Thymic Epithelial Cell Apoptosis, Aire And Autoimmune Disease.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$470,799.00
Summary
Autoimmune diseases, like diabetes and multiple sclerosis are a significant disease burden. Their root cause is the failure of the immune system to distinguish between the body's own tissues and potential pathogens. We propose to study how potentially dangerous immune cells are destroyed in the thymus before they can develop. This research will significantly improve our understanding of how autoimmune diseases begin.
The Molecular Determinants Of Immunological Tolerance
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$473,477.00
Summary
Autoimmune diseases, such as type I diabetes and multiple sclerosis, are debilitating disorders that impose a massive toll on wellbeing in Australia and worldwide. This fellowship will support research aimed at determining the genes and mechanisms that control autoimmunity. New technologies will be brought to bear to track immune cells throughout their development, maturity and malfunction in disease settings. We aim to uncover new therapeutic targets to prevent and reverse autoimmune disease.
Prevention Of Autoimmune Diabetes By Immune Tolerance To Proinsulin
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$504,597.00
Summary
In type 1 diabetes, insulin is the first target of the immune system. Strategies to prevent the immune system targeting insulin in mice early in the disease process work, but it is not clear if such strategies would be effective if applied late. This is important because preventive therapies for human type 1 diabetes are currently feasible only late in the disease process. We aim to address this by removing T cells specific for insulin at different stages of the disease.
How Deletional And Non-Deletional Tolerance Mechanisms Integrate To Prevent Autoimmune Disease
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$509,944.00
Summary
The body produces millions of immune cells every day to fight infection. Some of these immune cells are defective and dangerous because they can cause autoimmune diseases, like Type I diabetes and multiple sclerosis. To defuse this risk, such immune cells are either caused to die or are inactivated to prevent autoimmunity. We propose to investigate how the processes of immune cell death and inactivation work in health and disease so we may harness these mechanisms to cure autoimmunity.
Understanding The Pathogenesis And Heterogeneity Of Autoimmunity As Failure Of Multiple Steps
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$504,023.00
Summary
Autoimmune diseases like diabetes, thyroid disease or rheumatoid arthritis affect around 1 in 15 people in Australia. It is clear that defects in a number of different genetic mechanisms can contribute to the development of autoimmunity. But it is currently not clear how these different mechanisms need to interact to prevent the onset of disease. This grant seeks to understand these interactions and how defects in two or more tolerance mechanisms can lead to autoimmunity.
How Does NF-kB2 Regulate Thymic Selection To Prevent Organ-specific Autoimmune Disease?
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$787,600.00
Summary
Autoimmune diseases like type 1 diabetes and thyroiditis arise from defects that cause the immune system to confuse self and non-self. Normally, this distinction is programmed in the thymus. We recently identified the gene that causes a form of autoimmune disease. We also made an important discovery about how the thymus gland regulates self-non-self discrimination. We will build on these two discoveries to gain a precise understanding of how the immune system normally avoids autoimmune disease.
Understanding The Critical Mechanisms That Govern Regulatory T Cell Life And Death Decisions
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$338,811.00
Summary
Autoimmune diseases impose an increasingly large health burden. Treg cells prevents the immune system from attacking “self” offering the promise of using these cells to restore immune balance in autoimmune diseases. However, there are currently no protocols that reliably modify Treg cell numbers. This study will elucidate the mechanisms that govern Treg cell survival and death, revealing potential molecular targets to manipulate the quality and quantity of Treg cell for therapeutic benefit.