TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
6Total items
4ePosters
2Seminars

Latest

SeminarNeuroscience

How do we sleep?

William Wisden
Dept Life Sciences & UK Dementia Research Institute, Imperial College London, UK
Nov 28, 2024

There is no consensus on if sleep is for the brain, body or both. But the difference in how we feel following disrupted sleep or having a good night of continuous sleep is striking. Understanding how and why we sleep will likely give insights into many aspects of health. In this talk I will outline our recent work on how the prefrontal cortex can signal to the hypothalamus to regulate sleep preparatory behaviours and sleep itself, and how other brain regions, including the ventral tegmental area, respond to psychosocial stress to induce beneficial sleep. I will also outline our work on examining the function of the glymphatic system, and whether clearance of molecules from the brain is enhanced during sleep or wakefulness.

SeminarNeuroscience

The glymphatic system in motor neurone disease

David Wright
Monash University
Jul 6, 2022

Neurodegenerative diseases are chronic and inexorable conditions characterised by the presence of insoluble aggregates of abnormally ubiquinated and phosphorylated proteins. Recent evidence also suggests that protein misfolding can propagate throughout the body in a prion-like fashion via the interstitial or cerebrospinal fluids (CSF). As protein aggregation occurs well before the onset of brain damage and symptoms, new biomarkers sensitive to early pathology, together with therapeutic strategies that include eliminating seed proteins and blocking cell-to-cell spread, are of vital importance. The glymphatic system, which facilitates the continuous exchange of CSF and interstitial fluid to clear the brain of waste, presents as a potential biomarker of disease severity, therapeutic target, and drug delivery system. In this webinar, Associate Professor David Wright from the Department of Neuroscience, Monash University, will outline recent advances in using MRI to investigate the glymphatic system. He will also present some of his lab’s recent work investigating glymphatic clearance in preclinical models of motor neurone disease. Associate Professor David Wright is an NHMRC Emerging Leadership Fellow and the Director of Preclinical Imaging in the Department of Neuroscience, Monash University and the Alfred Research Alliance, Alfred Health. His research encompasses the development, application and analysis of advanced magnetic resonance imaging techniques for the study of disease, with a particular emphasis on neurodegenerative disorders. Although less than three years post PhD, he has published over 60 peer-reviewed journal articles in leading neuroscience journals such as Nature Medicine, Brain, and Cerebral Cortex.

ePosterNeuroscience

Formulating novel research questions to investigate a mechanistic relationship between the brain glymphatic system and Alzheimer's Disease

Iva Durdanovic
ePosterNeuroscience

Glymphatic system modelled as part of a gut-brain axis on-a-chip platform to study brain fluids clearance in neuroinflammation

Simone Perottoni, Gabriele Ferrari, Lucia Boeri, Francesca Donnaloja, Marzia Campanile, Lorenzo Sardelli, Andrea Arighi, Diego Albani, Carmen Giordano
ePosterNeuroscience

A porcine cranial window model to study the glymphatic system

Nicholas B. Bechet, Nagesh Shanbhag, Iben Lundgaard
ePosterNeuroscience

The role of sleep in glymphatic system regulation

Natalie Hauglund, Maiken Nedergaard

glymphatic system coverage

6 items

ePoster4
Seminar2

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