Proteases are enzymes that degrade other proteins. These molecules are essential for life and drive fundamental processes such as blood clotting and the inflammatory response. Protease dysfunction underlies numerous human diseases, including cancer. This proposal aims to investigate whether structural information can be used to improve our ability to accurately predict the target specificity of proteases.
Complement Inhibitors For Treatment Of Chronic Inflammatory Diseases
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$623,606.00
Summary
We aim to provide new therapeutic approaches to gum disease, which not only causes tooth loss, but also contributes to other diseases, such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes. We will find new methods to inhibit a system in our own bodies that contributes to inflammation and gum disease and test the effects of these methods of inhibition in disease models. In this way, we hope to lessen the burden of gum disease on the Australian population.
Flaviviral Proteases As Viable Targets For Antiinfective Drugs
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$620,716.00
Summary
Viruses hijack the machinery and nutrients of cells they infect in order to reproduce. We will study viral enzymes (proteases) essential for virus replication, use fluorescent probes to learn where the viral enzymes hide and act in infected cells, track the passage of drugs aimed at these enzymes, design drugs to block their actions and stop virus replication, and test antiviral activity against Dengue, West Nile, Japanese Encephalitis and Yellow Fever viruses which infect millions of people.