Project 170397

Assembly and export of bacterial capsular polysaccharides

170397

Assembly and export of bacterial capsular polysaccharides

$748,270
Project Information
Study Type: Trial Randomized_Controlled_Trial
Therapeutic Area: Psychiatry
Research Theme: Biomedical
Disease Area: bipolar disorder
Data Type: Canadian
Institution & Funding
Principal Investigator(s): Whitfield, Christopher
Institution: University of Guelph
CIHR Institute: Infection and Immunity
Program: Operating Grant
Peer Review Committee: Microbiology & Infectious Diseases
Competition Year: 2008
Term: 5 yrs 0 mth
Abstract Summary

The surfaces of bacteria are typically composed of a complex and dynamic array of carbohydrate-containing macromolecules. An extensive layer of polysaccharide known as the capsule covers the surfaces of many bacterial pathogens. Capsules have crucial roles in many interactions between bacteria and their environments, including interplay between invading bacteria and host cell defenses. Capsules are generally protective structures and treatments that eliminate capsules (or dramatically reduce their size) can render a bacterial pathogen susceptible to normal host defenses. Consequently, reactions involved in capsule synthesis represent potential targets for therapeutic intervention. Any attempts to develop capsule assembly as a therapeutic target requires a detailed understanding of the underlying processes and this is the goal of our work. We intend to characterize in detail the structure and function of two protein families involved in novel aspects of capsule assembly. The precise mechanisms of action of these proteins are unknown. However, representatives are widely distributed in bacteria, indicating that the results obtained will have broad impact. In addition, the complex processes underlying capsule assembly are of fundamental importance and our studies are expected to provide insight into other important cellular events in pathogenic bacteria.

Research Characteristics

This project includes the following research characteristics:

Cost Effectiveness
Budget Impact
Health Technology Assessment
Resource Utilization
Productivity Outcomes
Implementation Science
Health System Integration
Scalability Assessment
Barrier Identification
Patient Reported Outcomes
Real World Evidence
Patient Engagement
Regulatory Pathway
Ethics Focus
Data Sharing
Comorbidity Focus
Social Determinants
Health Equity
Multicenter
Knowledge Translation Focus
Equity Considerations
Safety Focus
Quality of Life
Time to Event
Composite Endpoint
Vulnerable Populations
Combination Therapy
Personalized Medicine
Study Justification

"evaluate the effectiveness of antidepressant maintenance treatment in bipolar disorder"

Novelty Statement

"first well-designed study to determine if antidepressants help prevent depression during long-term treatment"

Methodology Innovation

long-term evaluation of antidepressant maintenance treatment

Keywords
Capsular Polysaccharides Cell Surfaces Microbial Pathogens Outer Membranes Transport Virulence Factors