This project will unleash the potential of peptide drugs by overcoming their final barrier to widespread use, their synthesis. Plants naturally produce ultra-stable cyclic peptides. We will co-opt their machinery to produce in seeds, two drug leads that have potential as treatments for prostate cancer and chronic neuropathic pain. As an �organic� drug source, seeds have the potential to improve patient compliance and low-tech production systems will allow technology transfer to third-world natio ....This project will unleash the potential of peptide drugs by overcoming their final barrier to widespread use, their synthesis. Plants naturally produce ultra-stable cyclic peptides. We will co-opt their machinery to produce in seeds, two drug leads that have potential as treatments for prostate cancer and chronic neuropathic pain. As an �organic� drug source, seeds have the potential to improve patient compliance and low-tech production systems will allow technology transfer to third-world nations.Read moreRead less
Crystallographic Studies Of Non-canonical Peptides Binding To MHC Class I Molecules.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$489,750.00
Summary
Virus infected cells and cancer cells are recognised and eliminated from our body by specialised cells called T-cell lymphocytes. This recognition process is the key step in the immune response and some fundamental questions in immunology are centred on the nature of this process. At the molecular level, the recognition is mediated by the specific interaction between proteins on the surface of the cells. On the T-cell lymphocyte, the T-cell receptor (TCR) binds specifically to a protein called t ....Virus infected cells and cancer cells are recognised and eliminated from our body by specialised cells called T-cell lymphocytes. This recognition process is the key step in the immune response and some fundamental questions in immunology are centred on the nature of this process. At the molecular level, the recognition is mediated by the specific interaction between proteins on the surface of the cells. On the T-cell lymphocyte, the T-cell receptor (TCR) binds specifically to a protein called the MHC on the surface of the target cell. The target cell can be a cancer cell, or an infected antigen presenting cell (specialised cells in the body which present protein fragments (peptides) on their surface via MHC). The structure of a TCR and TCR-MHC have been solved in terms of the shape of the molecules at atomic resolution, bringing detailed information on how these two proteins interact with each other. In this proposal the structural basis of antigen presentation and recognition in cell-mediated immunity will be determined by three-dimensional structures of different peptides on MHC by x-ray crystallography. Cell surface antigen presentation by MHC molecules is crucial for initiating the cellular immune response against invading pathogens and cancer. This proposal encompasses a combined biochemical, immunological, and biophysical approach to understand the range of ligands which can bind to MHC which are subsequently recognised by the TCR. To understand the antigenic properties of modified peptides at the structure level, the x-ray structure of MHC with modified bound synthetic peptides will be determined.Read moreRead less