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Dr. Sarah Shapley, former graduate student, and Dr. Nicholas Seyfried are featured in ASBMB Today for their recent Molecular & Cellular Proteomics paper where Emory University researchers developed a method to capture tau-associated proteins found in diseased human brains.

Emory University researchers engineered an enzyme that marks proteins (red) that interact with tau (blue) during aggregation by labeling them with biotin (B), which makes them easier to isolate and identify.

Dr. Sarah Shapley, former graduate student, and Dr. Nicholas Seyfried are featured in ASBMB Today for their recent Molecular & Cellular Proteomics paper where Emory University researchers developed a method to capture tau-associated proteins found in diseased human brains.

Check out the Alzheimer’s Association ISTAART Voices Podcast where Dr. Aleksandra Wojtas and Dr. Nicholas Seyfried discuss their latest research investigating the critical role of cerebrovascular dysfunction in Alzheimer’s and related neurodegenerative diseases.

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Protein Signatures, Blood Vessels and Alzheimer’s Disease In this episode, Dr. Aleksandra Wojtas and Dr. Nicholas Seyfried discuss their latest research investigating the critical role of cerebrovascular dysfunction in Alzheimer’s and related neurodegenerative diseases. They explain how analyzing the unique protein signatures found within the brain’s blood vessels is uncovering new insights into the early […]