grant

Host Immunogenetics and Fungal Virulence Mechanisms in Coccidioidomycosis

Organization UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELESLocation LOS ANGELES, UNITED STATESPosted 24 Jan 2022Deadline 31 Dec 2026
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY2026AddressAreaB blood cellsB cellB cellsB-CellsB-LymphocytesB-cellCaliforniaCase StudyCase-Base StudiesCell Membrane LipidsCell WallClinicClinicalCoccidioidesCoccidioidomycosisCommunicationDataDefectDesert rheumatismDevelopmentDiagnosisDiagnosticDiseaseDisorderEnsureFungus DiseasesGene TranscriptionGeneticGenetic TranscriptionGenomicsGoalsHelper CellsHelper T-CellsHelper T-LymphocytesHelper-Inducer T-CellsHelper-Inducer T-LymphocyteHost DefenseHumanImmuneImmune EvasionImmune responseImmunesImmunityImmunochemical ImmunologicImmunodominant AntigensImmunogeneticsImmunologicImmunologicalImmunologicallyImmunologicsImmunologistInbred Strains MiceIndividualInducer CellsInducer T-LymphocytesInfectionInnate Immune ResponseInnate ImmunityInvestigationInvestigatorsLifeLungLung DiseasesLung Respiratory SystemMeasuresMembrane LipidsModern ManMucosaMucosal TissueMucous MembraneMycosesNative ImmunityNatural ImmunityNon-Specific ImmunityNonspecific ImmunityOrganismOutcomePathogenicity FactorsPatientsPhagocytosisPlayPredispositionPreventionPublishingPulmonary DiseasesPulmonary DisorderRNA ExpressionReagentReproduction sporesResearchResearch PersonnelResearchersResistanceRoleRunningSafetySamplingSan Joaquin Valley feverSideSignal PathwaySporesSusceptibilityT-CellsT-LymphocyteTherapeutic FungicidesTranscriptionValley FeverVariantVariationVirulenceVirulence Factorsadaptive immune responseadaptive immunityanti-fungalanti-fungal agentsanti-fungal drugcase reportclinical heterogeneitydesert feverdevelopmentaldisease of the lungdisorder of the lungempowermentexperimentexperimental researchexperimental studyexperimentsfungal infectionfungusfungus infectionhost responseimmune evasiveimmune system responseimmunoresponseliving systemlow-frequency mutationlung disordermeetingmeetingsmodel organismmouse modelmultidisciplinarymurine modelnew approachesnovel approachesnovel strategiesnovel strategypathogenprematureprematuritypreventpreventingprognosticprogramsrare allelerare mutationrare variantrecruitresistantresponsesocial rolethymus derived lymphocytetool
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Full Description

There is a broad heterogeneity of clinical outcomes after infection with Coccidioides (Cocci) ranging from
asymptomatic infection to mild pulmonary disease (“Valley fever”) to a life-threatening, invasive disease called

disseminated coccidioidomycosis (DCM). Everyone in the endemic areas is susceptible to this infection, but we

have almost no ability to predict who will develop disseminated disease and lack an understanding of why they

do so. With nearly 10K reported cases of Valley fever and 200 cases of DCM yearly in California, our state alone

spends ~$1B yearly on coccidioidomycosis. Thus, there is an urgent need to better understand DCM to enable

better prevention, diagnostics, prognostics, and treatments. Our team's long-term goal is to study the

intersection between the virulence programs of Coccidioides spp that maliciously exploit defective immunity, and

the dysregulation of genetic and immunological programs of innate and adaptive immunity that allow for severe

disease to take hold.

Our program will bring together a cohesive and multi-disciplinary team of immunologists, geneticists,

computational biologists, fungal microbiologists, and clinicians. Combining deep expertise with synergistic goals

will enable breakthroughs.

Our consortium includes four Projects and three supporting Cores: Project 1 addresses the innate immune

responses to cocci infection that go awry in the first stages of cocci infection; Project 2 addresses the adaptive

immune responses to cocci infection that go awry in protecting the host from disseminated disease; Project 3

addresses the genomic basis of cocci disease, from common variants that underlie susceptibility due to ancestry

to rare variants that disable host defenses; and Project 4 addresses the contributions of fungal virulence factors

in enabling the organisms to evade host immune defenses in some individuals. Our program includes an

Administrative Core (Core A) that facilitates communications between investigators, organizes meetings and

finances, and runs the Developmental Research Program. We also propose a unified Clinical Samples Core

(Core B) comprising two of the largest coccidioidomycosis clinics in California, and a Model Organisms Core

(Core C) that will carry out all experiments requiring BSL3 safety measures. These Cores together empower the

proposed projects by providing common reagents, human samples, tools, and expertise.

Our proposed investigations have the potential to transform our understanding of invasive fungal infections

and will restore hope for patients through new approaches to prevent, diagnose, and treat DCM.

Grant Number: 5U19AI166059-05
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: MANISH BUTTE

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