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Airway Epithelial Research

The Airway Epithelial Research Team is investigating the role of the epithelium in the development of airway diseases including asthma, cystic fibrosis and lung transplant rejection.

Understanding the importance of the regulatory mechanisms involved in each of these disease processes is essential if effective prevention and therapeutic strategies are to be developed.

In addition, they are also investigating the stem cells found in the lung and are examining their role in airway healing as well as other functions to try and identify areas for therapeutic targeting. This research has the potential to translate from the laboratory bench into clinical practice in the form of cellular therapy (alone or in combination with other therapies) and is a novel practical approach to treat airway disease.

The group has successfully established and optimized a primary cell in vitro model for each of these disease settings using airway cells recovered by a safe and routinely performed method. To our knowledge, we are only one of only a handful of laboratories to be performing this in children with asthma or cystic fibrosis, and the only lab that can compare samples with age and sex matched healthy controls.

Using our unique research program the team is not only able to study mechanisms underlying particular airway diseases but has developed functional outcome tests which enable them to conduct preclinical trials of potential new drugs as well as through the repurposing of currently available medications.

Team Highlights

  • Anthony Kicic- Research Star of 2018; National Scientific Leader in Pulmonology
  • Luke Garratt - FutureHealth WA Merit award
  • Luke Garratt- NHMRC Early career fellowship
  • Thomas Iosifidis – won TSANZ Young Investigator award
  • Kevin Looi – awarded travel award to attend iPSC workshop in Toronto Canada
  • Kevin Looi- TSANZ Astra Zenica- thoracic fellowship, Janet Elder TSANZ award
  • Thomas Iosifidis- TSANZ Janet Elder TSANZ award
  • Samuel Montgomery and Kelly Martinovich – awarded CFWA Top Up scholarship
  • Nicole Shaw- award PCH Foundation Top Up Award
  • Samuel Montgomery & Kak-Ming Ling- awarded UWA Research Travel Award

Team leader

Rothwell Family Fellow; Head, Airway Epithelial Research

Team members (17)

Thomas Iosifidis
Thomas Iosifidis

BSc BMedSci(Hons) PhD

Pamela Laird
Pamela Laird

BSc (physiotherapy) dist. PhD

Senior clinician research fellow

Luke Garratt

Luke Garratt

NHMRC Research Fellow

Jessica Hillas

Jessica Hillas

Research Assistant

Daniel Laucirica

Daniel Laucirica

Research Assistant; PhD Candidate

Kevin Looi

Kevin Looi

Research Officer

Kelly Martinovich

Kelly Martinovich

Research Assistant; PhD Candidate

Samantha McLean

Samantha McLean

Research Assistant

Kak Ming Ling

Kak Ming Ling

Research Assistant; PhD Candidate

Samuel Montgomery

Samuel Montgomery

Research Assistant; PhD Candidate

Matthew Poh

Matthew Poh

Research Assistant; PhD Candidate

Craig Schofield

Craig Schofield

Research Assistant

Nicole Shaw

Nicole Shaw

PhD Candidate

Erika Sutanto

Erika Sutanto

Senior Research Officer

Scott Winslow

Scott Winslow

Research Scientist

Renee Ng

Renee Ng

PhD Candidate

Andrew Vaitekenas

Andrew Vaitekenas

Honours Student

Airway Epithelial Research projects

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Reports and Findings

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Surveillance of avian influenza through bird guano in remote regions of the global south to uncover transmission dynamics

Avian influenza viruses (AIVs) pose a growing global health threat, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), where limited surveillance capacity and under-resourced healthcare systems hinder timely detection and response. Migratory birds play a significant role in the transboundary spread of AIVs, yet data from key regions along migratory flyways remain sparse. To address these surveillance gaps, we conducted a study between December 2021 and February 2023 using fresh bird guano collected across 10 countries in the Global South.

Combination of curcumin or chitosan with photodynamic therapy as an effective alternative therapy for overcoming wound infection associated with multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii

The increasing prevalence of multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii as an opportunistic pathogen in wound infections raises significant concerns due to its antibiotic resistance and biofilm-mediated antibiotic tolerance. This underscores the urgent need to explore an alternative approach to effectively managing wound infections caused by MDR A. baumannii.

Interleukin-4 modulates type I interferon to augment antitumor immunity

Despite advances in immunotherapy, metastatic melanoma remains a considerable therapeutic challenge due to the complexity of the tumor microenvironment. Intratumoral type I interferon (IFN-I) has long been associated with improved clinical outcomes. However, several IFN-I subtypes can also paradoxically promote tumor growth in some contexts. 

The potential of antisense oligonucleotide therapies for inherited childhood lung diseases

Antisense oligonucleotides are an emerging therapeutic option to treat diseases with known genetic origin. In the age of personalised medicines, antisense oligonucleotides can sometimes be designed to target and bypass or overcome a patient's genetic mutation, in particular those lesions that compromise normal pre-mRNA processing. Antisense oligonucleotides can alter gene expression through a variety of mechanisms as determined by the chemistry and antisense oligomer design.

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