Research Grant
[Cite as https://purl.org/au-research/grants/nhmrc/454640]Researchers: Prof David Jackson (Principal investigator) , Dr Weiguang Zeng , Prof Joseph Torresi , Prof Lorena Brown
Brief description The parts of viruses, bacteria and of cancer cells that are recognised by the immune system are called epitopes. Epitopes are generated from these agents by dendritic cells which are found in many parts of the body where they act as sentinels on the look out for dangerous organisms. Epitopes are very small pieces of the proteins against which immune responses are mounted and can be readily synthesised in the laboratory. If we were to design vaccines that are made of epitopes such that the immune response is focussed to those exact regions of infectious agents it could lead to an immune response that eliminates the agent. The problem is, however, that we usually do not know which part of the virus, bacterium or cancer cell is recognised as an epitope. So the identification of epitopes is a limitation to the design of epitope-based vaccines. Anyone who has encountered a virus, bacterium or tumour cell and who has raised an immune response will have developed antibodies and immune cells able to recognise the right parts of the infectious agent or cancer cell. These antibodies and immune cells now contain information about the epitopes. We will use antibodies and blood cells obtained from people immune to the disease to extract epitopes from a panel of protein fragments that represent the agent against which we wish to make vaccines. These newly discovered epitopes will then be incorporated into totally synthetic vaccines. These vaccines will also incorporate a simple lipid molecule which specifically targets and activates the dendritic cell that is key for the induction of potent immune responses. All of the technologies we propose are in place and we have proof of principle that the approach leads to the successful design of vaccines that are effective against infectious diseases and cancers.
Funding Amount $AUD 526,571.74
Funding Scheme NHMRC Project Grants
Notes Standard Project Grant
- nhmrc : 454640
- PURL : https://purl.org/au-research/grants/nhmrc/454640