The Function Of Transcription Factor SCL In T Cell Development.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$504,750.00
Summary
SCL is a gene which is abnormally expressed in a large percentage of human T cell leukaemias. Mouse models that increase SCL levels have demonstrated that T cell maturation is abnormally affected by SCL. Thus, providing a clue as to how T cell leukemias arise. By utilising recombinant DNA technology we are now able to control SCL levels in T cell maturation. We can either increase the level of SCL using pharmacological reagents or we can genetically remove SCL from maturing T cells. This double- ....SCL is a gene which is abnormally expressed in a large percentage of human T cell leukaemias. Mouse models that increase SCL levels have demonstrated that T cell maturation is abnormally affected by SCL. Thus, providing a clue as to how T cell leukemias arise. By utilising recombinant DNA technology we are now able to control SCL levels in T cell maturation. We can either increase the level of SCL using pharmacological reagents or we can genetically remove SCL from maturing T cells. This double-edged approach will allow us to monitor the effects of SCL on maturing T cells with a precision that has never previously been achieved. Results from this approach will provide new insights into how T cell leukaemia develops and provide the foundation for new rational based treatments.Read moreRead less
Characterisation And Development Of Type-2 NKT Cells
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$853,885.00
Summary
Humans defend themselves from foreign pathogens by mounting a protective immune response. Type-2 NKT cells recognise foreign lipid molecules and play a key role in immunity. This project is designed to understand to how Type-2 NKT cells develop within the body, how they recognise lipid molecules and how they carry out their immune functions. This work will have important implications in understanding the role of NKT cells in human health and disease.
Delineating Immune Circuits For Innate And Adaptive Immune Protection
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$876,005.00
Summary
The immune system provides the essential frame-work to protect us against infection, disease and to heal tissues after trauma. This is achieved by a complex but elegant network of different types of white blood cells. Understanding the molecular wiring of these cells will provides fundamental insights to how the body fights pathogen infections and cancer and lays the foundation to therapeutic approaches to vaccination and disease treatments.
Discovery Of Novel T Cell Oncogenes By Using A Functional Retroviral CDNA Library Screen.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$692,470.00
Summary
T cells mature in an organ called the thymus which is located on top of the heart. Blood borne T cell precursors enter the thymus after being resident in the bone marrow. T cell leukaemia is a disease where a blood cell that is committed to becoming a T cell is blocked from maturing into a functional cell. Instead, the leukaemic immature T cell uncontrollably divides to make endless non-functional copies of itself. As a result, normal functional T cells are outcompteted and the immune system is ....T cells mature in an organ called the thymus which is located on top of the heart. Blood borne T cell precursors enter the thymus after being resident in the bone marrow. T cell leukaemia is a disease where a blood cell that is committed to becoming a T cell is blocked from maturing into a functional cell. Instead, the leukaemic immature T cell uncontrollably divides to make endless non-functional copies of itself. As a result, normal functional T cells are outcompteted and the immune system is crippled. Patients generally die due to opportunistic infection. The molecular causes of T cell leukaemia are slowly being discovered. Up to 50% of all human T cell leukaemias overexpress SCL-TAL-1. Other T cell leukaemia-causing genes (oncogenes) include Ras and Notch. Current leukaemia treatments include chemotherapy and bone marrow transplants but even these fail ~30% of the time. Consequently, all T cell oncogenes need to be discovered so that disease-specific treatments can be generated. This proposal will utlise a functional retroviral cDNA library screen to uncover novel T cell lineage commitment genes and T cell oncogenes. This will be accomplished by constructing a coloured [GFP] cDNA library (a library of genes) that will be transfected (inserted) into immature T cells that cannot develop down the T cell pathway owing to the lack of a crucial gene (Rag-1). The T cell oncogene Ras and the T cell lineage commitment gene Notch can move cells past the Rag-1 block. If there is a gene in the cDNA library that can compensate for the lack of Rag-1 and allow the cells to mature we will detect it using high speed flow cytometryic cell sorting (like sieving weevils from flour very quickly). Once we find this cell we will isolate the gene using the colour tag. The potential oncogenes uncovered will provide the foundation for next generation drug development that targets each leukaemia based on its cause.Read moreRead less
The human immune system comprises many different types of cells that can detect foreign molecules. My research will lead the way to understanding some of the most abundant, yet least well understood, cells within this system, collectively known as 'unconventional T cells'. This knowledge is essential to optimally and efficiently manipulate the immune system in health and disease.
Following The T Cell Repertoire Over The Human Life Course
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$473,159.00
Summary
T cells are critical to human health being our second and last line against infectious disease and cancer. However, we know very little about how this important immune compartment operates on a top-down scale. This project will use new technology to resolve this immune compartment to high detail. We will then use this new method to track the T cell compartment from the first years of life and across years of adult life to see how this vital immune compartment evolves along the human life course.
The Role Of NOD Proteins In T Cell Development And Function.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$349,590.00
Summary
The long-term goal of this project is to understand the role of NOD proteins in the T cell branch of the immune system. Distorted T cell responses can lead to over-activation and autoimmunity, or host susceptibility to microbial infection. This project aims to provide a deeper understanding of NOD proteins in chronic inflammatory diseases like Crohn’s disease, where altered NOD signaling may generate intrinsic T cell defects, in addition to altered microbial sensing and host protection by the in ....The long-term goal of this project is to understand the role of NOD proteins in the T cell branch of the immune system. Distorted T cell responses can lead to over-activation and autoimmunity, or host susceptibility to microbial infection. This project aims to provide a deeper understanding of NOD proteins in chronic inflammatory diseases like Crohn’s disease, where altered NOD signaling may generate intrinsic T cell defects, in addition to altered microbial sensing and host protection by the innate immune system.Read moreRead less
The Role Of C-Cbl In The Regulation Of T Cell Signalling And Development
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$527,250.00
Summary
c-Cbl is a member of a multi-adaptor protein family that can interact with many signalling proteins via its different domains. Cbl proteins have been implicated as negative regulators of signalling pathways involving protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs). PTKs are enzymes which add phosphate groups to tyrosine residues on other protein substrates, and the process of tyrosine phosphorylation acts as a potent biochemical switch to turn signalling cascades on and off. Studies of Cbl-deficient (knockout) ....c-Cbl is a member of a multi-adaptor protein family that can interact with many signalling proteins via its different domains. Cbl proteins have been implicated as negative regulators of signalling pathways involving protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs). PTKs are enzymes which add phosphate groups to tyrosine residues on other protein substrates, and the process of tyrosine phosphorylation acts as a potent biochemical switch to turn signalling cascades on and off. Studies of Cbl-deficient (knockout) mice show that Cbl proteins are important in regulating the development of, and signalling by, cells of the immune system called T cells. c-Cbl knockout mice show greatly enhanced PTK-signalling responses and deregulated activity of a PTK called ZAP-70. The mechanism of this is not known, but analysis of a c-Cbl mutant mouse shows that this is not dependent on the tyrosine kinase binding (TKB) domain of c-Cbl. Therefore other functional domains of Cbl must be responsible for the increased signalling response in the c-Cbl knockout mouse. One candidate is the highly conserved RING finger domain which can modify Cbl-associated PTKs by addition of ubiquitin molecules. Ubiquitination of a protein often, but not always, leads to its degradation, and this could be how Cbl controls the strength and duration of signalling in T cells. However there may be other functions of the conserved RING finger yet to be identified. c-Cbl itself is prominently and very rapidly modified by tyrosine phosphorylation on tyrosine 737 by the Fyn PTK following T cell activation, but the role of this modification is not known and could also be essential for c-Cbl s function in T cells. We plan to investigate the roles of the RING finger domain and Fyn-mediated tyrosine phosphorylation in c-Cbl regulation of T cell signalling by analyzing knock-in mice that carry specific mutations disrupting the RING finger or tyrosine 737 in the c-Cbl gene.Read moreRead less