Effect Of Ultraviolet Radiation On Development Of Effector And Memory T Cells To Melanoma
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$498,328.00
Summary
Australia has the highest incidence of skin cancer in the world, due to our lifestyle that involves high levels of exposure to sunlight. Skin cancer, including melanoma can be destroyed by the immune system, but sunlight inhibits immunity, enabling skin tumours to grow. Our aim is to determine how sunlight affects the activation of effector anti-melanoma T cells, and their development into memory T cells, and the dose of sunlight required to have this effect. It is unknown whether ultraviolet ra ....Australia has the highest incidence of skin cancer in the world, due to our lifestyle that involves high levels of exposure to sunlight. Skin cancer, including melanoma can be destroyed by the immune system, but sunlight inhibits immunity, enabling skin tumours to grow. Our aim is to determine how sunlight affects the activation of effector anti-melanoma T cells, and their development into memory T cells, and the dose of sunlight required to have this effect. It is unknown whether ultraviolet radiation in sunlight suppresses the activation of effector cells that mediate rejection of skin tumours, or their development into memory cells, or migration of activated-memory lymphocytes into skin tumours. The number of antigen reactive T cells is a key issue for tumour immunity and the aim of many clinical immunotherapy trials is to boost these to levels that can effectively destroy the tumour. It is important to establish whether low doses of sunlight readily achievable during normal living, or only higher exposures received when sunbaking, inhibit the number of these effector T cells, and their migration into skin tumours. It is important to determine whether there is a relatively safe threshold level of sunlight exposure to be able to give better advice on sunlight doses that can be achieved without causing serious deleterious health effects. Also these levels of sunlight may interfere with immunotherapy trials and therefore need to be determined. An additional outcome will be to determine whether chemopreventative agents that enhance recovery from sunlight induced suppression of skin allergies are also protective for anti-tumour immunity. The establishment of procedures for prevention of suppression of anti-tumour immunity may enhance the number of T cells activated by natural immunity or during immunotherapy, thereby improving immune rejection of melanoma.Read moreRead less
Identification And Characterization Of A Novel Tumor Suppressor
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$591,997.00
Summary
Australia has the highest rate of skin cancer in the world, with over 380,000 people diagnosed every year. Of these, over 370,000 have non-melanoma skin cancers including squamous cell carcinoma and basal cell carcinoma. Our laboratory has identified a gene in mice that protects animals from squamous cell cancer. The studies proposed in this grant examine the mechanisms underpinning this protective role and may have important implications for the prevention of skin cancers in humans.
Brm And Brg-1 Protect From Ultraviolet Radiation-induced Skin And Ocular Damage
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$555,325.00
Summary
Ultraviolet radiation within sunlight is the most important environmental hazard to which Australians are exposed. It causes cancers of the skin and eye, in addition to other forms of skin and eye damage. However sunlight also has health benefits such as vitamin D production. To protect our health from the sun we need to understand how it causes damage and the meachanisms involved. We have discovered a new pathway that we plan to study, called Brm and Brg-1, that provides protection from UV.
Role Of Brm In Skin Tumour Progression From Benign To Malignant
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$457,267.00
Summary
Australia has the highest incidence of skin cancer in the world. Skin cancer is 3 times as common as all other cancers combined and continues to increase in incidence, particularly in the aging population. Skin cancer is caused by exposure to the ultraviolet radiation found in sunlight. Ultraviolet radiation causes the appearance of solar keratosis, or sunspots, benign lesions that are not particularly dangerous to human health. Some of these develop into malignant squamous cell carcinomas that ....Australia has the highest incidence of skin cancer in the world. Skin cancer is 3 times as common as all other cancers combined and continues to increase in incidence, particularly in the aging population. Skin cancer is caused by exposure to the ultraviolet radiation found in sunlight. Ultraviolet radiation causes the appearance of solar keratosis, or sunspots, benign lesions that are not particularly dangerous to human health. Some of these develop into malignant squamous cell carcinomas that can spread to other tissues and are potentially fatal. Little is known about the biological mechanisms involved in solar keratosis development into squamous cell carcinomas. We have identified the gene brm as being involved in this process. It has not previously been recognised that this gene is important for skin cancer development and therefore our preliminary studies have identified a potential new target. We will study the role of this gene in ultraviolet radiation induced skin carcinogenesis, determine whether it is mutated by ultraviolet radiation in human skin cancer, and what role in plays in some key biological processes in skin cancer development. This study will expand our understanding of malignant conversion during human skin carcinogenesis, the most prevalent human cancer in Australia.Read moreRead less