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SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Genetic-based brain machine interfaces for visual restoration

Serge Picaud
Institute Vision Paris
Apr 13, 2022

Visual restoration is certainly the greatest challenge for brain-machine interfaces with the high pixel number and high refreshing rate. In the recent year, we brought retinal prostheses and optogenetic therapy up to successful clinical trials. Concerning visual restoration at the cortical level, prostheses have shown efficacy for limited periods of time and limited pixel numbers. We are investigating the potential of sonogenetics to develop a non-contact brain machine interface allowing long-lasting activation of the visual cortex. The presentation will introduce our genetic-based brain machine interfaces for visual restoration at the retinal and cortical levels.

SeminarNeuroscience

Chemogenetic therapies for epilepsy: promises and challenges

Robrecht Raedt
Ghent University
Mar 16, 2022

Expression of Gi-coupled designer receptors exclusively activated by designer drugs (DREADDs) on excitatory hippocampal neurons in the hippocampus represents a potential new therapeutic strategy for drug-resistant epilepsy. During my talk I will demonstrate that we obtained potent suppression of spontaneous epileptic seizures in mouse and a rat models for temporal lobe epilepsy using different DREADD ligands, up to one year after viral vector expression. The chemogenetic approach clearly outperforms the seizure-suppressing efficacy of currently existing anti-epileptic drugs. Besides the promises, I will also present some of the challenges associated with a potential chemogenetic therapy, including constitutive DREADD activity, tolerance effects, risk for toxicity, paradoxical excitatory effects in non-epileptic hippocampal tissue.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Visual restoration from prosthesis to optogenetic therapy

Serge Picaud
Institut de la Vision
Jun 8, 2021
SeminarNeuroscience

Genetic therapies for Huntington’s disease, what does the future hold for neurodegenerative disorders?

Sarah Tabrizi
University College London
Mar 9, 2021

There are no effective disease-modifying therapies for neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis or Huntington’s disease. Huntington’s disease (HD) is a devastating autosomal dominantly inherited neurodegenerative disease and the world’s most common genetic dementia. I will present an overview of important approaches in development for targeting mutant HTT DNA and RNA (Tabrizi et al Neuron 2019), the cause of HD pathogenesis, and the translational pathway from bench to clinic for a HTT targeting antisense oligonucleotide (Tabrizi et al New England Journal of Medicine 2019, Tabrizi, Science 2020) which is now in phase 3 studies. In my talk I will also review some of the genetic approaches in development for other CNS diseases. I will talk a bit about my journey as a clinician scientist and share some of my learnings for young scientists on how to survive a career in science.

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