MINIMAL RESIDUAL DISEASE IN ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKAEMIA
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$455,204.00
Summary
This project will study the extremely small numbers of leukaemic cells which are found in patients who are apparently healthy, but which sometimes lead to relapse. Very sensitive methods for measuring and studying low levels of leukaemic cells will be developed and used. To develop new better treatments in the long term, we will study why current treatment sometimes fails to eradicate the leukaemia, leading to patients relapsing. Clinicians currently need to obtain samples of bone marrow to asse ....This project will study the extremely small numbers of leukaemic cells which are found in patients who are apparently healthy, but which sometimes lead to relapse. Very sensitive methods for measuring and studying low levels of leukaemic cells will be developed and used. To develop new better treatments in the long term, we will study why current treatment sometimes fails to eradicate the leukaemia, leading to patients relapsing. Clinicians currently need to obtain samples of bone marrow to assess leukaemia, and the research will show whether this needs to be continued, or whether, with sensitive tests, samples of blood can be used instead. The study will involve collaboration with clinicians throughout Australia and overseas.Read moreRead less
Structure-based Design Of Novel Therapeutics For Multi-drug Resistant Neisseria Gonorrhoeae
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$669,148.00
Summary
Multiple drug resistance (MDR) in bacteria represents one of the most intractable problems facing modern medicine. The recent superbug, MDR-Neisseria gonorrhoeae (MDR-Ng), causes the sexually transmitted infection gonorrhoeae. A multi disciplinary team with expertise in structural biology, medicinal chemistry and bacteriology will establish a comprehensive knowledge base aimed at developing new antibiotics to treat MDR-Ng by targeting a bacterial protein virulence factor.
At least 6 young Australians are diagnosed each day with type 1 diabetes. This Program aims to change the way type 1 diabetes is managed by proactively treating its underlying mechanisms. We will develop safer and more effective immune therapies, develop islet transplantation, look for better markers of disease, and identify ways to preserve insulin-producing cells. The Program aims to propel type 1 diabetes research forward to reach the goals of prevention and cure.
The team has been at the forefront of research on type 1 diabetes for over a decade. This form of diabetes is a major chronic disease from childhood, as well as accounting for at least 10% of adult-onset diabetes. It occurs when the body�s immune system attacks and destroys the beta cells in the pancreas that make insulin, the hormone that controls the level of glucose in the blood. The team was one of the first in the world, and is the only one in Australia, to develop screening programs to tes ....The team has been at the forefront of research on type 1 diabetes for over a decade. This form of diabetes is a major chronic disease from childhood, as well as accounting for at least 10% of adult-onset diabetes. It occurs when the body�s immune system attacks and destroys the beta cells in the pancreas that make insulin, the hormone that controls the level of glucose in the blood. The team was one of the first in the world, and is the only one in Australia, to develop screening programs to test and identify people at risk for type 1 diabetes. They showed that the underlying disease could start years before symptoms occurred and discovered genes that determine the rate at which the underlying disease progresses. They have also found evidence that the disease may be triggered by gut viruses called rotaviruses in genetically-susceptible individuals. They showed that type 1 diabetes could be prevented in a mouse model by getting the immune system to make a protective response to insulin, and then went on to apply this in at-risk humans in a controlled trial of intranasal insulin, the first of its kind. They have used genetic techniques not only to pinpoint the mechanisms responsible for killing the beta cells but also to modify the beta cells to make them resistant to attack by these mechanisms. The multidisciplinary approach of the team will be directed to further understanding the genetic and environmental factors underlying type 1 diabetes and the immune mechanisms, particularly involving special white blood cells called T cells, that kill beta cells. A molecular target of the immune attack, the parent of insulin called proinsulin, will be used, paradoxically, as a tool to regulate the immune system and avert the attack. This will be achieved by giving proinsulin via the mucosa of the naso-respiratory tract or via the bone marrow-derived stem cells, initiallyin the mouse model as a test of feasibility for human application. In parallel with these approaches to prevention, specially constructed viruses will be used to transfer several new genes into beta cells to improve their resistance to immune attack, so that they can be transplanted into people with established diabetes without the need for potentially toxic drugs that suppress the immune system overall. The integrated research of the team is helping to provide a sound, rational base for the eventual prevention and cure of type 1 diabetes.Read moreRead less
Characterization Of HOXA-expressing Human Haematopoietic Cells Generated From Embryonic Stem Cells
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$622,464.00
Summary
Blood stem cell transplants are used for treating a range of human blood disorders such as leukaemias. However, for many patients, suitable donors cannot be found. We are searching for ways in which embryonic stem cells can be turned into blood stem cells in the laboratory to provide a new source of these cells that could then be used to treat patients.
A Genome-wide Association Study In 2000 Glaucoma Cases With Matched Controls Using Equimoloar DNA Pools
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$610,267.00
Summary
Glaucoma is a common cause of loss of vision worldwide but we are unable to predict which people are at high risk of blindness. We aim to discover the genetic risk factors for glaucoma. We will use cutting edge genetic technology to assess the whole genome in thousands of patients with glaucoma. We hope to identify important new glaucoma genes, which could lead to the development of diagnostic tests and treatments which will provide the most cost-efficient ways to prevent glaucoma blindness.
Understanding The Causes Of Childhood Congenital Anomalies Of The Kidney And Urinary Tract
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$609,748.00
Summary
Congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT) is a common cause of renal failure in children. The majority of patients with CAKUT do not know the underlying cause of their renal anomalies. In this proposal we will characterise the developmental events that are perturbed in three mouse models of CAKUT and identify the causal gene responsible in each mouse model. We will translate this information to the clinic by screening patients with CAKUT for mutations in these newly identified ....Congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT) is a common cause of renal failure in children. The majority of patients with CAKUT do not know the underlying cause of their renal anomalies. In this proposal we will characterise the developmental events that are perturbed in three mouse models of CAKUT and identify the causal gene responsible in each mouse model. We will translate this information to the clinic by screening patients with CAKUT for mutations in these newly identified genes.Read moreRead less
Once treatable infections are becoming deadly because bacteria are developing broad antibiotic resistance. New medicines are urgently needed. Microbes themselves are the richest known source of new antibiotics but finding the 'good bugs' is like finding a needle in a microbial haystack. This project will use state-of-the art science to screen a previously overlooked source of rich microbial biodiversity and find new antibiotics.
This research proposal will identify changes in liver-secreted proteins during the development of fatty liver, and in the transition from fatty liver to the more advanced form of liver disease, non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). Understanding the differences in protein secretion between NASH patients and patients with normal/fatty liver will provide the opportunity to identify disease biomarkers that could be determined from a blood sample. This will provide a major shift in clinical care.