2 results match your criteria: "University of Crete Medical School and IMBB FORTH[Affiliation]"

Implication of Contactins in Demyelinating Pathologies.

Life (Basel)

January 2021

Laboratory of Neuroscience, Department of Basic Science, University of Crete Medical School and IMBB FORTH, Nikolaou Plastira 100, 70013 Vassilika Vouton, Greece.

Demyelinating pathologies comprise of a variety of conditions where either central or peripheral myelin is attacked, resulting in white matter lesions and neurodegeneration. Myelinated axons are organized into molecularly distinct domains, and this segregation is crucial for their proper function. These defined domains are differentially affected at the different stages of demyelination as well as at the lesion and perilesion sites.

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Impact of anti-CASPR2 autoantibodies from patients with autoimmune encephalitis on CASPR2/TAG-1 interaction and Kv1 expression.

J Autoimmun

September 2019

INSERM U1217, Institut NeuroMyoGène, Lyon, F-69000, France; CNRS UMR5310, Institut NeuroMyoGène, Lyon, F-69000, France; University Claude Bernard Lyon 1, Lyon, F-69000, France. Electronic address:

Autoantibodies against CASPR2 (contactin-associated protein-like 2) have been linked to autoimmune limbic encephalitis that manifests with memory disorders and temporal lobe seizures. According to the growing number of data supporting a role for CASPR2 in neuronal excitability, CASPR2 forms a molecular complex with transient axonal glycoprotein-1 (TAG-1) and shaker-type voltage-gated potassium channels (Kv1.1 and Kv1.

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