Chronic Disease
chronic disease
Innate immune response in brain pathologies: Lost in translation?
Inflammation is a key component of the innate immune response. Primarily designed to remove noxious agents and limit their detrimental effects, the prolonged and/or inappropriately scaled innate immune response may be detrimental to the host and lead to a chronic disease. Indeed, there is increasing evidence suggesting that a chronic deregulation of immunity may represent one of the key elements in the pathobiology of many brain disorders. Microglia are the principal immune cells of the brain. The consensus today is that once activated microglia/macrophages can acquire a wide repertoire of profiles ranging from the classical pro-inflammatory to alternative and protective phenotypes. Recently, we described a novel ribosome-based regulatory mechanism/checkpoint that controls innate immune gene translation and microglial activation involving RNA binding protein SRSF3. Here we will discuss the implications of SRSF3 and other endogenous immune regulators in deregulation of immunity observed in different models of brain pathologies. Furthermore, we will discuss whether targeting SRSF3 and mRNA translation may open novel avenues for therapeutic modulation of immune response in the brain.
Harnessing Mindset in 21st Century Healthcare
Mindsets are core assumptions about the nature and workings of things in the world that orient us to a particular set of attributions, expectations, and goals. Our study of mindsets is, in part, inspired by research on the placebo effect, a robust demonstration of the ability of mindsets, conscious or subconscious, to elicit physiological changes in the body. This talk will explore the role of mindsets in three stages of chronic disease progression: genetic predisposition, behavioral prevention, and clinical treatment. I will discuss the mechanisms through which mindsets influence health as well as the myriad ways that mindsets can be more effectively leveraged to motivate healthy behaviors and improve 21st century healthcare.