UQ researchers awarded $29m from NHMRC grants – News


In a major boost for health research, 22 UQ researchers and teams have secured $29 million from the National Health and Medical Research Council across the Ideas grants and Postgraduate Scholarships. 

This funding supports early and mid-career researchers who are leading innovative and creative projects across health and medical fields from discovery to implementation, from breast cancer vaccines to tuberculosis treatments. 

NHMRC Ideas Grants recipients: 

Dr Matilde Balbi – test if induced brain rhythms can improve outcomes after stroke by clearing harmful waste, aiming to discover new ways to protect the brain and improve recovery. 

Dr Carlie Cullen – investigate whether improper brain insulation during development disrupts brain function and contributes to neurodevelopmental disorders like ADHD and autism. 

Professor Luke Guddat – create a new type of antibiotic that targets an enzyme essential for microbes but absent in humans, offering safer treatments for infections like tuberculosis and candida. 

Professor John Hooper – test a new approach to detect breast cancer that targets a specific receptor to deliver radioactive ‘payloads’ to make breast cancer cells identifiable on PET scans. 

Professor Kiarash Khosrotehrani – uncover why damaged cells outcompete healthy ones, paving the way for new therapies that could stop skin cancer before it starts. 

Dr Christopher McMillan – formulate a new RNA medicine platform that works longer, needs smaller doses, and can be made quickly and affordably to fight diseases and respond to pandemics. 

Dr Christian Nefzger – examine how ageing increases the risk and severity of fatty liver disease and develop new treatments using drugs and RNA technology. 

Professor Michael Piper – create a lab model of Malan syndrome, a rare disorder causing overgrowth and intellectual disability, to uncover its cause and explore ways to reduce the impact on patients’ lives. 

Professor Avril Robertson – design new drugs that block a venom enzyme to treat dangerous recluse spider bites, which currently have no effective therapy. 

Professor Mark Schembri – understand how a new drug-resistant E. coli strain causes urinary tract infections and sepsis, to help fight the growing global threat of antibiotic resistance. 

Professor H. Peter Soyer – use 3D body photography, AI and genomics to pinpoint high-risk skin areas, helping doctors detect melanoma earlier and save lives. 

Professor Matt Sweet – study how immune cells turn off harmful inflammation and explore ways to use this process to create new anti-inflammatory treatments. 

Professor Stewart Trost – develop a classification system capturing data on children’s screen use to determine the benefits and harms to their health. 

Associate Professor Susannah Tye – develop a new deep brain stimulation system that adjusts in real time to the brain’s needs, reducing side effects and improving treatment for conditions like Parkinson’s disease. 

Professor Brandon Wainwright – develop an mRNA vaccine to improve outcomes for children with brain cancer. 

Professor Daniel Watterson – uncover how yellow fever vaccine mutations affect virus behaviour and use these insights to design next-generation vaccines and antibody therapies for flaviviruses like dengue. 

Associate Professor Timothy Wells – learn more about a ‘superbug’ bacteria that is outsmarting antibiotics to improve outcomes against drug-resistant infections. 

Professor Nick West – investigate how tuberculosis bacteria use special systems to survive, and whether disrupting these systems can make them easier to treat or prevent infection altogether. 

Dr Sarah Withey – grow tiny livers and brains to enable testing of treatments to tackle Ataxia Telangiectasia, a devastating childhood disease, that restore a crucial protein to ease symptoms and give affected children a better quality of life. 

 Associate Professor Steven Zuryn – two separate projects will investigate how mitochondrial DNA mutations spread within cells and how certain environmental bacteria can reduce mutations, uncovering new strategies to prevent and treat mitochondria-related diseases. 

NHMRC Postgraduate Scholarships recipients: 

Dr Douglas Drak – test an optimised electronic frailty index to estimate in-hospital improvements in health outcomes and expenditure. 

Emilia Janca – co-lead a model which improves the mental health and wellbeing of people released from prison, informed by cultural and lived experiences.