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The Intracellular Replicative Niche Of Legionella Species And Coxiella Burnetii.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$529,632.00
Summary
This project will study how the bacterium that causes Legionnaire's disease survives and grows inside human cells. We have identified new bacterial proteins that allow Legionella to manipulate the normal host cell processes involved in killing an invading bacterium. Similar proteins are also present in the closely related organism, Coxiella, which causes Q-fever. By determining how these proteins act, this work may result in new treatments for Legionnaire's disease and related infections.
Regulation Of Pulmonary Immune Responses To Subunit Vaccines Against Tuberculosis
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$509,202.00
Summary
Tuberculosis (TB) remains an enormous health problem world-wide. Improving the effectiveness of anti-TB vaccines is essential for its control. The first approach to improving subunit TB vaccines will be to manipulate the cellular immune response to the vaccine by increasing the positive cytokine signals, or reducing inhibitory effects on the immune response. The second approach is to develop new subunit vaccines to deliver to the lung in order to increase the potency of the protective response.
Investigation Of The Association Between Chlamydial Infection And Asthma In Different Age Groups
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$382,117.00
Summary
Asthma is a common and severe lung disease that results from inflammation due to allergy and has symptoms of breathing difficulties, wheezing, chest tightness, and cough. Asthma is clinically characterised by the presence of certain types of responses from the immune system. We are looking for ways of preventing and curing asthma. There is a well known link between certain types of bacteria, called Chlamydia, and asthma but it is not known whether people develop asthma first and then get chlamyd ....Asthma is a common and severe lung disease that results from inflammation due to allergy and has symptoms of breathing difficulties, wheezing, chest tightness, and cough. Asthma is clinically characterised by the presence of certain types of responses from the immune system. We are looking for ways of preventing and curing asthma. There is a well known link between certain types of bacteria, called Chlamydia, and asthma but it is not known whether people develop asthma first and then get chlamydial infection or are infected first and this leads to asthma. We have shown that if adult mice are exposed to an allergen during chlamydial infection then the asthma gets worse. However, if newborn mice have a chlamydial infection then asthma is prevented when they are adults. These are preliminary observations, which we need to expand and understand the immune mechanisms that result in infection and allergy so that we can target them with antibiotics or vaccines. We will investigate how the timing of chlamydial infection relative to exposure to allergens (before, during or after) affects the development of asthma in adult mice. Newborns and young children have different immune systems to adults, so we will investigate what effects the infection of young mice has on infection and allergy later in life. We will also test a new vaccine we have developed against chlamydial infection to see if it can prevent chlamydial infection and infection-induced asthma. We will then examine if there is the same association between chlamydial infection and asthma in human asthmatics that present to hospital with exacerbation of their asthma. This work will help us develop new strategies for preventing and curing asthma, which may vary in different age groups. We will identify whether prevention of chlamydial infection by vaccination (or antibiotics) can be used to prevent and treat asthma.Read moreRead less
The aim of this project is to provide a better understanding of the mechanisms underlying the development of gas gangrene, an often fatal disease of particular significance to elderly and diabetic patients, who are particularly susceptible following injury, or surgery, or in some cases when suffering from colon cancer. Although research has been carried out on this disease for many years prompt surgical removal of the infected tissue, often including amputation of a limb, is still commonly used ....The aim of this project is to provide a better understanding of the mechanisms underlying the development of gas gangrene, an often fatal disease of particular significance to elderly and diabetic patients, who are particularly susceptible following injury, or surgery, or in some cases when suffering from colon cancer. Although research has been carried out on this disease for many years prompt surgical removal of the infected tissue, often including amputation of a limb, is still commonly used to ensure the patient's survival. This project involves the study of the two bacteria that are the major causes of the disease. We aim to find out how the bacteria mediate the disease, in particular to determine which toxic factors produced by the bacteria are involved. The normal host response to a bacterial infection is a rapid influx of white blood cells to the infected tissue, which is part of the normal inflammatory response. These cells engulf and degrade the bacteria, clearing the infection. However, a major characteristic of gas gangrene pathology is that very few white blood cells infiltrate the infected tissue. We aim to determine why the host fails to mount an inflammatory response to this bacterial infection. We will achieve this objective by developing a better understanding of the role of the bacterial toxins in the development of this morbid disease. It is hoped the results from this study will enable the development of more effective therapeutic and prophylactic treatments for this disease and also provide a foundation for studies into the modulation of the host response by other bacterial species.Read moreRead less
Mechanism Of Exacerbations In Cystic Fibrosis Lung Disease
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$254,876.00
Summary
Cystic Fibrosis lung disease is characterised by infeciton with a bug called Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Patients ultimately die in their mid-30's as a result of this infection, but lung decline is accelerated by episodes of exacerbation when patients cough up large volumes of mucky sputum. We are studying the casue of exacerbations by looking at bacterial behaviour and the response of the immune system. We will use this information to try and develop early warning signals and better treatments.
Two-component Regulatory Systems Involved In Toxin Production In Clostridium Perfringens
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$78,500.00
Summary
The bacterium studied in this project causes gas gangrene, a severe and often fatal infection of traumatic or surgical wounds. The project involves the detailed analysis of the process by which this bacterium controls the production of the toxic proteins that are required for disease to occur. The emphasis is to determine the mechanism by which this regulatory process is mediated. Research in this laboratory has identified two genes whose protein products are the key links in this regulatory net ....The bacterium studied in this project causes gas gangrene, a severe and often fatal infection of traumatic or surgical wounds. The project involves the detailed analysis of the process by which this bacterium controls the production of the toxic proteins that are required for disease to occur. The emphasis is to determine the mechanism by which this regulatory process is mediated. Research in this laboratory has identified two genes whose protein products are the key links in this regulatory network. The objectives of the project will be to determine which part of the regulatory protein interacts with the target toxin gene, to start to determine the structure of the regulatory protein so that the precise biochemical mechanism of action can be ascertained, to determine the components of the DNA target that are essential for binding activity, and to identify other genes that are involved in the regulation of both the toxin genes and other genes that may be implicated in the disease process. These studies will be facilitated by the availability of the complete genome sequence of this pathogenic bacterium. The project will make a major contribution to our knowledge of how bacteria that cause disease are able to control the production of the toxins that are critical to the disease process. If we are to learn how to more effectively control and treat bacterial infections then it is very important that we understand the complex regulatory networks that tell bacteria when to produce its disease-causing products.Read moreRead less
Expression And Function Of Fatty Acid Binding Proteins In Asthmatic Airway Epithelium
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$226,500.00
Summary
Asthma is an inflammatory disease of the lungs that affects over 10% of all Australians. It ranges in severity from mild to life-threatening. Although a number of drugs are currently available for the treatment of asthma, there are many people whose asthma does not respond very well to treatment. We have recently identified a gene called aP2 that is important in the development of asthma. Drugs targeted against this gene may be very useful in the treatment of asthma. In this project, we aim to u ....Asthma is an inflammatory disease of the lungs that affects over 10% of all Australians. It ranges in severity from mild to life-threatening. Although a number of drugs are currently available for the treatment of asthma, there are many people whose asthma does not respond very well to treatment. We have recently identified a gene called aP2 that is important in the development of asthma. Drugs targeted against this gene may be very useful in the treatment of asthma. In this project, we aim to understand how aP2 is turned on during asthma, and how it contributes to disease development. This information will be essential for designing optimal strategies for drug targeting of the aP2 pathway in asthma.Read moreRead less
Evolution And Function Of A Novel Lateral Flagellar Locus, Flag-2, In Pathogenic Escherichia Coli
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$465,158.00
Summary
This project will study how the bacteria that cause infant diarrhoea colonize the intestine and induce disease. We have identified a novel genetic region that allows E. coli to survive and persist in the intestine. Similar genes are also present in closely related organisms. This project will help us to undestand how new diseases evolve and emerge and may lead to the development of new vaccines to protect against infant diarrhoea.
Contribution Of Nuclear Targeting Of The NleE-OspZ Family Of Proteins To Escherichia Coli And Shigella Virulence
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$542,462.00
Summary
This project will study how the bacteria that cause infant diarrhoea colonize the intestine and induce disease. We have identified new bacterial proteins that allow E. coli to manipulate the normal host cell processes involved in killing an invading bacterium. Similar proteins are also present in the closely related organism, Shigella which causes dysentary. We will determine how these proteins act by finding the host cell proteins they bind.