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Research Topic : Metabolic dysfunction
Australian State/Territory : SA
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  • Funded Activity

    Inflammatory Cytokines As Causal Agents In Peri-conception Programming Of Offspring Health

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $604,046.00
    Summary
    Events at conception set the trajectory of fetal developmental that will determine health of children after birth and in later life. Susceptibility to obesity and metabolic conditions is established at this very early time. This project will define the molecular signals affecting the embryo in the event of maternal or paternal infection, diet and stress. The results will help us devise health advice for intending parents to improve child health and help prevent onset of metabolic disorders.
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    Funded Activity

    Linking Place To Metabolic Syndrome Via Behavioural And Psychological Antecedents: Levers For Public Health Intervention

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $295,135.00
    Summary
    This collaboration involves the SA Health Department and community partners in analyses of local data from a 10-year biomedical cohort to (i) identify features of residential areas that are related to the metabolic syndrome and (ii) assess the mechanism by which area features influence metabolic syndrome through effects on behavioural and psychosocial mediators. The knowledge generated will inform policy intervention via urban planning and public health actions to support healthful lifestyles.
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    Funded Activity

    Life! Diabetes Prevention Program: A Randomised Cluster Control Trial Of Its Efficacy And Cost Effectiveness

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $866,066.00
    Summary
    Type 2 diabetes is a great and growing epidemic, and Australia's largest public health challenge. Life! is a diabetes prevention program for 25,000 Victorians. This proposal will look at its efficacy, effectiveness and cost effectiveness so that more improvements can be made.
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    Active Funded Activity

    Discovery Early Career Researcher Award - Grant ID: DE220100403

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $468,582.00
    Summary
    Defining how gut bacteria regulate metabolism: a role for gut serotonin. This project aims to understand how serotonin-producing cells in the gut interact with gut bacteria (the microbiome), using a combination of cells in culture and live germ-free and genetically modified mice. This project expects to generate new knowledge regarding cellular interactions that underlie important physiological pathways, such as the control of blood glucose and fat storage. The intended outcomes of this project .... Defining how gut bacteria regulate metabolism: a role for gut serotonin. This project aims to understand how serotonin-producing cells in the gut interact with gut bacteria (the microbiome), using a combination of cells in culture and live germ-free and genetically modified mice. This project expects to generate new knowledge regarding cellular interactions that underlie important physiological pathways, such as the control of blood glucose and fat storage. The intended outcomes of this project are to identify how gut bacteria communicate with serotonin-producing cells to regulate metabolism, and whether diet acts via a gut microbiome-serotonin axis to impact physiology. The expected benefit of this project will be to provide a new understanding of highly complex physiological systems that regulate our health.
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    Funded Activity

    Testing The Behavioural And Psychosocial Mechanisms Underlying Geographic Variation In Metabolic Syndrome

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $415,457.00
    Summary
    This study seeks to assess the mechanisms that explain the link between residential area features and the metabolic syndrome (obesity and high blood pressure, lipids and glucose), related to cardiometabolic diseases. There is more metabolic syndrome in disadvantaged areas but the reasons for this have not been empirically established. We will evaluate behavioural and psychosocialmechanisms that might independently and jointly explain the association between place and metabolic syndrome.
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