Inflammation plays a pivotal role in the body’s defence against pathogens. It is part of a cascade of events that are crucial for maintaining organ and systemic homeostasis. While acute inflammatory responses are essential for combating infections, chronic inflammation is increasingly linked to the onset of various clinical conditions, including diabetes, atherosclerosis, cardiometabolic diseases, rheumatoid arthritis, and obesity.
Traditionally, C-Reactive Protein (CRP) has been the gold standard for assessing inflammation. However, recent studies highlight the importance of glycoproteins and lipoproteins in both acute and chronic inflammation. Notably, inflammation can alter the composition and influence the pro- or anti-inflammatory behaviour of HDL particles.
In this webinar, we will explore how Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR*) technology provides robust, fine-grained measurements of glycoproteins and lipoproteins, offering a comprehensive inflammatory profile within minutes. Further, we will present how those models were translated to benchtop NMR spectrometers potentially revolutionizing the landscape of NMR lipoprotein measurements.
Join us for this insightful webinar and discover how our translational achievements in NMR technology are poised to revolutionize clinical research settings.
September 25, 2024 | 03:00 PM CEST
* Bruker NMR Instruments are for Research Use Only. Not for Use in Clinical Diagnostic Procedures
Julien Wist
Professor of Computational Spectroscopy | Deputy Director of the Center for Computational & Systems Medicine
Prof. Julien Wist is currently the Deputy Director of the Centre for Computational and Systems Medicine at Murdoch University and head of operations and lead of the bio-/ chem-informatics team at the Australian National Phenome Centre consisting of software engineers, biostatisticians, chemometricians and data processing experts to develop analytical pipelines for metabolic phenotyping. Wist is involved in international initiative for the development of open-source data analysis and visualisation platforms such as nmrdb.org, nmrium.org and cheminfo.org.
His research focuses on the integration of high-fidelity molecular phenotypes to create translatable methods for the clinical environment. He strives to establish a comprehensive phenotypic databank of the world population by integrating cellular, immunological, and molecular data. Prof. Wist's research on SARS-CoV-2 infection revealed crucial markers for disease progression, including the acute phase, risk of death, and post-acute COVID 19 syndrome. More recently, Wist and his team detected and elucidated the structure of 10 new molecules for the first time in human urine and elucidated 10 of them, revealing the existence of an extended RSAD2 dependant natural antiviral pathway extending involving the Viperin enzyme to convert CTP into ddhCTP and analogs. These significant findings have led to the filing of 2 patents in collaboration with industry leaders and have been published in renowned international journals.