The Univeristy of Melbourne The Royal Melbourne Hopspital

A joint venture between The University of Melbourne and The Royal Melbourne Hospital

EDUCATION

Research Projects

Project: Understanding the role of the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) family in cancer immune surveillance

Barrow group

Many tumours secrete growth factors (GFs) to promote cellular proliferation, epithelial-mesenchymal transition, stromal reaction, and angiogenesis through autocrine and paracrine growth factor receptor (GFR) signalling. However, prevailing paradigms of natural killer (NK) cell receptor signalling dictate that ligands which are either shed or secreted from tumour cells bind to activating receptor and suppress NK cell effector functions. We were the first to show that platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF)-D can bind the NK cell immunoreceptor, NKp44, to induce NK cell anti-tumour immunity for control of tumour growth (Barrow et al. Cell, 2018). This work resulted in a change in the existing paradigm and shows that NK cells can sense changes in the cellular secretome to evoke anti-tumour immunity. Moreover, the results suggests that other innate receptors may sense secreted factors to induce immune responses. This project will focus on a combined approach of expressing recombinant vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) family proteins for biophysical studies and high-throughput screens to identify novel immunoreceptors that interact with the VEGF family members, and engineering chimeric antigen receptors (CAR) that are activated by VEGFs for cancer immunotherapy. The results will have relevance for cancer as well as infectious disease because many viruses encode growth factors that induce proliferative lesions to facilitate viral spread.

Contact project supervisor for further
information and application enquiries

Project Supervisor

Dr Alexander Barrow

Project Co-supervisor

Dr Julian Vivian

Project availability
PhD/MPhil
Master of Biomedical Science

Barrow group

alexanderdavid.barrow@unimelb.edu.au

0 vacancies

Themes
Immunology
Viral Infectious Diseases
Bacterial and Parasitic Infections
Cross Cutting Disciplines
Discovery Research
Clinical and health systems research

The Barrow group is interested in innate immune recognition programs, in particular a new immunological recognition strategy termed ‘growth factor surveillance’. Growth factors (GFs) are over-expressed by cancer cells to promote tumour growth. We first showed that the immune system evolved activating receptors to sense aberrant GF expression by cancers. The Barrow group’s goal is to understand how the immune system recognises GF expression by tumours with the ultimate aim of exploiting these pathways for cancer immunotherapy and the development of new cancer immunotherapies.