EVENTS
LATE (limbic predominant age-associated TDP43 encephalopathy) is a recently described condition that may be responsible for memory decline in the oldest old (>85 years). While the prevalence of Alzheimer's decreases in this demographic, LATE continues to rise. But because LATE looks clinically indistinguishable from Alzheimer's, many people are inadvertently diagnosed with Alzheimer's, treated as if they have Alzheimer's, and are enrolled in studies for new treatments in Alzheimer's. While we have known that TDP43 is involved in ALS, frontotemporal dementia and perhaps Alzheimer's, this is one of the first indications that TDP43 may be primarily responsible for a disorder of memory in a growing fraction of the population. You can read about LATE and its implications below.
All dressed up... and places to go! Congrats Brittany!
Congratulations to Kate, Nate and Roberto! In one of the fastest peer review processes ever, their manuscript on neuronal survival was recently accepted for publication in the Journal of Visualized Experiments.
Congrats to Lisa, Ahmet and Nate! Their work on Ubiquilin-2 in ALS and FTD was recently accepted for publication at Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA. This was a concerted effort that included many from Hank Paulson's group and Magda Ivanova's lab as well as our own.
|
AuthorThe Barmada Lab Archives
August 2023
Categories |