Skip to main content
European Commission logo print header

The transformation of employment and governance structures - the civil service in denmark and great britain.

Objective



Research objectives and content

mediators, including lipid mediators, cytokines, neuropeptides and nitric oxide. The mechanisms of increased mediator production in asthma are not well understood. Our primary objective is to elucidate the mechanisms involved in increased mediator production in asthma in order to understand the pathophysiology of this increasingly common condition and to lead to the development of new and more specific therapies. We have adopted a multidisciplinary molecule-to-man approach as the questions and scope of the research is complex and needs to involve several groups. We have brought together leading European research groups in the field of inflammatory mediators to address this objective. Major research tasks include elucidation of the factors that regulate expression of lipid mediators (leukotrienes, prostaglandins and platelet-activating factor) and their receptors in airway and inflammatory cells, experimental models of asthma and in normal and asthmatic airways. We will also study regulation of expression of lymphokines and chemokines that orchestrate eosinophilic inflammation in asthmatic airways, sensory neuropeptides and their receptors and the enzyme that generates nitric oxide, using the same approaches. Establishment of a network of investigators will allow us to study the interactions between different mediators, by taking advantage of the different assays and technologies available amongst the partners. A unifying theme to this project is the idea that there are common molecular mechanisms leading to increased expression of the genes responsible for the synthesis and effects (receptors) of multiple inflammatory mediators. For example, pro-inflammatory cytokines increase the expression of enzymes involved in the arachidonic acid cascade. We will investigate the role of common transcription factors, such as nuclear factor-kappa B and activator protein-l that are activated by various cytokines, in regulating the increased expression of inflammatory mediators and their receptors in asthmatic airways. The long-term objectives of our project are to develop more specific therapies to control and prevent the inflammation of asthma. This can only be achieved by greater understanding of the molecular basis for asthmatic inflammation. This requires a critical mass of investigators, with a multiplicity of experimental approaches, ranging from molecular biology through to clinical studies of asthmatic patients. This concerted action provides an opportunity to exploit the highly esteemed European research on inflammatory mediators in order to advance our knowledge more rapidly, and to make inroads into the important health and social problems created by asthma within the European Union.

Call for proposal

Data not available

Funding Scheme

Data not available

Coordinator

University of Warwick
EU contribution
No data
Address

CV4 7AL Coventry
United Kingdom

See on map

Total cost
No data