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Research Topic : Lentivirus
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Respiratory Diseases (2)
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  • Funded Activity

    Lentiviral Vector Delivery Of Short Hairpin RNA Targeting The PrPc Gene

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $55,609.00
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    Funded Activity

    MicroRNA Regulation Of Fear-related Memory

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $490,317.00
    Summary
    Emotionally traumatic experiences are well remembered and, in some instances, frequent reminders of these events can lead to the development of fear-related anxiety disorders such as phobia or post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The experiments outlined in this proposal will examine how a novel epigenetic mechanism of gene regulation contributes to the transition from the retrieval of a fear memory to its inhibition through a process called extinction.
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    Funded Activity

    Ataxia-Telangiectasia Mutated (ATM) Antisense CDNA Radiosensitisation Of Gliomas Using New Lentiviral Vectors.

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $44,329.00
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    Funded Activity

    Role Of The Area Postrema In Determining The Increased Cardiac Sympathetic Nerve Activity In Heart Failure

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $489,912.00
    Summary
    In heart failure there is a large increase in sympathetic nerve activity to the heart that has detrimental effects on the heart and can induce sudden death. The areas in the brain causing the increased nerve activity are unknown. We will investigate the role of the area postrema, which is a window to the brain for hormones in the blood. We have evidence that this brain site maintains the high level of nerve activity in heart failure, possibly stimulated by hormones circulating in the blood.
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    Funded Activity

    Lentivirus-mediated Gene Transfer To The Eye

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $519,295.00
    Summary
    Blindness exerts major physical, emotional and economic constraints and hardship upon the sufferer. Transplant surgery can restore vision to many people who are visually impaired as a result of disease affecting the front of the eye. The transplant itself is taken from the eye of a person who has died, after consent from the donor's family. Our goal is to improve the outcome for patients who require transplants of tissue to the front of the eye, in order to restore their vision or to relieve pai .... Blindness exerts major physical, emotional and economic constraints and hardship upon the sufferer. Transplant surgery can restore vision to many people who are visually impaired as a result of disease affecting the front of the eye. The transplant itself is taken from the eye of a person who has died, after consent from the donor's family. Our goal is to improve the outcome for patients who require transplants of tissue to the front of the eye, in order to restore their vision or to relieve pain. Our work is predicated on the finding that unwanted immune responses are the major cause of graft failure in such patients. The recipient recognizes the grafted tissue as being foreign, and rejects it. Treatment with conventional systemic drugs appears to hold little promise for further improvements in outcome, but gene therapy applied to the donor tissue may provide a safe and effective way of reducing transplant failure. Gene therapy can be undertaken on the donor tissue in the laboratory, prior to transplantation surgery. In this project, we will assess the suitability of a new method of modifying the transplant. All of the work will be performed on the laboratory bench, or in experimental animals.
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    Funded Activity

    Cell-selective Deletion Of Brain AT1A Receptors In Hypertension: Effect On Blood Pressure, Increased ROS Production And Inflammation.

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $578,268.00
    Summary
    Angiotensin is important for normal regulation of blood pressure but is also involved in cardiovascular diseases. Interruption of angiotensin’s actions is a common treatment of these diseases. Functional deletion of angiotensin receptors decreases blood pressure. Surprisingly the site(s) in the body responsible for this decrease are not known. We will examine the role of angiotensin receptors in the brain in the control of blood pressure in health and in cardiovascular disease.
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    Funded Activity

    Correction And Measurement Of The Basic Defects In Cystic Fibrosis

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $929,335.00
    Summary
    Airway disease caused by the genetic disease cystic fibrosis (CF) cannot currently be prevented or cured. Current treatments (other than lung transplant) can only slow the inevitable decline in lung health. Early death from lung failure occurs for many with CF. We have developed a gene transfer technique to introduce the corrective gene (CFTR) into CF-diseased airway cells. We have used airways in mice to test and develop this method, to determine if long-lasting genetic correction of the airway .... Airway disease caused by the genetic disease cystic fibrosis (CF) cannot currently be prevented or cured. Current treatments (other than lung transplant) can only slow the inevitable decline in lung health. Early death from lung failure occurs for many with CF. We have developed a gene transfer technique to introduce the corrective gene (CFTR) into CF-diseased airway cells. We have used airways in mice to test and develop this method, to determine if long-lasting genetic correction of the airway cells can be achieved. The gene is introduced into the airway as a single small dose of special delivery-particles (vector) that have been built using highly-modified components of the HIV-1 virus. If ultimately successful in humans with CF, the disease should be halted, or even cured. Our recent work indicates that we have been able to insert the gene into airway progenitor cells, confirming our hypothesis that long-lasting gene expression can be achieved this way. To know if the method would be safe and effective in humans, we must now test the technique in sheep (as a human-size lung) and in marmosets (as a human-like lung) before clinical trials could be considered. We will monitor animals for up to 3 years to be sure the effect of the gene is truly long-lasting, and we will document how the gene-transfer vector disappears from the body. We have also discovered a new way to examine the detail of the very thin fluid layer on the airway surface. This fluid is too shallow in CF airway (allowing bacteria to stick and start disease) and so a successful gene therapy should return the fluid to it's proper depth. This method uses X-ray light from a synchrotron, and we expect it will work without the need to sacrifice animals to measure the airway surface. If successful it also has potential to be used much like a normal X-ray in humans with CF, to test if a gene therapy has worked.
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    Funded Activity

    Synchrotron X-ray Assessment Of Airway Surface Physiology For Cystic Fibrosis

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $778,228.00
    Summary
    We seek a cure or long-lasting therapy for the fatal airway disease in cystic fibrosis. Disease is caused by a shallow and dehydrated airway surface liquid (ASL), allowing bacteria to infect the lung. We can introduce a corrective gene into mouse airways where it can be effective for over 1 yr, but no fast, accurate and non-invasive measurement exists to test if treatments are successful. We will develop methods using synchrotron light to directly measure ASL depth changes in live mouse airways.
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    Showing 1-8 of 8 Funded Activites

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