Bioactive Peptides as Pharmacological Tools and Novel Drug Leads. Bioactive peptides are produced by all organisms and play numerous critical physiological roles, including in cellular communication, host defence and capture of prey. Peptides have huge potential as tools for studying roles of signalling pathways and as novel drugs due to their high affinity and selectivity for various therapeutically relevant targets. However their use has been limited by poor in vivo stability. This project is ....Bioactive Peptides as Pharmacological Tools and Novel Drug Leads. Bioactive peptides are produced by all organisms and play numerous critical physiological roles, including in cellular communication, host defence and capture of prey. Peptides have huge potential as tools for studying roles of signalling pathways and as novel drugs due to their high affinity and selectivity for various therapeutically relevant targets. However their use has been limited by poor in vivo stability. This project is focused on studying structural features of a range of peptides and their contributions to both activity and to resistance against degradation, with the aim to develop stabilised bioactive peptide sequences for in vivo applications, allowing the full potential of peptides as drugs to be realised.Read moreRead less
Structural investigations into the regulation of programmed cell death. One in three men and one in four women in Australia will develop cancer by the age of 75 at current incidence rates. At its heart, cancer is a disease of uncontrolled cell proliferation. One of the body's main defence mechanisms against excess cell proliferation is Programmed Cell Death, a process which becomes dysfunctional in cancer cells. This work will provide three dimensional images of the machinery that controls Progr ....Structural investigations into the regulation of programmed cell death. One in three men and one in four women in Australia will develop cancer by the age of 75 at current incidence rates. At its heart, cancer is a disease of uncontrolled cell proliferation. One of the body's main defence mechanisms against excess cell proliferation is Programmed Cell Death, a process which becomes dysfunctional in cancer cells. This work will provide three dimensional images of the machinery that controls Programmed Cell Death. This information is critical for the development of drugs designed to re-initiate Programmed Cell Death in cancer cells.Read moreRead less
Structural and functional characterisation of compounds that inhibit the malarial aminopeptidases. Malaria is the world's most prevalent parasitic disease. Due to the rapid spread of drug resistant parasites there is a need to develop new antimalarial drugs. In this proposal we will characterise new targets and novel methods of inhibition that will form the basis of a new mechanism for antimalarial drugs.
Investigating the intercellular trafficking of proteins and RNA and its relevance to neurodegenerative diseases. Alzheimer's and prion diseases are neurodegenerative disorders associated with protein misfolding. This project brings together similar features of these diseases using novel cell- and animal-based studies to develop a greater understanding of the molecular basis of these disorders.