Тёмный
No video :(

Gregory Petsko (Cornell) 1: Neurodegenerative disease: The Coming Epidemic 

Science Communication Lab
Подписаться 181 тыс.
Просмотров 21 тыс.
50% 1

www.ibiology.org/neuroscience...
Overview:
Part 1: As the world’s population ages, rates of neurodegenerative disease are increasing. Research into familial forms of these diseases is providing insight into cellular mechanisms.
Part 2: Petsko’s lab has shown that cleavage of α-synuclein by caspase-1 causes α-synuclein to form aggregates. This may be a critical step in the development of Parkinson’s disease.
Part 3: Studies in yeast and neuronal models have allowed Petsko’s lab to identify genes that suppress protein aggregation found in ALS.
Talk Description:
Dr. Petsko begins his lecture by presenting the challenges associated with a growing elderly population and a shrinking work force. As the population ages, we face an epidemic of debilitating neurodegenerative disease that will take a great financial and emotional toll on family, caregivers and society. The brains of patients with Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and ALS/Lou Gehrig’s diseases are characterized by the presence of protein aggregates due to protein misfolding. While most neurodegenerative disease arises sporadically, about 10% has a direct genetic cause. Petsko explains that by studying the familiar forms, scientists have gained great insight into the cellular and molecular processes underlying these devastating diseases.
In Part 2, Petsko focuses on Parkinson’s disease, the second most common neurodegenerative disease after Alzheimer’s. Petsko and his colleagues studied patients with a genetic predisposition to Parkinson’s disease and found a mutation in the α-synuclein gene that caused the protein to misfold and aggregate. In sporadically occurring cases of Parkinson’s, they discovered that α-synuclein was cleaved and the resulting protein fragment formed aggregates. Switching to yeast as a model system and then to human cells, Petsko’s lab identified caspase-1 as the protease responsible for cleaving α-synuclein. Interestingly, caspase-1 is activated during inflammation, providing a possible explanation for how head injury and brain infection may contribute to Parkinson’s. The development of caspase-1 inhibitors that can penetrate the brain would present hope for an effective treatment for Parkinson’s disease.
Petsko and others also studied patients with familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) or Lou Gehrig’s disease and he describes this work in Part 3. They knew that many of the genes mutated in ALS encode RNA-binding proteins and these proteins formed aggregates in neurons from ALS patients. Expression of two of these proteins, FUS and TDP43, in yeast resulted in the same phenotype. A screen for yeast genes that would suppress FUS/TDP43 toxicity identified five genes and all encoded RNA binding proteins. Excitingly, several of the human homologs of these genes also were shown to block FUS/TDP43 toxicity in human neuron and neonatal rat models. These encouraging results generate hope that targeted gene therapy may provide a future treatment for this terrible neurodegenerative disease.
Speaker Biography:
Gregory Petsko is Arthur J. Mahon Professor of Neuroscience in the Brain and Mind Research Institute at Weill Cornell Medical College. His lab studies protein structure and function with a particular focus on understanding and developing treatments or preventative therapies for age-related neurodegenerative diseases.
Petsko received his B.A. from Princeton University. He was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship and completed his D.Phil. from Oxford University where he studied in Sir David Chilton Phillips’ lab.
Petsko is an elected member of the National Academy of Sciences and the Academy of Medicine and has received numerous other honors and awards.
Learn more about Dr. Petsko: brainandmind.weill.cornell.edu...

Опубликовано:

 

17 июл 2016

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 30   
@XiangxiMeng
@XiangxiMeng 8 лет назад
This is the most passionate lecture I have ever watched through iBiology! If I could make the decision, I will definitely grant the fundings to Dr. Petsko and to support AD research!
@merlinmystique
@merlinmystique 4 года назад
this is one of the best lessons in this playlist of iBiology for sure, stunning
@dukherdohonekorunrodone6346
@dukherdohonekorunrodone6346 6 лет назад
awesome lecture. That Douglas Whitney one sent me chills down my spine
@ilkinmengusoglu4277
@ilkinmengusoglu4277 2 года назад
Probably the best lecture I watched! Thank you for influencing my career decision
@Dr_Sri_Harsha_Guthikonda
@Dr_Sri_Harsha_Guthikonda 4 года назад
He is good!
@DeAskatasuna
@DeAskatasuna 7 лет назад
ist gut!
@XpnLef
@XpnLef 4 года назад
Fun fact, Auguste Deter did not carry the mutation (Rupp et al. 2014 "A Presenilin 1 Mutation in the First Case of Alzheimer's Disease: Revisited"). it gets really complicated, personally i am not a fan if the amyloid cascade hypothesis, i am a "tauoist".
@allyourcode
@allyourcode 5 лет назад
Prof: We could have global thermonuclear war, or worldwide plage, but you know somehow, you just never can have one of those when you really need one. Trump: Hold my beer.
@user-cf3oe8fi7y
@user-cf3oe8fi7y 5 месяцев назад
I am trying to work on a Way to stop or slow it done I Had FTD under 18 from thoaused of brain injury's
@abumutaz8878
@abumutaz8878 2 года назад
Any cure for GPT2 mutation?
@TyrekeCorrea
@TyrekeCorrea 3 года назад
This has happened to little kids at an alarming rate over the past twenty years.
@medaphysicsrepository2639
@medaphysicsrepository2639 8 лет назад
LOL 1:55
@MrsVickyJane
@MrsVickyJane 2 года назад
I’m disappointed that he says there is no research that neurodegenerative diseases are caused by environmental and nutritional issues. There is research that shows it is exactly these things. His other information is good and informative but there has to be a cause and effect and it is not just age.
@intrinsicfactor5425
@intrinsicfactor5425 8 лет назад
.........when disease is a business, you'll never have a cure.
@farvision
@farvision 8 лет назад
Not from the companies. The cures come from the scientists working in the government.
@Hy-jg8ow
@Hy-jg8ow 8 лет назад
Massive automation would not help?
@farvision
@farvision 8 лет назад
We have massive automation, for example DNA sequencing whole human genomes. But you need money to buy the machines, you need people to run them, you need people to do the bioinformatic analysis. You need people like Petsko to decide WHAT to sequence - to do the science. All that takes money and physical resources to support the science. Unless companies see a profit in a short time they won't touch the basic research. That's why governments need to support the basic research until the discoveries have been made. Then clinical trials need to be run to look for side effects, efficacy ... after all that the drug companies might come in and take over ...
@Hy-jg8ow
@Hy-jg8ow 8 лет назад
+farvision I was thinking more on the lines of freeing up ALL people from menial and humiliating jobs and via robotics, while still being able to produce the same economic value via those robots. I was not thinking about a few scientists playing with their chemistry set, they presumably love what they do and only need money instead of direct access to a system of resource distribution, because we elected to build up a system based on exploitative market forces. We can redesign the whole principle of manufacturing, distribution and sharing of goods and resources without a monetary system which axiomatically designates people as tools in this process rather than goals. I for one categorically refuse to have kids for many reasons, one of them is for them to be used, abused and exploited as "resources" and wage slaves. We need to find another way to distribute goods more equitably and we need serious positive birth control policies - like rewarding the childless or those with few children. Automation for me means to replace the productive force relying on humans and human inequality generators like the market with robotic equivalents - which obviously has not happened yet. This would free up people from working as a means to merely survive and enable them to become full humans who genuinely choose to work in areas they truly love and to grow their creative potential. This can be done either within a market system without capital accumulation via a basic income strategy or within a non-monetary resource based economy framework. Either way, the predatory and axiomatically exploitative system of capital, a system which inherently requires inequality to exist in order to realize the flow of market values should end. Most resources in such a world would be given to the efforts which have the rationally proven potential for most real value being generated - diseases like this mentioned would certainly have plenty of resources to be solved. People will work not because of monetary incentives (the most shallow of all incentives) because their livelihood will require no money, but because they want to study, understand, explore, discover, create, help, expand their horizon, evolve, express themselves, etc. Some people love to be mechanics, some people love science, others love art, others love gardening, etc - a fully automated system of production and distribution based on common human decency, dignity and equity would enable people to contribute according to their most cherished of their interests and not out of need and desperation, since the base of the economy will be unburdened by machines. One such idea I heard is that you can potentially assign a robot to every human at birth so to speak, and free the human from servitude on account of the machine actually generating the needed work needed to justify the freedom from involuntary wage slavery of the former. PS: cute animal avatar
@pleasesubscribefornoreason5207
@pleasesubscribefornoreason5207 4 года назад
And why the fuck do i get multiple system atrophy at the age of 20.
@zfloz9895
@zfloz9895 4 года назад
I'm so disappointed in the neurological doctor, and all the studies that they do !!!! They still are at the point, that they can't do anything ,against this brain degenerativ problems. Going from conference to conferences, writing books, but nothing actually ,comes out useful. I'm in the situation when I'm seeing my mother, losing more of her memorie. Her walk and hands moving more rigid, she is on treatment for two years now. And all the pills in the world, can't seem to help , to stop this illness evolution. I'm so disappointed in medicine, and doctors! !!!
@moegreen3005
@moegreen3005 2 года назад
Before Corona 😔😵🤥
Далее
Treatment and Research: Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB)
1:09:53