Ipsen Colloquium on Alzheimer's Disease 2010
Two Faces of Evil: Cancer and Neurodegeneration Ipsen Colloquium on Alzheimer's Disease
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Two Faces of Evil: Cancer and Neurodegeneration Ipsen Colloquium on Alzheimer's Disease
Cancer and neurodegenerative diseases—what do they have in common, apart from the distress they cause to sufferers and their families?...
Researchers report that PGC-1α manages multiple genes that mitochondria need for biogenesis, electron transport, and glucose metabolism...
Immune cells cannot easily cross the blood-brain barrier to enter the central nervous system, but when they do reach the brain to fight infection, they don’t let go...
A report published online October 3 in Nature Genetics adds to the evidence for functional variants in NMDA glutamate receptor genes...
Could it be that a γ-secretase mutation helped give rise to communism?
Readers who followed Tom Fagan’s <a href="/news/conference-coverage/copper-mountain-fractious-receptors-glia-and-ad-pathology">Keystone Symposium coverage</a> of how a particular form of neuroinflammation...
In the race to understand the genetics of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), the lowly zebrafish just might swim off...
Québec: Teasing Out the Function of TDP-43 Québec: Motor Neurons from Stem Cells—Really, Truly? Québec: In Zebrafish, Scientists See "ALS Matrix" Fondation André-Delambre, 2010 Symposium on Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
From fibroblasts, to stem cells, to neurons—it is a vision that holds the promise of someday treating amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)...
Sponsored by the <a href="http://www.fondationandredelambre.com/indexeng.html" target="_new">Fondation André-Delambre</a> and now in its sixth year, the Symposium on amyotrophic lateral sclerosis...
Two pernicious disorders of late life, Alzheimer disease and diabetes, may be tied together...
In amino acid speak, trouble can be spelled with a capital “Q”—more precisely, long strings of them in proteins...
What’s good for the heart may be good for the brain...
Reactive astrogliosis is a well-described pathological feature of AD, but how it relates to neurodegeneration is not fully clear...