Ten Wellington-based medical researchers received grants in the second funding round of the year from Research For Life. Four research grant applicants received a total of $43,843 to undertake innovative medical research and six travel
grants totalling $13,598 were approved to assist local researchers meet the cost of presenting their research findings
at international conferences.
Research For Life funds innovative quality research undertaken by researchers in the early stages of their careers who, through their
work, will advance the quality of healthcare in the Wellington region and beyond.
The successful applicants for research grants were:
Morgane Brunton-O’Sullivan, a PhD student at the Department of Surgery and Anesthesia, University of Otago, Wellington, received a Research for
Life grant of $15,040.
Working in collaboration with the Wellington Cardiovascular Research Group, her research aims to characterise a
pathological fibrotic phenotype in order to identify patients at risk of adverse remodeling processes.
Acute myocardial infarction represents a significant health and economic burden worldwide. Despite advances in medical
treatment and management following a heart attack, a subset of patients will undergo fibrotic remodeling which
significantly contributes to the development of heart failure and poor cardiac function.
Dr Laura Ferrer Font, a Research Fellow at the Malaghan Institute of Medical Research received a Research For Life grant of $11,531 to
undertake research to evaluate different immune cells in cancer. She is specifically using new techniques to establish
how macrophages contribute to cancer, and whether their activity can be modified with specific drugs that alter their
function.
Professor John Miller received a $10,000 Research For Life grant to undertake the screening of new compounds for bioactivity against cancer
cells. New drugs, or modifications to old drugs are needed in the fight against cancer. New natural products from marine
animals or algae, or from terrestrial plants, or synthesised analogues will be screened for their ability to inhibit
cancer cell growth in tissue culture. Professor Miller is an Emeritus Professor in the School of Biological Sciences and
the Centre for Biodiscovery at Victoria University of Wellington.
Dr Andrew Munkacsi, a Senior Lecturer in the School of Biological Sciences at Victoria University of Wellington, received a $7,272
Research For Life grant to undertake research to help children suffering with a rare disease and also provide insight
into a fundamental process that is not well understood in healthy people.
Sphingolipids are critical structural and signaling molecules in all eukaryotic cells, that when defective in humans,
are involved in the onset and progression of many human diseases including cardiovascular disease, diabetes, cancer and
neurodegenerative diseases. However, the molecular regulation of sphingolipid metabolism is not fully understood in
healthy or diseased cells.
Dr Munkacsi’s research is exploring new therapeutic options to treat Niemann-Pick type C disease, a fatal paediatric
neurodegenerative disease caused by sphingolipid toxicity that typically results in loss of life before adolescence. By
identifying the genes that regulate each particular form of sphingolipid, his research will identify genes that can be
targeted with drugs or gene therapy to ameliorate the onset and progression of NPC disease and other diseases with
defective sphingolipid metabolism, as well as further understand a process that is happening normally in healthy
persons.
Travel Grants were awarded in this round to the following:
Deanna Ayupova, a PhD student from the MacDiarmid Institute for Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology at Victoria University of
Wellington received a travel grant of $3,000 to present her research at the first conference on Computational Biology of
Cancer in Paris, France in September 2018 and at the Applied Nanotechnology and Nanoscience International Conference
which will be held in Berlin from October 22-24 October 2018.
Her research aims to develop a non-invasive device (such as a breathalyser) that can help detect lung cancer by using
breath exosomes as biomarkers. Deanna is using exosomes that she isolates from a cancer cell line and serum from
patients for the detection of proteins carrying tumour gene and plans to use it to capture these proteins using
nanomaterials (InP/ZnS quantum dots). Exosome studies are very innovative and not many researchers take this unknown
path. One of the important steps in that process is to determine the cytotoxicity of nanomaterials so they don’t result
in harming patients.
Olivia Burn, a PhD student in the Cancer Immunotherapy Programme at the Malaghan Institute of Medical Research, received a travel
grant of $2,122 to present her research at the International Cancer Immunotherapy Conference in New York this October.
Olivia’s research is focused on a new immunotherapy that acts by disrupting a key pathway in immune cells to enhance
their activation against cancer-specific proteins and drive a strong anti-tumour immune response.
As this research was recently patented and therefore not previously presented, Olivia noted it was exciting to promote
New Zealand-based research to an international audience and discuss her findings with experts in the field.
Dr Hayley Denison from the Centre for Public Health Research, Massey University, received a travel grant of $1,539 to present her
research findings at the International Union against Sexually Transmitted Infections Asia Pacific Congress in Auckland
this year. Hayley is an epidemiologist, with a particular interest in sexually transmitted infections.
The research she will be presenting examines the trends in gonorrhoea diagnoses at the Christchurch Sexual Health
Centre. Hayley hopes that a better understanding of diagnosis trends will enable more targeted testing and treatment of
sexually transmitted infections, and lead to a reduction in infection and subsequent ill-health.
Sonja Hummel, a Masters student at Victoria University of Wellington, received a travel grant of $1,000 to present her research
findings at the AussieMit conference in Melbourne this year. Sonja’s research investigates a mechanism cancerous cells
use to resist the effects of chemotherapy and radiation therapy called mitochondrial transfer. By using yeast to model
the conditions that cancer cells are in, Sonja aims to identify the underlying genetical signals which could lead to the
potential development of new cancer treatments in the future.
Nicholas Lowther, a PhD student at the University of Canterbury is advancing radiotherapy treatment techniques to improve outcomes for
head-and-neck cancer patients. Nick is conducting research based at the Wellington Blood & Cancer Centre and was awarded a $1,457 travel grant to present his research at the Engineers & Physical Scientists in Medicine conference in Adelaide this year. His research aims to optimise current treatment
approaches by reducing toxicity and unwanted side-effects, such as xerostomia – a dry mouth resulting from reduced or
absent saliva flow. This research will ultimately lead to an enhanced quality of life for patients.
Dr Michelle Thunders, a Senior Lecturer at the Department of Pathology and Molecular Medicine at the University of Otago, Wellington,
received a travel grant of $4,480 to present her research at the Chromatin and Epigenetics workshop held at the European
Molecular Biology Laboratory Advanced Training Centre in Heidelberg Germany. Michelle's research interests lie with the
identification of epigenomic biomarkers to aid in clinical diagnosis, prognosis and treatment of Myocardial Infarction
and in Renal Cancer. Her intention is to aid in understanding the molecular pathogenesis of both conditions to
facilitate improving outcomes for patients.
Last year, Research For Life approved 11 research grants and 10 travel grants constituting a total of $203,698 available
to researchers.
Dr Rebecca Grainger, Chair of RFL’s Research Advisory Committee, said: “Research For Life congratulates the successful
applicants of this round of funding. The research they are undertaking is innovative, well-conceived and vital to
achieving continuing improvements in health outcomes in the community.”
The closing date for the next round of Research For Life grant applications - including travel grant applications – is
Friday, 29 March 2019.