Skip to menu Skip to content Skip to footer

Regulation of lung immune-epithelial networks sensing environmental change (2023-2026)

Abstract

This study aims to uncover how lung epithelial cells engage with immune cells and determine their cellular and molecular wiring to ensure homeostatic maintenance and essential repair processes of lung tissues. Maintenance of lung epithelial-immune networks is essential to maintain normal lung tissue structure and function, and to induce immune responses to protect against microbial challenges or inhaled potentially toxic substances. Understanding this molecular program of epithelial-immune cell-mediated sensing/repair will be essential to understand how tissue-repair processes can be driven in the lung, an organ critical for respiration and thus life.

Experts

Professor Gabrielle Belz

ARC Australian Laureate Fellow
Frazer Institute
Faculty of Health, Medicine and Behavioural Sciences
Gabrielle Belz
Gabrielle Belz