Stanley Prusiner, M.D.

prusiner
 
STANLEY PRUSINER, MD
 
Professor of Neurology
Director, Institute for
Neurodegenerative Diseases
University of California
San Francisco, CA
 
“Prions Causing Neurodegeneration”
 
Mounting evidence argues that prions feature in the pathogenesis of many, if not all, neurodegenerative diseases. Such disorders include Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, Lou Gehrig’s and Creutzfeldt-Jakob diseases as well as the frontotemporal dementias. In each of these illnesses, aberrant forms of a particular protein accumulate as pathological deposits referred to as amyloid plaques, neurofibrillary tangles, Lewy bodies, as well as glial cytoplasmic and nuclear inclusions. The heritable forms of the neurodegenerative diseases are often caused by mutations in the genes encoding the mutant, aberrant proteins that accumulate in the CNS of patients with these fatal disorders. The late onset of the inherited neurodegenerative diseases seems likely to be explained by the protein quality control systems being less efficient in older neurons and thus, more permissive for prion accumulation. To date, there is not a single drug that halts or even slows one neurodegenerative disease.
 
 
Attendees will learn:
  1. About the growing epidemic of neurodegenerative diseases.
  2. Evidence showing that prions are the cause of most neurodegenerative diseases.
  3. How effective therapeutics that halt neurodegeneration are being developed.