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Cerebrospinal Fluid

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cerebrospinal fluid

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with cerebrospinal fluid across World Wide.
12 curated items9 ePosters3 Seminars
Updated about 1 year ago
12 items · cerebrospinal fluid
12 results
SeminarNeuroscience

Cerebrospinal fluid and the meninges : Understanding brain immunology from its borders

Gerd Meyer zu Hörste
University Clinic Münster, Germany
Sep 11, 2024
SeminarNeuroscience

The glymphatic system in motor neurone disease

David Wright
Monash University
Jul 5, 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.

SeminarNeuroscience

Emergent scientists discuss Alzheimer's disease

Christiana Bjørkli, Siddharth Ramanan
Norwegian University of Science and Technology, University of Cambridge
Oct 19, 2020

This seminar is part of our “Emergent Scientists” series, an initiative that provides a platform for scientists at the critical PhD/postdoc transition period to share their work with a broad audience and network. Summary: These talks cover Alzheimer’s disease (AD) research in both mice and humans. Christiana will discuss in particular the translational aspects of applying mouse work to humans and the importance of timing in disease pathology and intervention (e.g. timing between AD biomarkers vs. symptom onset, timing of therapy, etc.). Siddharth will discuss a rare variant of Alzheimer’s disease called “Logopenic Progressive Aphasia”, which presents with temporo-parietal atrophy yet relative sparing of hippocampal circuitry. Siddharth will discuss how, despite the unusual anatomical basis underlying this AD variant, degeneration of the angular gyrus in the left inferior parietal lobule contributes to memory deficits similar to those of typical amnesic Alzheimer’s disease. Christiana’s abstract: Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a debilitating neurodegenerative disorder that causes severe deterioration of memory, cognition, behavior, and the ability to perform daily activities. The disease is characterized by the accumulation of two proteins in fibrillar form; Amyloid-β forms fibrils that accumulate as extracellular plaques while tau fibrils form intracellular tangles. Here we aim to translate findings from a commonly used AD mouse model to AD patients. Here we initiate and chronically inhibit neuropathology in lateral entorhinal cortex (LEC) layer two neurons in an AD mouse model. This is achieved by over-expressing P301L tau virally and chronically activating hM4Di DREADDs intracranially using the ligand dechloroclozapine. Biomarkers in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is measured longitudinally in the model using microdialysis, and we use this same system to intracranially administer drugs aimed at halting AD-related neuropathology. The models are additionally tested in a novel contextual memory task. Preliminary findings indicate that viral injections of P301L tau into LEC layer two reveal direct projections between this region and the outer molecular layer of dentate gyrus and the rest of hippocampus. Additionally, phosphorylated tau co-localize with ‘starter cells’ and appear to spread from the injection site. Preliminary microdialysis results suggest that the concentrations of CSF amyloid-β and tau proteins mirror changes observed along the disease cascade in patients. The disease-modifying drugs appear to halt neuropathological development in this preclincial model. These findings will lead to a novel platform for translational AD research, linking the extensive research done in rodents to clinical applications. Siddharth’s abstract: A distributed brain network supports our ability to remember past events. The parietal cortex is a critical member of this network, yet, its exact contributions to episodic remembering remain unclear. Neurodegenerative syndromes affecting the posterior neocortex offer a unique opportunity to understand the importance and role of parietal regions to episodic memory. In this talk, I introduce and explore the rare neurodegenerative syndrome of Logopenic Progressive Aphasia (LPA), an aphasic variant of Alzheimer’s disease presenting with early, left-lateralized temporo-parietal atrophy, amidst relatively spared hippocampal integrity. I then discuss two key studies from my recent Ph.D. work showcasing pervasive episodic and autobiographical memory dysfunction in LPA, to a level comparable to typical, amnesic Alzheimer’s disease. Using multimodal neuroimaging, I demonstrate how degeneration of the angular gyrus in the left inferior parietal lobule, and its structural connections to the hippocampus, contribute to amnesic profiles in this syndrome. I finally evaluate these findings in the context of memory profiles in other posterior cortical neurodegenerative syndromes as well as recent theoretical models underscoring the importance of the parietal cortex in the integration and representation of episodic contextual information.

ePoster

Cerebrospinal fluid-contacting neurones are functionally connected to cardinal motor interneurons in the mice spinal cord

Edith Blasco, Caroline Michelle, Nicolas Wanaverbecq

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

A chemosensory role of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)-contacting neurons in detecting and responding to pathological changes in cerebrospinal fluid

Feng Quan, Hugo Marnas, Andrew E Prendergast, Ki Jim Kin, Loéva Tocquer, Louis Moizan, Claire Wyart

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Cilia-mediated cerebrospinal fluid flow modulates neuronal and astroglial activity in the zebrafish larval brain

Percival Paul D'Gama, Inyoung Jeong, Andreas Moe Nygård, Ahmed Jamali, Emre Yaksi, Nathalie Jurisch-Yaksi

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Enhancement of cerebrospinal fluid movement by transcranial focused ultrasound stimulation

Jaeho Kim, Seunghwan Choi, Jeungeun Kum, Sun Kwang Kim, Hyungmin Kim

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Immune cell profiling of cerebrospinal fluid in patients with neuroinflammatory diseases using mass cytometry (CyTOF)

Gerardina Gallaccio, Meng Wang, Stephan Schlickeiser, Desiree Kunkel, Chotima Böttcher, Camila Fernández-Zapata

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

The impact of cerebrospinal fluid flow on the brain metabolomic landscape and animal behavior

Mert Ege, Andreas Moe Nygaard, May-Britt Tessem, Nathalie Jurisch-Yaksi

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Irisin levels in cerebrospinal fluid correlate with biomarkers and clinical dementia scores in Alzheimer’s disease

Manuela Dicarlo, Patrizia Pignataro, Chiara Zecca, Maria Teresa Dell'Abate, Daniele Urso, Valentina Gnoni, Alessia Giugno, Francesco Borlizzi, Roberta Zerlotin, Angela Oranger, Graziana Colaianni, Silvia Colucci, Giancarlo Logroscino, Maria Grano

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

New method to characterize wasteosomes (corpora amylacea) from the human intraventricular cerebrospinal fluid

Marta Riba, Raquel Alsina, Clara Romera, Jaume del Valle, Jordi Vilaplana, Laura Molina-Porcel, Carme Pelegrí

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Optical imaging of cerebrospinal fluid via AAV-mediated secretory fluorescent protein

Masaki Nagao, Ayumu Konno, Marta Vittani, Philip Alexander Gade Knak, Michael Gianetto, Xiaowen Wang, Tsuneko Mishima, Hirokazu Hirai, Maiken Nedergaard, Hajime Hirase

FENS Forum 2024