Neurodegeneration: Molecules to medicines
Professor Giovanna Mallucci (MRC Toxicology Unit, University of Leicester)
Tuesday, 24 November 2015, 4pm to 5pm
Sherrington Building (Sherrington Library, 2nd floor (note main door closes at 4pm)), off Parks Road OX1 3PT.
Professor Giovanna Mallucci is Programme Leader at the MRC Toxicology Unit, University of Leicester. Her research group works on mechanisms of neurotoxicity.
Her background is in modelling prion diseases in mice, looking at mechanisms of neurotoxicity and developing new therapeutic approaches. Her group have shown that early synaptic changes in mice with prion disease can be reversed, resulting in recovery of synaptic and cognitive function and behavioural deficits, long term neuroprotection, and life long survival of affected animals. Thus neurodegeneration can be prevented by reversing early synaptic deficits.
Their programme uses several model systems – mice (wild type and transgenic), primary neurons and the nematode C. elegans, to understand the early molecular events that cause synaptic toxicity and neuronal cell death in neurodegeneration. In parallel, they are looking at the mechanisms involved in synaptic repair processes.
Topics: Nervous system—Degeneration, Prion diseases in animals, Prion diseases, Animals—Models, Neurotoxicology, Parkinson’s disease
Organisers: Melanie Witt (University of Oxford, Department of Earth Sciences, Department of Physiology Anatomy and Genetics)
Contact email: opdc.administrator@dpag.ox.ac.uk