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Séminaire Janelle Drouin-Ouellet "Can directly induced neurons derived from patients be useful to study sporadic parkinson’s disease?"

Détails de la réservation

Détails de l'évènement

Janelle Drouin-Ouellet

PhD, Department of Experimental Medical Science,

Wallenberg Neuroscience Center Division of Neurobiology and Lund Stem Cell Center,

Lund University, Sweden

 

"Can directly induced neurons derived from patients be useful to study sporadic parkinson’s disease?"

 

Résumé

Directly reprogrammed neurons (induced neurons; iNs) hold great promise for disease modeling of neurodegenerative disorders associated with aging, as they maintain some of the signature associated with age from the parental cells. As such, they could also express the intra-cellular disease related features occurring in idiopathic forms of Parkinson’s disease (PD).  Despite their great promise, reprogramming roadblocks have prevented the generation of iNs at a sufficiently high yield from adult dermal fibroblasts, which has significantly limited the adoption of this technology for biomedical applications. To overcome this, we have developed a new reprogramming protocol to efficiently obtain iNs of high yield and purity from aged individuals, including PD patients.
We next adapted the approach to generate dopaminergic neurons (iDA) to investigate disease-related phenotypes in iDAs derived from sporadic PD patients, with a focus on protein degradation alteration. Our findings suggest a stratification of the sporadic PD cell lines in terms of their response to stress-induced autophagy. Interestingly, some of these impairments are seemingly influenced by factors such as age, disease onset and MAPT genetics, thus perhaps reflecting the clinical heterogeneity of the disease. 

Invitant : Ludivine Breger, PhD, IMN, team: Pathophysiology of parkinsonian syndromes

 

 

 

Responsable

  • Nom : Breger Ludivine