Publications by authors named "Alysa Kasen"

Background: The accumulation of hyperphosphorylated, aggregated tau in neurons is one of the hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Recent work in structural biology has solved the structure of tau fibrils in several tauopathies and found that the structure of the tau fibrils varies between diseases, but fibril structure is conserved among patients within the same disease, suggesting fibril structure relates to its pathogenicity. Tau fibrils derived from AD brain (AD PHFs) seed AD-like pathology in wild-type mice, yet efforts to recapitulate this seeding with recombinant fibrils have failed.

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Symptoms in the urogenital organs are common in multiple system atrophy (MSA), also in the years preceding the MSA diagnosis. It is unknown how MSA is triggered and these observations in prodromal MSA led us to hypothesize that synucleinopathy could be triggered by infection of the genitourinary tract causing ɑ-synuclein (ɑSyn) to aggregate in peripheral nerves innervating these organs. As a first proof that peripheral infections could act as a trigger in MSA, this study focused on lower urinary tract infections (UTIs), given the relevance and high frequency of UTIs in prodromal MSA, although other types of infection might also be important triggers of MSA.

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Alpha-synuclein (α-syn) has been suggested to have many functions including, vesicle transport in neurons, transcriptional regulator, modulator of immune cell maturation and response, and a role as an antimicrobial peptide. This protein forms insoluble aggregates, called Lewy bodies, in several neurodegenerative diseases, termed synucleinopathies, including Parkinson's disease (PD), Multiple System Atrophy, and Lewy Body Dementia, and aggregates are also commonly found in Alzheimer's disease. Moreover, multiplications and point mutations in the gene cause rare autosomal dominant forms of parkinsonism, which resemble sporadic PD.

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