|
|
|
2004
Grants
National
Council recently agreed to fund five projects recommended by the Research
Committee in September. This brings the total grants awarded over the
last 5 years to £658 824.
A brief summary of the 2004 projects:
• Dr.
Dorothy Crouch at Ninewells Hospital, Dundee - a grant of £2 380
Distribution and regulation of ERM proteins in psoriasis: a pilot study
My laboratory has an
interest in the ERM (Ezrin, Radixin, Moesin) family of proteins. These
proteins play a fundamental role in maintaining the normal architecture
of and growth of a cell.We proposed that the ERM
proteins control skin maturation and growth by a process that is dependent
on their specific location within the cell. This has very important
implications in skin disorders such as psoriasis. The aim of this project
is to find out whether the location and level of the individual ERM
family and their associated proteins are aberrant in normal and psoriatic
tissue.
• Professor Peter Friedmann, Professor Eugene Healy and
Dr. Christodoulides at Southampton General Hospital - a grant of £59
954 over 2 years.
Investigation
of interaction between NK T cells and keratinocytes in induction of
psoriatic lesions
The
processes underlying the formation of psoriasis in human skin appear
to involve white blood cells of the immune system (lymphocytes) and
cells of the outer layer of skin (epidermis). It is suggested that a
particular type of lymphocyte, the NK T cell, somehow cause psoriasis.
In this proposal we wish to examine how these NK T cells become activated
and how they are able to induce skin cells to develop psoriatic like
changes.
It is hoped that the results of this study will explain why people develop
psoriasis following streptococcal infections and as a result of injury
to the skin and that this new knowledge will lead to better treatments
for patients with psoriasis.
• Professor Groves at Imperial College London, Chelsea
nd Westminster Hospital - a grant of £59 931
Early transcriptional changes in the development of psoriasis
It is now well established that there is a genetic base to
psoriasis. In this project we are aiming to identify genes that are
turned on very early in the development if a psoriasis plaque using
a technique known as microarray analysis.
We hope to be able to define those genes that are turned on very early
in the development of psoriasis, which may prove to be critical in the
disease and therefore represent new attractive targets for treatment.
• Dr. Pringle, Dr. Osborne and Dr. Hutchinson at Leicester
Royal Infirmary - a grant of £59 856 over two years.
Investigation of vitamin D receptor polymorphis on the response of T
cells to vitamin D therapy in psoriasis
This project will investigate why some patients with psoriasis
do not respond to topically applied vitamin D creams. We have identified
a genetic difference in the vitamin D receptor gene which may influence
the immune response in psoriatic plaques.
We will investigate the immune cells in tissue biopsies, blood samples
and the molecules that control vitamin D receptor activity. The result
of this project could identify an important mechanism of drug resistance
which would lead to a pharmacogenetic approach to vitamin D based therapy
and allow the appropriate use of vitamin D in psoriasis.
• Dr. Song Han and Dr. Paul Bowden at University of Wales
College of Medicine - a grant of £58 928 over two years.
The function of fringe genes in epidermal homeostasis and their role
in the pathogenesis of psoriasis
Fruit flies undergo rapid development from eggs to adult flies
and this is controlled by 'developmental genes'. Research has shown
that these genes are also important in all living organisms, including
man, both for development and for maintenance of many adult tissues,
for example skin. Abnormalities in these developmental genes can cause
disease or give rise to disease susceptibility. In psoriasis, the programme
that controls skin maintenance is abnormal and one possibility is that
the abnormality resides in one of theses developmental genes od the
proteins that are made from them. We propose to study these developmental
genes and their protein products in normal and psoriatic skin and see
if we can find any changes in the skin of psoriasis patients that might
influence the progress of this condition.
|
|
|