UofL receives Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Grand Challenges TB biomarkers grant

February 9th, 2012

The University of Louisville announced today that it will receive a tuberculosis (TB) biomarkers grant through the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation's Grand Challenges in Global Health program, an initiative which seeks to overcome persistent bottlenecks in creating new tools that can radically improve health in the developing world. James E. Graham, Ph.D., associate professor of microbiology and immunology at the UofL School of Medicine, will pursue an innovative research project to identify and validate TB biomarkers, titled "Disposable Sampling Plate and Breath Test to Identify Patients with Active Tuberculosis."

The Grand Challenges TB biomarkers program provides funding for groundbreaking research into TB biomarkers for the development of a low-cost, simple to use tool that can quickly and accurately diagnose TB in developing countries.

"There is an urgent need to break through barriers in biomarker research in order to develop a highly-sensitive point-of-care diagnostic to improve identification of active TB cases," said Chris Wilson, Director of Global Health Discovery at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. "We hope these innovative ideas lead to effective and affordable TB diagnostics that can make an impact on one of the world's deadliest infectious diseases." Graham's project is one of 10 Grand Challenges TB biomarkers grants announced today.

The UofL project was awarded $576,800 over two years for an interdisciplinary study headed by Graham with Xiao-an "Sean" Fu, Ph.D., assistant professor of chemical engineering in the Speed School of Engineering; Richard M. Higashi, Ph.D., professor of chemistry, and Michael H. Nantz, Ph.D., professor of chemistry, in the College of Arts and Sciences; and Timothy L. Wiemken, Ph.D., instructor in the infectious diseases division of the department of medicine in the School of Medicine. This is UofL's first grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

UofL researchers are investigating a device prototype they developed for sampling volatile components of the breath. The device consists of a disposable silicon plate with reactive chemical coatings placed inside a glass vial. The patient breathes into the vial through a drinking straw and the disposable plate captures volatile chemical markers in human breath that indicate the presence of respiratory disease. To identify markers, the plate is then processed and analyzed by mass spectrometry. Researchers will be able to use combinations of detected compounds to identify TB bacteria in the lung, diagnosing the active state, which is the only contagious form of disease.

The researchers think their device might ultimately replace sputum smear microscopy, the current test for active TB. With microscopy, the patient must cough to produce sputum, which is then stained and analyzed in the laboratory under a microscope. The UofL project proposes an easier process for patients; instead of forcing a cough, patients will simply breathe into a straw and onto the sampling plate. The disposable plate method also is thought to ultimately be less expensive and capable of being the basis for a "point of care" diagnostic test independent of the need for additional laboratory work. This will be important for the goal of developing a global approach to improve TB diagnosis.

Along with the research itself, the project's interdisciplinary scope – involving engineering, chemistry, biology and immunology – excites Graham. "It is not often that engineers, chemists and the life scientists are able to come together to solve problems," he said. "This is research that none of us could do alone. This grant enables us to put our different research expertise together to address a major global health issue."

Provided by University of Louisville

This PHYSorg Science News Wire page contains a press release issued by an organization mentioned above and is provided to you “as is” with little or no review from Phys.Org staff.

More news stories

Hands-on research: Neuroscientists show how brain responds to sensual caress

A nuzzle of the neck, a stroke of the wrist, a brush of the knee—these caresses often signal a loving touch, but can also feel highly aversive, depending on who is delivering the touch, and to whom. Interested ...

Medicine & Health / Neuroscience

created 7 minutes ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 0 | with audio podcast

'Good fat' activated by cold, not ephedrine, research finds

Researchers at Joslin Diabetes Center have shown that while a type of "good" fat found in the body can be activated by cold temperatures, it is not able to be activated by the drug ephedrine.

Medicine & Health / Medical research

created 7 minutes ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 0 | with audio podcast

New immune therapy shows promise in kidney cancer

An antibody that helps a person's own immune system battle cancer cells shows increasing promise in reducing tumors in patients with advanced kidney cancer, according to researchers at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.

Medicine & Health / Cancer

created 2 minutes ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 0

Are wider faced men more self-sacrificing?

Picture a stereotypical tough guy and you might imagine a man with a broad face, a square jaw, and a stoical demeanor. Existing research even supports this association, linking wider, more masculine faces with several less-than-cuddly ...

Medicine & Health / Psychology & Psychiatry

created 3 hours ago | popularity 5 / 5 (2) | comments 1 | with audio podcast

Aging and breast cancer: Researchers uncover cellular basis for age-related breast cancer vulnerability

It is well-known that the risks of breast cancer increase dramatically for women over the age of 50, but what takes place at the cellular level to cause this increase has been a mystery. Some answers and the ...

Medicine & Health / Cancer

created 3 hours ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 0 | with audio podcast


Infectious disease may have shaped human origins, study says

Roughly 100,000 years ago, human evolution reached a mysterious bottleneck: Our ancestors had been reduced to perhaps five to ten thousand individuals living in Africa. In time, "behaviorally modern" humans ...

Mechanism for regulating plant oil production identified

Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory have identified key elements in the biochemical mechanism plants use to limit the production of fatty acids. The results suggest ways scientists ...

Reign of the giant insects ended with the evolution of birds, study finds

Giant insects ruled the prehistoric skies during periods when Earth's atmosphere was rich in oxygen. Then came the birds. After the evolution of birds about 150 million years ago, insects got smaller despite rising oxygen ...

More evidence for Asia, not Africa, as the source of earliest anthropoid primates

An international team of researchers has announced the discovery of Afrasia djijidae, a new fossil primate from Myanmar that illuminates a critical step in the evolution of early anthropoids—the group that includes humans, ...

High-contrast, high-resolution CT scans now possible at reduced dose

Scientists have developed an X-ray imaging method that could drastically improve the contrast of computed tomography (CT) scans whilst reducing the radiation dose deposited during the scan. The new method ...

Physicists close in on a rare particle-decay process

In the biggest result of its kind in more than ten years, physicists have made the most sensitive measurements yet in a decades-long hunt for a hypothetical and rare process involving the radioactive decay ...