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Australian State/Territory : VIC
Scheme : NHMRC Project Grants
Research Topic : Signalling pathways. Stem Cells
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  • Funded Activity

    Characterisation Of Human Embryonic Stem Cell Differentiation To Haematopoietic Progenitors And Stem Cells

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $638,856.00
    Summary
    Blood stem cells, which are found in the bone marrow, are currently used for treating human blood disorders including leukemia and lymphoma. However, for the majority of bone marrow transplant candidates, suitable donors cannot be found. Using embryonic stem cells, this project aims to define the conditions required to generate blood stem cells in the laboratory. The aim of the work is to provide a new source of blood stem cells that could be used in place of donor derived bone marrow.
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    Funded Activity

    Signalling Networks As Targets For Antibody Therapy In Glioma.

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $526,683.00
    Summary
    Antibodies are a major component of the bodies immune system that bind (i.e. stick) to foreign substances such as viruses. Once bound, these antibodies can activate other parts of the immune system, which help destroy the foreign substance. Analogous to the situation above, a number of institutions are testing antibodies that bind to cancer cells, in order to determine if they are able to destroy these cells. It is also possible to generate antibodies that bind to receptors on the surface of can .... Antibodies are a major component of the bodies immune system that bind (i.e. stick) to foreign substances such as viruses. Once bound, these antibodies can activate other parts of the immune system, which help destroy the foreign substance. Analogous to the situation above, a number of institutions are testing antibodies that bind to cancer cells, in order to determine if they are able to destroy these cells. It is also possible to generate antibodies that bind to receptors on the surface of cancer cells and block their function. If you target a receptor critical to the growth or survival of a cancer cell in this way, then swtiching-off this signal may inhibit tumor growth. In this proposal we plan to test a panel antibodies that recognize receptors important to the growth of brain cancer. Two of these antibodies have been generated and the other two will be made as part of this proposal. A key aspect of this proposal will be testing these antibodies in combination to determine how many receptors need to be targeted in order to get complete tumor regressions in animal models. Overall this work will help us identify new therapeutic strategies for the treatment of brain cancer. Finally, we will also analyze the way different receptors interact together in brain cancer cells.
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    Funded Activity

    Cytokine Signalling And Insulin Resistance In Obesity.

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $512,065.00
    Summary
    Western communities are experiencing an epidemic of obesity that is contributing to diabetes, heart disease, and premature death. This project is investigating why being overweight and obese causes diabetes. Improved understanding about how hormones regulates the body's storage and breakdown of fat and responsiveness to insulin will enable the development of new medicines for the treatment of obesity and the prevention of diabetes.
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    Funded Activity

    Impaired Bone Remodelling Leads To Failure Of Orthopaedic Prostheses

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $515,917.00
    Summary
    The failure of bone prostheses is becoming a major health problem. More than 26,000 hip, and an equal number of knee, replacements were performed in Australia in 2002 with the number increasing between 5%-10% each year for the previous 10 years. Disturbingly, the incidence of revision hip surgery in Australia is now more than 15%, meaning that, despite the impressive success of joint replacement surgery, a significant number of arthroplasties fail. It is becoming more common for young, active in .... The failure of bone prostheses is becoming a major health problem. More than 26,000 hip, and an equal number of knee, replacements were performed in Australia in 2002 with the number increasing between 5%-10% each year for the previous 10 years. Disturbingly, the incidence of revision hip surgery in Australia is now more than 15%, meaning that, despite the impressive success of joint replacement surgery, a significant number of arthroplasties fail. It is becoming more common for young, active individuals to receive joint replacement surgery to improve their quality of life. This, combined with increasing life expectancy, and the known higher rate of failure of joint replacements in younger patients, means that the morbidity of a failed replacement, and the mobidity and associated mortality of revision surgery, will become an increasingly important health issue, with a major impact upon health budgets. The overwhelming majority of hip and knee prostheses have metal or ceramic on polyethylene bearing surfaces. It is now apparent that most implants fail due to bone loss around them leading to loosening, and evidence is accumulating that polyethylene wear particles are a major contributing factor to this process. It is therefore vital that we obtain better understanding of the causes of implant failure in order to extend the life of these implants and this project is designed to do so.
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    Funded Activity

    Structural Studies On Cell Signalling Via The LIF Receptor And Gp130

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $453,943.00
    Summary
    The cytokines play important roles in the immune system during blood cell development and inflammation, and in nerve growth, bone remodeling, reproduction and heart development. Cell responses are initiated by a cytokine bringing together on the cell surface a receptor complex made up of multiple molecules. This project will investigate the atomic structure of the cell surface macromolecular complex, and hence the underlying mechanism by which cytokine signals are initiated.
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    Funded Activity

    Sonic Hedgehog Signalling In Barrett S Oesophagus

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $570,876.00
    Summary
    Barrett's oesophagus (BO) is a condition that arises in some patients with chronic reflux (heartburn) and increases the risk of developing cancer of the oesophagus. However, the exact mechanisms involved in its development are unknown. This project aims to investigate how a protein called sonic hedgehog might be involved using novel cell culturing techniques that allow us to model the growth of oesophageal tissue in the laboratory. This could lead to development of new therapies for treating BO.
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    Funded Activity

    Functions Of FZD7 In The Intestine And Colorectal Cancer

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $644,761.00
    Summary
    Wnt proteins are a family of signaling molecules that are critical for the function of normal and cancerous epithelial cells in the gut. However, the cell surface receptor that transmits Wnt signals is not known. Our research strongly implicates one Wnt receptor (FZD7). Here we test this using innovative mouse and cell line models. We wish to understand how Wnt-driven processes are activated. This knowledge will lead to novel avenues to block aberrant activation of Wnt signalling in cancer cells
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    Funded Activity

    Functional Suicide Of Selected Dendritic Cells By Cytochrome C: An In Vivo Model Lacking Cross-presentation

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $597,476.00
    Summary
    Certain white blood cells (dendritic cells) activate the immune system, especially its T cells. Infection of such cells elicits killer T cell responses. However not all infections infect dendritic cells. In such cases, the infectious material is eaten by dendritic cells and moved to certain areas within the cell. This process is called cross-presentation and how important it is during various diseases remains moot. We now have a model of testing this by eliminating these cross-presenting cells.
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    Funded Activity

    Immunoregulation In The Pathogenesis And Therapy Of Autoimmune Anti Myeloperoxidase Glomerulonephritis

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $283,880.00
    Summary
    Glomerulonephritis (GN) is a major health burden and crescentic GN is the most severe form. Most patients have autoantibodies to their own white blood cell ANCA, causing the disease. This study will use a mouse model of ANCA associated autoimmunity causing crescentic GN to define the normal mechanisms preventing the development of this disease (immunoregulation) and test the potential of new cell based therapies to prevent and treat the disease.
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    Funded Activity

    The Role Of IL-18 In Proliferative And Crescentic Glomerulonephritis

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $56,177.00
    Summary
    Inflammation of the small filters with the kidneys, known as glomerulonephritis, is the commonest cause of kidney failure in Australia. People whose kidneys have failed need either kidney dialysis or a kidney transplant. Our understanding of the immune events that cause glomerulonephritis is patchy. However, it is known that T cells are the directors of immune responses in the body and direct the immune response in glomerulonephritis. Chemical messengers known as cytokines direct the way T cells .... Inflammation of the small filters with the kidneys, known as glomerulonephritis, is the commonest cause of kidney failure in Australia. People whose kidneys have failed need either kidney dialysis or a kidney transplant. Our understanding of the immune events that cause glomerulonephritis is patchy. However, it is known that T cells are the directors of immune responses in the body and direct the immune response in glomerulonephritis. Chemical messengers known as cytokines direct the way T cells behave. One of these cytokines, known as interleukin-18, has been shown to stimulate T cells and other immune cells to induce inflammation that is helpful when the body is fighting infection but is harmful in immune diseases. This project will determine the role of interleukin-18 in glomerulonephritis by studying the way it talks to T cells and the mechanisms by which it incites inflammation in the kidney. Mice with glomerulonephritis will be treated by blocking the actions of interleukin-18 to discover whether interleukin-18 produced by the animal is important in kidney damage induced by glomerulonephritis, to understand the way in which this cytokine works and to assess whether blocking interleukin-18 could be a useful treatment for glomerulonephritis in humans. Current treatments for glomerulonephritis are often ineffective and have unwanted side effects. Knowledge of the way interleukin-18 participates in the immune response in glomerulonephritis may lead directly or indirectly to more effective and more targeted treatments for different forms of glomerulonephritis.
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