Tau protein hyperphosphorylation and aggregation are key pathological events in neurodegenerative tauopathies such as Alzheimer's disease. Interestingly, seasonal hibernators show extensive tau hyperphosphorylation during torpor, i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFT cell receptor (TCR) gene therapy is a potent form of cellular immunotherapy in which patient T cells are genetically engineered to express TCRs with defined tumor reactivity. However, the isolation of therapeutic TCRs is complicated by both the general scarcity of tumor-specific T cells among patient T cell repertoires and the patient-specific nature of T cell epitopes expressed on tumors. Here we describe a high-throughput, personalized TCR discovery pipeline that enables the assembly of complex synthetic TCR libraries in a one-pot reaction, followed by pooled expression in reporter T cells and functional genetic screening against patient-derived tumor or antigen-presenting cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Methylation of plasma cell-free DNA (cfDNA) has potential as a marker of brain damage in neurodegenerative diseases such as frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Here, we study methylation of cfDNA in presymptomatic and symptomatic carriers of genetic FTD pathogenic variants, next to healthy controls.
Methods: cfDNA was isolated from cross-sectional plasma of 10 presymptomatic carriers (4 C9orf72, 4 GRN, and 2 MAPT), 10 symptomatic carriers (4 C9orf72, 4 GRN, and 2 MAPT), and 9 healthy controls.
Communication and contact between neurons and astrocytes is important for proper brain physiology. How neuron/astrocyte crosstalk is affected by intraneuronal tau aggregation in neurodegenerative tauopathies is largely elusive. Human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived neurons provide the opportunity to model tau pathology in a translationally relevant in vitro context.
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