Role Of Adhesion Molecules In Autoimmune Vasculitis
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$377,036.00
Summary
Lupus is a disease which causes inflammation and pain throughout the body. The inflammation is caused by white blood cells attacking the lining of blood vessels in tissues. The aim of this project is to understand the reasons why these white blood cells attack the blood vessel lining. This process is impossible to study in humans. However, there is a strain of mouse which is affected by a disease which is very similar to human lupus. This disease occurs spontaneously in these mice. Using a micro ....Lupus is a disease which causes inflammation and pain throughout the body. The inflammation is caused by white blood cells attacking the lining of blood vessels in tissues. The aim of this project is to understand the reasons why these white blood cells attack the blood vessel lining. This process is impossible to study in humans. However, there is a strain of mouse which is affected by a disease which is very similar to human lupus. This disease occurs spontaneously in these mice. Using a microscope, it is possible to study the tiny blood vessels which are affected by this disease in these mice . Under the microscope, it is possible to see the white blood cells as they undergo the process of attacking the blood vessel lining. Visualizing this attack then allows us to study it and determine which molecules are important in causing this damaging inflammatory response. Specifically I will examine diseased blood vessels in the skin and brain of these mice, two of the tissues most dramatically affected by this disease. This information should help us gain an increased understanding of lupus as it affects humans.Read moreRead less
Elucidating The Mechanisms Of Action Of And Resistance To Endoperoxide Antimalarials
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$716,755.00
Summary
Artemisinin-based antimalarials (ARTs) save hundreds of thousands of lives every year. Unfortunately resistance of P. falciparum to ART is now emerging in South East Asia and it is critical to know how and why. We will determine what is different about resistant parasites and will develop assays to monitor drug resistance in the field. We have found that the immature form of the malaria parasite is more resistant to ARTs, which helps explain resistance. We will build on this to develop new targe ....Artemisinin-based antimalarials (ARTs) save hundreds of thousands of lives every year. Unfortunately resistance of P. falciparum to ART is now emerging in South East Asia and it is critical to know how and why. We will determine what is different about resistant parasites and will develop assays to monitor drug resistance in the field. We have found that the immature form of the malaria parasite is more resistant to ARTs, which helps explain resistance. We will build on this to develop new targetted treatments.Read moreRead less
The Structural Basis Of Direction Selectivity In The Retina
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$401,705.00
Summary
The retina is part of the central nervous system and there are almost one hundred types of retinal neurons which process visual information before it is passed up the optic nerve to the brain. This project examines how some of these neurons are wired together to form a simple neuronal circuit that detects the direction of a moving object. The elucidation of the cellular mechanisms of direction selectivity will provide an important paradigm of complex processing by simple neuronal circuits, with ....The retina is part of the central nervous system and there are almost one hundred types of retinal neurons which process visual information before it is passed up the optic nerve to the brain. This project examines how some of these neurons are wired together to form a simple neuronal circuit that detects the direction of a moving object. The elucidation of the cellular mechanisms of direction selectivity will provide an important paradigm of complex processing by simple neuronal circuits, with direct relevance to information processing in other parts of the central nervous system. In particular, the project may provide strong evidence for two neuronal strategies that may be of general significance. First, information may be processed at a very local level, which would greatly increase the computational power of a single neuron. Second, neurons may make selective contact with only some processes of an input neuron, which would require novel mechanisms for producing the necessary specificity.Read moreRead less
Spatial Arrangement And Three-dimensional Structure Of Human Centromeres
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$283,000.00
Summary
Centromeres occur at the main constriction of chromosomes. They allow duplicated chromosomes to divide, control cell division and are involved in the control of gene expression. Faulty centromeres are found in many types of cancer and in other genetic diseases. They are also implicated in extra-chromosome disorders such as Down syndrome. Centromeres have a different structure to the rest of the chromosome and it is this structure we wish to study. We want to see how centromere DNA folds up tight ....Centromeres occur at the main constriction of chromosomes. They allow duplicated chromosomes to divide, control cell division and are involved in the control of gene expression. Faulty centromeres are found in many types of cancer and in other genetic diseases. They are also implicated in extra-chromosome disorders such as Down syndrome. Centromeres have a different structure to the rest of the chromosome and it is this structure we wish to study. We want to see how centromere DNA folds up tightly at the centromere. We also want to find out why centromeres locate in certain regions of the nucleus, because this may influence how the centromere works and how they regulate genes. Human centromeres come in many sizes and forms; by looking at a wide range of human centromeres, common structural and spatial properties will emerge. We have discovered very small centromeres - neocentromeres - which are much easier to study than other centromeres. We have used these centromeres to construct human minichromosomes, which we believe represent the main, all-human way forward to treat people with gene therapy. One way to help us achieve our aims is to stretch out centromeres in a controlled way to make it easier to visualise their structure. Our tools will be antibodies, fluorescently-labelled proteins and high resolution microscopes. These include an electron microscope, and microscopes that can produce optical sections and in turn a 3D image. One of these is the confocal laser scanning microscope; the other involves removal of out-of-focus light from images using deconvolution software to achieve the same goal. We will detect different centromere proteins with different fluorochromes for fluorescence microscopes and different sizes of gold particles for the electron microscope. Using these microscopes we have already been able to find out where one of our neocentromeres is located within the nucleus. We have also started to look at centromeres with the electron microscope.Read moreRead less
Flaviviruses Must Come Of Age: Design Of Stable, Mature Particles By Structural Vaccinology
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$1,149,487.00
Summary
We have established a powerful toolset combining advanced structural biology and rapid virus engineering that allows us investigate the assembly of flaviviruses in novel ways. This project will integrate these approaches to investigate the role of new ligands that we have identified in the structure of medically-relevant flaviviruses including dengue virus and delineate a novel maturation path for flaviviruses, which will be used to design safer and more effective flavivirus vaccines.
Breaking Malaria's Lethal Grip: Targeting The Assembly Of An Adhesive Complex On Infected Red Blood Cells
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$817,426.00
Summary
The malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum, infects the red blood cells of its human victims. It causes them to stick to blood vessel walls in the brain, causing severe cerebral complications and death. Adhesion is mediated by a Velcro-like protein that is presented at the red blood cell surface. This project will fully elucidate the pathway for trafficking of the adhesion protein to the red blood cell surface with a view to finding new ways of interfering with malaria disease.
Architecture Of The Hendra Virus Nucleocapsid And Implications For Replication
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$342,108.00
Summary
Hendra virus causes sporadic fatal outbreaks in horses, which may result in human deaths through direct contact with infected animals. The unanticipated surge of Hendra cases since mid-2011, the broad host range of the virus and the discovery of other related viruses worldwide highlight the epidemic potential of hendra-related paramyxoviruses. To improve our preparedness against paramyxoviruses, this Project aims at determining the structure of the viral replication machinery.
Shedding Light Onto The Structural Secrets Inside Pluripotent Stem Cells In Real-time
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$555,890.00
Summary
To meet the challenges of life, a human being requires 30 trillion cells, a blue whale a staggering 100 quadrillion. This vast diversity of cells derives from very few unspecialised cells that can become any cell type of the adult body - the pluripotent stem cells. We will use innovative imaging techniques to uncover the cellular architecture of pluripotency to provide critical insights into how the various parts of a versatile cell, its cytoskeleton and organelles, are assembled in real-time.