor Neurone Disease Model
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$533,578.00
Summary
Motor neurone disease is a rapidly progressive and incurable disease, usually ending in death within 3-5 years of diagnosis. The disease usually arrives without warning, and results in a progressive loss of muscle control. There is no effective treatment, and available drugs increase life span by a few weeks at best. There is evidence that the disease involves an inflammatory component, but available anti-inflammatory drugs are ineffective. We have developed a new class of anti-inflammatory drug ....Motor neurone disease is a rapidly progressive and incurable disease, usually ending in death within 3-5 years of diagnosis. The disease usually arrives without warning, and results in a progressive loss of muscle control. There is no effective treatment, and available drugs increase life span by a few weeks at best. There is evidence that the disease involves an inflammatory component, but available anti-inflammatory drugs are ineffective. We have developed a new class of anti-inflammatory drugs, known as C5a antagonists, and in preliminary experiments have shown they are therapeutically effective in a transgenic rat model of motor neurone disease. We propose to investigate in more detail how these drugs work in the rat model, and demonstrate that a specific inflammatory pathway, which we can now block, is responsible for some of the disease's progression. This work may lead to an entirely new class of drugs being used to treat patients with this drastic disease.Read moreRead less
Understanding The Interplay Between ER Stress And Inflammation
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$560,918.00
Summary
Chronic inflammatory diseases in the gut and lung affect hundreds of thousands of Australians. We have identified how inflammation causes a type of stress resulting in abnormal protein synthesis in the cells which make the barrier to microbes. Following an infection this process might be the trigger for chronic unresolving inflammatory disease. The further understanding of this process we seek in this project is likely to lead new approaches to treat common inflammatory diseases.
Prof McGuckin is studying common chronic diseases (gut and respiratory inflammatory diseases, arthritis, and obesity and diabetes) that are major contributors to poor health in the Australian community and are major contributors to healthcare expenditure. His research includes basic studies elucidating the biological basis of these diseases and then uses this new knowledge to develop new therapeutic approaches to treatment. The new therapeutic approaches will be tested in model systems as a prel ....Prof McGuckin is studying common chronic diseases (gut and respiratory inflammatory diseases, arthritis, and obesity and diabetes) that are major contributors to poor health in the Australian community and are major contributors to healthcare expenditure. His research includes basic studies elucidating the biological basis of these diseases and then uses this new knowledge to develop new therapeutic approaches to treatment. The new therapeutic approaches will be tested in model systems as a prelude to clinical trials.Read moreRead less
Faecal Microbiota Transplantation And Other Novel Therapeutic Microbial Manipulation Strategies In Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$645,205.00
Summary
There is growing interest in the role of microbial-based strategies including faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) for the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease. This project will develop such strategies into valid treatment options through a combination of clinical & basic science work including (1) characterising viral & fungal factors of importance, (2) evaluation of novel orally-delivered formulations of FMT, and (3) development of better defined, more reproducible microbial treatments.
Pathogenesis Of A New Mouse Model Of Ankylosing Spondylitis
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$682,820.00
Summary
Ankylosing spondylitis and Crohn's disease are autoimmune inflammatory diseases which cause long-term pain and deformity of joints, spine and bowel. Using a new mouse model of both diseases, we will study cells and processes involved in the initiation of disease, in order to discover new targets for prevention and treatment. The work will have importance for design of new therapies for human inflammatory spine and bowel diseases.
HMGB1: A Novel Player In The Pathogenesis Of Inflammatory Myositis?
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$84,800.00
Summary
The project aims to determine whether HMGB1, a pro-inflammatory molecule, plays a key role in the cause of inflammatory myositis, an extremely disabling muscle condition characterised by progressive weakness.