Bacterial And Host Drivers Of Fulminant Community-acquired Acinetobacter Baumannii Infection
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$729,315.00
Summary
This proposal aims to understand how a bacterial pathogen causes severe, life-threatening infections in people from the community in northern Australia. This severe infection particularly impacts people who drink excess alcohol or have diabetes mellitus, and importantly impacts Indigenous Australians the greatest. This work will provide, for the first time, important insights into new prevention and treatment strategies for a serious infection impacting Australians and those in our region.
Interferon Mediated Control Of Legionella Infection
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$628,848.00
Summary
Bacterial lung infections are a serious cause of illness and death in humans. To fight infection the body activates the immune system using a network of signalling molecules. We are studying exactly how one of these signalling molecules called interferon controls the infection. Interferon induces the killing of bacteria that are replicating inside human lung cells. How interferon drives bacterial death is not known and this will be studied in this proposal.
Molecular Basis For The Emergence Of Community Acquired Staphylococcus Aureus
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$427,518.00
Summary
Golden Staph is a major problem in our hospitals but serious Golden Staph infections are increasingly common in the community, among otherwise healthy people who have had no contact with hospitals. This project will find out how Golden Staph is evolving to become more likely to cause disease in the community. This knowledge can then be used to design new strategies for early detection, prevention and treatment.
Mathematical Modelling Of Bacterial Carriage In Children
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$421,746.00
Summary
Children exposed to larger numbers of other children are at risk of persistent bacterial infections. Such circumstances explain the high rates of ear and chest infections, and skin sores seen in children in historical times. Changing social circumstances (smaller families, better housing, nutrition and hygiene), as well as the introduction of antibiotics, explain the decline of such infections in affluent communities since the early 20th century. However, even today, in affluent countries, child ....Children exposed to larger numbers of other children are at risk of persistent bacterial infections. Such circumstances explain the high rates of ear and chest infections, and skin sores seen in children in historical times. Changing social circumstances (smaller families, better housing, nutrition and hygiene), as well as the introduction of antibiotics, explain the decline of such infections in affluent communities since the early 20th century. However, even today, in affluent countries, children attending group child care are at high risk of ear infections. As many bacteria are resistant, antibiotics are now much less effective than when they were first introduced. Furthermore, there is a continuing load of infection for children in Aboriginal communities, in PNG and other developing countries, causing hearing loss, chronic respiratory problems, and heart disease and renal disease in later life. Using data previously collected from other studies in Indigenous communities and children in child care, mathematical models allow us to ask what if?, and answer important public health questions: 1. What environmental and public health measures can reduce the cycle of cross-infection in child-care and high-risk populations? 2. What coverage rates with pneumococcal vaccine will eliminate the vaccine-specific bacteria from child care centres, from the wider community, and from high risk populations? 3. Will infections with bacteria not covered by vaccine then increase? 4. Will the resistant bacteria tend to disappear if antibiotic use is restricted? 5. Under what circumstances will antibiotics help to control infection? The modelling will promote understanding of the social and health costs of bacterial infection in Aboriginal communities and child care and use educational scenarios to promote uptake of the most cost-effective and socially acceptable interventions.Read moreRead less
A Novel CD39-like Ecto-NTPDase Of Legionella Pneumophila
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$362,046.00
Summary
Legionnaire's disease is a serious cause of community acquired pneumonia. We are studying the way the Legionella bacteria persist in the environment and cause disease. We have found that Legionella produces a specific protein that mimics the action of a human protein. This proposal aims to work out how the bacteria use this protein to infect the human lung and escape killing by immune cells. The results from this study will help to determine if this protein may be used as a target for the develo ....Legionnaire's disease is a serious cause of community acquired pneumonia. We are studying the way the Legionella bacteria persist in the environment and cause disease. We have found that Legionella produces a specific protein that mimics the action of a human protein. This proposal aims to work out how the bacteria use this protein to infect the human lung and escape killing by immune cells. The results from this study will help to determine if this protein may be used as a target for the development of new anti-infective drugs.Read moreRead less
The pneumococcus is a major cause of bacterial pneumonia, sepsis and meningitis especially in children and the elderly. Antibiotic-resistant pneumococci are becoming more prevalent, and available vaccines have major shortcomings. We propose to identify and characterise the factors produced by this organism during infection that enable it to cause invasive disease. Such factors could be incorporated into protein-based pneumococcal vaccines currently under development.
Vitamin D And Acute Lower Respiratory Tract Infection (ALRI) In Indigenous Children
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$92,669.00
Summary
Australian Indigenous children experience extreme rates of acute lower respiratory infection (ALRI) that medical interventions have failed to reduce. Vitamin D is an important immunoregulatory molecule of the respiratory system that remains uncharacterised in this population. We propose that deficiency contributes to the persistent rates of ALRI. This study will characterise vitamin D levels in a cohort of Indigenous children with and without ALRI. The results will guide future intervention.
The Pathogenesis Of Melioidosis: The Interaction Of Burkholderia Pseudomallei With Host Cells.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$344,375.00
Summary
Melioidosis is an often fatal disease of mainly tropical Australia and SE Asia caused by a bacterium which is found in soil and water. Infection occurs via wounds or by inhalation. Melioidosis has recently become endemic in south-west Western Australia and south-eastern Queensland, and could represent an emerging disease worldwide. Melioidosis disproportionately affects Aboriginal Australians. Melioidosis has many forms including septicemia with damage to most organs, particularly lung, spleen a ....Melioidosis is an often fatal disease of mainly tropical Australia and SE Asia caused by a bacterium which is found in soil and water. Infection occurs via wounds or by inhalation. Melioidosis has recently become endemic in south-west Western Australia and south-eastern Queensland, and could represent an emerging disease worldwide. Melioidosis disproportionately affects Aboriginal Australians. Melioidosis has many forms including septicemia with damage to most organs, particularly lung, spleen and liver, acute localised suppurative infection and pneumonia. Melioidosis may also become latent, and later develop into an acute and fatal infection. It is important to understand, at the molecular level, how and why the causative bacterium is able to cause disease. Only with such an understanding can measures be undertaken to prevent the disease, or novel methods developed to control the disease. Colonisation of a host is a first step in the disease process for all bacteria which cause disease. Large protein molecules located on the surface of disease-causing bacteria are usually neccessary for colonisation of the host since they allow adherence to the surface of host cells. We have previously undertaken a basic study of adherence. This study will build on this research with the aim of identifying molecules which mediate adherence to host cells, using in vivo and in vitro methods, including the techniques of molecular biology. This study will inevitably lead to the development of vaccine candidates which is important to the management of melioidosis, particularly in high risk groups. It may also allow the development of novel antimicrobial compounds.Read moreRead less