Publications by authors named "Stefanie Freeman"

Background: The human monoclonal antibody opicinumab (BIIB033, anti-LINGO-1) has shown remyelinating activity in preclinical studies. We therefore assessed the safety and tolerability, and efficacy of opicinumab given soon after a first acute optic neuritis episode.

Methods: This randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 2 study (RENEW) was done at 33 sites in Australia, Canada, and Europe in participants (aged 18-55 years) with a first unilateral acute optic neuritis episode within 28 days from study baseline.

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Frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) with ubiquitin-positive, tau-negative inclusions, and linkage to chromosome 17 was recently found to be caused by mutations in the progranulin (PGRN) gene. In this study, we screened a group of 51 FTLD patients for PGRN mutations and identified a novel exon 6 splice donor site deletion (IVS6+5_8delGTGA) in 2 unrelated patients. This mutation displayed an altered splicing pattern generating 2 aberrant transcripts and causing frameshifts of the coding sequence, premature termination codons, and a near absence of PGRN mRNA from the mutated alleles most likely through nonsense-mediated decay.

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Article Synopsis
  • Frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) is a leading cause of early-onset dementia, with FTLD-TDP being the most common type linked to TDP-43 protein inclusions.
  • Researchers conducted a genome-wide association study with 515 FTLD-TDP patients and identified significant genetic links on chromosome 7p21, particularly related to the TMEM106B gene.
  • Variants in TMEM106B may increase the risk of developing FTLD-TDP, especially in those with GRN mutations, indicating a potential genetic mechanism for this form of dementia.*
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Background/aims: Alterations in gene dosage have recently been associated with neurodegenerative disorders, such as Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease, and deletions of the progranulin (PGRN) locus were recently described in patients with frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD). FTLD is a genetically complex neurodegenerative disorder with mutations in the PGRN and the microtubule-associated protein tau (MAPT) genes being the most common known causes of familial FTLD. In this study, we investigated 39 patients with FTLD, previously found negative for mutations in PGRN and MAPT, for copy number alterations of these 2 genes.

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Cerebral volume loss has long been associated with normal aging, but whether this is due to aging itself or to age-related diseases, including incipient Alzheimer disease, is uncertain. To understand the changes that occur in the aging brain, we examined the cerebral cortex of 27 normal individuals ranging in age from 56 to 103 years. None fulfilled the criteria for the neuropathologic diagnosis of Alzheimer disease or other neurodegenerative disease.

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Pigmented orthochromatic leukodystrophy and hereditary diffuse leukoencephalopathy with spheroids are two adult onset leukodystrophies with neuroaxonal spheroids presenting with prominent neurobehavioral, cognitive and motor symptoms. These are familial or sporadic disorders characterized by cerebral white matter degeneration including myelin and axonal loss, gliosis, macrophages and axonal spheroids. We report clinical, neuroimaging and pathological correlations of four women ages 34-50 years with adult onset leukodystrophy.

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Pick disease (PiD) is a frontotemporal dementia characterized by frontal and temporal atrophy, neuronal loss, gliosis, ballooned neurons that are positive for alpha-B crystallin and neurofilament, and the presence of tau- and ubiquitin-positive Pick bodies. TAR-DNA binding protein 43 (TDP-43) has been found to be a component of ubiquitinated inclusions in other neurodegenerative diseases, including frontotemporal lobar degeneration with ubiquitinated inclusions and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Fifteen cases of PiD were examined using immunohistochemical methods, and 5 cases with both Pick bodies and smaller intracytoplasmic inclusions that showed staining for ubiquitin, tau, and TDP-43 were observed.

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Some cases of familial frontotemporal dementia (FTD) leading to frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) are caused by mutations in tau on chromosome 17 (FTDP-17). Certain mutations alter the ratio between four (4R tau) and three (3R tau) repeat tau isoforms whereas cases with progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) and corticobasal degeneration (CBD) mainly have 4R tau brain pathology. We assessed tau mRNA and protein levels in frontal cortex from 15 sporadic FTLD, 21 PSP, 5 CBD, 15 Alzheimer's disease (AD) and 16 control brains.

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Cerebral accumulation of amyloid beta protein (Abeta) is characteristic of Alzheimer disease (AD). Abeta can be detected in cerebrospinal fluid and in plasma. Although plasma Abeta has been proposed as a marker of risk of AD, it is unknown how plasma levels relate to neuropathologic levels.

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Objective: To determine the correspondence between uptake of Pittsburgh Compound B (PiB) in life and measures of beta-amyloid (Abeta) in postmortem tissue analysis. Patient A 76-year-old man with a clinical diagnosis of dementia with Lewy bodies underwent fluorodeoxyglucose (18)F and PiB positron emission tomographic brain scans. Imaging revealed marked region specific binding of PiB and abnormal fluorodeoxyglucose uptake.

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A 46-year-old man with a 1-year history of distal paresthesias and mild distal weakness subacutely developed paralysis of the left hand. Electrodiagnostic evaluation revealed a demyelinating peripheral neuropathy that met criteria for chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP). Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain revealed a mass that enhanced with contrast, but revealed focal myelin loss with intense macrophage activity and axonal preservation on biopsy.

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Ubiquitinated cytoplasmic inclusions (Ub-CIs) in superficial frontal cortex and dentate gyrus neurons are the hallmark of frontotemporal degeneration of the motor neuron disease-type (FTD-MND-type). To date, 2 reports have described intranuclear ubiquitinated inclusions (Ub-INIs) in 9 cases of familial FTD-MND-type (without clinical or pathologic motor neuron disease, MND). In the current study we found an additional 11 cases with Ub-INIs.

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Production of toxic oxygen metabolites provides a mechanism for microbicidal activity of the neutrophil. The NADPH oxidase enzyme system initiates the production of oxygen metabolites by reducing oxygen to form superoxide anion (O(2)()). With stimulation of the respiratory burst, cytosolic oxidase components, p47(phox), p67(phox), and Rac, translocate to the phagolysomal and plasma membranes where they form a complex with cytochrome b(558) and express enzyme activity.

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