Hair cells, the mechanosensory receptors of the inner ear, are responsible for hearing and balance. Hair cell death and consequent hearing loss are common results of treatment with ototoxic drugs, including the widely used aminoglycoside antibiotics. Induction of heat shock ...
Read More »An optimized method for enrichment of whole brain-derived extracellular vesicles reveals insight into Alzheimer’s disease
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the major cause of dementia that has increased dramatically in prevalence over the past several decades. Yet many questions still surround the etiology of AD. Recently, extracellular vesicles (EVs) that transport protein...
Read More »Autophagy regulates exosomal release of prions in neuronal cells
Prions are protein-based infectious agents that autocatalytically convert the cellular prion protein PrPC to its pathological isoform PrPSc Subsequent aggregation and accumulation of PrPSc in nervous...
Read More »Insights of exosomes in neurodegenerative diseases
Exosomes are small membranous entities of endocytic origin. Their production by a wide variety of cells in eukaryotes implicates their roles in the execution of essential processes, especially cellular communication. Exosomes are secreted under both physiological and pathophysiological conditions, and ...
Read More »Exosomal Biomarkers In Down Syndrome And Alzheimer’s Disease
Every person with Down syndrome (DS) has the characteristic features of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) neuropathology in their brain by the age of forty, and most go on to develop AD dementia. Since people with DS show highly variable levels of ...
Read More »Exosomes and the Prion Protein
Exosomes are involved in the progression of neurodegenerative diseases. The cellular prion protein (PrPC) is highly expressed on exosomes. In neurodegenerative diseases, PrPC has at least two functions: It is the substrate for the generation of pathological prion protein (PrPSc), ...
Read More »Exosomes – Origins and Therapeutic Potential for Neurodegenerative Disease
Exosomes, small lipid bilayer vesicles, are part of the transportable cell secretome that can be taken up by nearby recipient cells or can travel through the bloodstream to cells in distant organs. Selected cellular cytoplasm containing proteins, RNAs, and other ...
Read More »Exosomes as a potential novel therapeutic tools against neurodegenerative diseases
Exosomes are extracellular vesicles that can transfer biological information over long distances affecting normal and pathological processes throughout organism. It is known that very often composition and therapeutic properties of exosomes depends on cell type and its physiological state. Thus, ...
Read More »Exosomes and autophagy – coordinated mechanisms for the maintenance of cellular fitness
Conditions resulting from loss of cellular homeostasis, including oxidative stress, inflammation, protein aggregation, endoplasmic reticulum stress, metabolic stress, and perturbation of mitochondrial function, are common to many pathological disorders and contribute to aging. Cells face these stress situations by engaging ...
Read More »The role of extracellular vesicles in the progression of neurodegenerative disease and cancer
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are released from many cell types, including normal and pathological cells, and range from 30 to 1000nm in size. Once thought to be a mechanism for discarding unwanted cellular material, EVs are now thought to play a ...
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