Detalles del proyecto
Description
ABSTRACT
Advances in biomarker detection have unlocked unprecedented opportunity in the early detection and treatment
of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), as highlighted by the recent FDA approval of two new anti-amyloid
immunotherapies. The picture that has emerged from these successes is one in which cognitive preservation
depends upon severing the link between initial amyloid accumulation and later involvement of tau. Multiple lines
of evidence indicate that aberrant astrocyte activation is a critical link in this causal chain, and one that is likewise
accessible to non-invasive biomarker detection. Work from our lab and others suggests that one particular
regulator of astrocyte activation, the stress kinase p38α, may be crucially involved in this process. We therefore
will test the central hypothesis that early astrocyte p38α signaling in response to Aβ accumulation enhances
downstream microglial activation, neuronal damage, and eventual cognitive dysfunction. This will be tested in
two complementary aims. Aim 1 will test the hypothesis that loss of astrocyte p38α rescues detrimental
alterations in reactive astrocyte function and reduces AD-type neuropathology. Aim 2 will determine the clinical
relevance of the animal findings by characterizing astrocyte p38α signaling in human brain across different levels
of AD pathological burden. Inclusion of transcriptomic endpoints across both aims will enhance the discovery
potential of the studies. If successful, this proposal will uncover important pathways underlying astrocyte
pathological transformations, providing a framework for wider interrogation of astrocytic modulators that might
find clinical utility for AD treatment.
| Estado | Activo |
|---|---|
| Fecha de inicio/Fecha fin | 10/1/25 → 9/30/27 |
Financiación
- Alzheimers Association: 66.056,00 US$
Huella digital
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