grant

Immune regulation, cellular trafficking and chemokine receptors in intestinal inflammation [ 2003 - 2005 ]

Also known as: Immunoregulation in IBD

Research Grant

[Cite as http://purl.org/au-research/grants/nhmrc/222752]

Researchers: Prof Michael Grimm (Principal investigator) ,  Prof Andrew Lloyd

Brief description The intestine is exposed to a vast array of foreign substances, or antigens, from food to the abundant bacteria that populate the gut. The gut immune system has developed elaborate and poorly understood mechanisms for preventing inflammation in response to these antigens. A breakdown in these control mechanisms may be partly responsible for the chronic intestinal diseases known as inflammatory bowel diseases, which cause abdominal pain, diarrhoea and bleeding. A recently described immune cell type, known as a regulatory T cell (T reg), is a powerful candidate cell as a master controller of intestinal inflammation. We know that T cells move to various sites in the body under the influence of hormone-like proteins known as chemokines, but the existence of T reg cells in the intestine, their characteristics, their behaviour and their specific response to chemokines, are all unknown. These studies aim to examine the presence and nature of T reg cells in human and mouse intestine, in both health and inflammation, and to explore how these cells migrate into the gut under the influence of chemokines. This knowledge will help in our understanding of intestinal immunity and endogenous regulation of immune responses, and will provide new targets for treatment of inflammatory bowel disease, and potentially other inflammatory diseases.

Funding Amount $AUD 204,750.00

Funding Scheme NHMRC Project Grants

Notes Standard Project Grant

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