Prof Parton is a cell biologist studying how the plasma membrane functions in health and in disease. These studies have provided new insights into potential vehicles that can be used to introduce therapeutic agents into cells.
The regulation to early T cell signalling is a critical step in immune responses. Superimposed onto the biochemical pathways is a spatial organization that defines the immunological synapse. My research aims to map the principles of the spatial organization on the molecular scale to identify how lipids could unbalance the dynamic signalling equilibrium, for example in obese patients. To achieve this goal, my research group has developed single molecule microscopy approaches.
Regulation Of The Signalling Efficiency Of The T Cell Antigen Receptor
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$456,557.00
Summary
An immune response starts with activation of the T cell antigen receptor (TCR). How T cell receptor signalling begins, however, is not well understood. We have developed a novel imaging approach that allows us to directly observe what happens after an antigen binds to the receptor. The research will provide mechanistic insights into how T cells sense and discriminate antigens. This knowledge will aid the development of cancer immunotherapies and vaccines.
Blimp-1: A Master Regulator Of B-lymphocyte Terminal Differentiation?
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$154,250.00
Summary
B lymphocytes are the antibody-producing cells of the immune system. They are formed in the bone marrow, and are exported to the body to circulate, searching for signs of infection. These circulating cells are not fully mature, but when they encounter an invader, with the help of other immune cells, they change. Most become antibody-producing cells, the final, operational cells of the B cell lineage. A few cells are set aside as memory cells that can rapidly become antibody-producing cells shoul ....B lymphocytes are the antibody-producing cells of the immune system. They are formed in the bone marrow, and are exported to the body to circulate, searching for signs of infection. These circulating cells are not fully mature, but when they encounter an invader, with the help of other immune cells, they change. Most become antibody-producing cells, the final, operational cells of the B cell lineage. A few cells are set aside as memory cells that can rapidly become antibody-producing cells should the same infection occur again. This is the basis of vaccination. The secretion of antibodies into the serum (that can bind to and eliminate an invader anywhere in the body) is the main function of B lymphocytes. This project will study the genes that allow B cells to become antibody-secreting cells (called ASC). We will focus on the gene for Blimp-1, the B lymphocyte-induced maturation protein, which has been called the master regulator of ASC formation. This claim is based largely on circumstantial evidence, and has not been directly tested genetically. We have made a mouse in which the Blimp-1 gene has been altered so that we can disable it in carefully controlled way. Using this knockout mouse, we can directly test the requirement for Blimp-1 in ASC and in other cell types. We will study these animals, using many tests that can accurately measure the behaviour of isolated cells, or the immune responses of the animals. We will examine other genes that are thought to be required for ASC to form or to perform their work, to see if loss of Blimp-1 (a known gene silencer) has impacted on these other genes. In this way, we expect to identify the genetic program that drives a B cell to become a mature ASC. Using this knowledge, we hope eventually to be able to study diseases of ASC in humans (as occur in allergy, asthma, rheumatoid arthritis and leukaemia). This information may also be used to improve the outcome of vaccination.Read moreRead less