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Oakley, Derek

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Oakley

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Derek

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Oakley, Derek

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Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
  • Publication

    A 44-year-old man with eye, kidney, and brain dysfunction

    (Wiley-Blackwell, 2016) Vodopivec, Ivana; Oakley, Derek; Perugino, Cory; Venna, Nagagopal; Hedley-Whyte, E.; Stone, John

    Retinal vasculopathy with cerebral leukodystrophy (RVCL) is a rare, autosomal dominant condition caused by mutations of the three-prime repair exonuclease-1 (TREX1). The phenotypic expressions range from isolated retinal involvement to varying degrees of retinopathy, cerebral infarction with calcium depositions, nephropathy, and hepatopathy. We report a case of RVCL caused by a novel TREX1 mutation. This patient’s multisystem presentation, retinal involvement interpreted as “retinal vasculitis”, and improvement of neuroimaging abnormalities with dexamethasone led to the accepted diagnosis of a rheumatologic disorder resembling Behçet’s disease. Clinicians should consider RVCL in any patient with retinal capillary obliterations associated with tumefactive brain lesions or nephropathy.

  • Publication

    Pathways Disrupted in Human ALS Motor Neurons Identified through Genetic Correction of Mutant SOD1

    (Elsevier BV, 2014) Kiskinis, Evangelos; Sandoe, Jackson L; Williams, Lauren; Boulting, Gabriella; Moccia, Robert; Wainger, Brian; Han, Steve Sang-woo; Peng, Theodore; Thams, Sebastian; Mikkilineni, Shravani; Mellin, Cassidy; Merkle, Florian; Davis-Dusenbery, Brandi N; Ziller, Michael; Oakley, Derek; Ichida, Justin; Di Costanzo, Stefania; Atwater, Nick; Maeder, M; Goodwin, Marcus; Nemesh, James; Handsaker, Robert; Paull, Daniel; Noggle, Scott; McCarroll, Steven; Joung, Keith; Woolf, Carl; Brown, Robert H; Eggan, Kevin

    Direct electrical recording and stimulation of neural activity using micro-fabricated silicon and metal micro-wire probes have contributed extensively to basic neuroscience and therapeutic applications; however, the dimensional and mechanical mismatch of these probes with the brain tissue limits their stability in chronic implants and decreases the neuron–device contact. Here, we demonstrate the realization of a three-dimensional macroporous nanoelectronic brain probe that combines ultra-flexibility and subcellular feature sizes to overcome these limitations. Built-in strains controlling the local geometry of the macroporous devices are designed to optimize the neuron/probe interface and to promote integration with the brain tissue while introducing minimal mechanical perturbation. The ultra-flexible probes were implanted frozen into rodent brains and used to record multiplexed local field potentials and single-unit action potentials from the somatosensory cortex. Significantly, histology analysis revealed filling-in of neural tissue through the macroporous network and attractive neuron–probe interactions, consistent with long-term biocompatibility of the device.

  • Publication

    Synaptic Tau Seeding Precedes Tau Pathology in Human Alzheimer's Disease Brain

    (Frontiers Media S.A., 2018) Devos, Sarah; Corjuc, Bianca T.; Oakley, Derek; Nobuhara, Chloe K.; Bannon, Riley N.; Chase, Alison; Commins, Caitlin; Gonzalez, Jose A.; Dooley, Patrick M.; Frosch, Matthew; Hyman, Bradley

    Alzheimer's disease (AD) is defined by the presence of intraneuronal neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) composed of hyperphosphorylated tau aggregates as well as extracellular amyloid-beta plaques. The presence and spread of tau pathology through the brain is classified by Braak stages and thought to correlate with the progression of AD. Several in vitro and in vivo studies have examined the ability of tau pathology to move from one neuron to the next, suggesting a “prion-like” spread of tau aggregates may be an underlying cause of Braak tau staging in AD. Using the HEK293 TauRD-P301S-CFP/YFP expressing biosensor cells as a highly sensitive and specific tool to identify the presence of seed competent aggregated tau in brain lysate—i.e., tau aggregates that are capable of recruiting and misfolding monomeric tau—, we detected substantial tau seeding levels in the entorhinal cortex from human cases with only very rare NFTs, suggesting that soluble tau aggregates can exist prior to the development of overt tau pathology. We next looked at tau seeding levels in human brains of varying Braak stages along six regions of the Braak Tau Pathway. Tau seeding levels were detected not only in the brain regions impacted by pathology, but also in the subsequent non-pathology containing region along the Braak pathway. These data imply that pathogenic tau aggregates precede overt tau pathology in a manner that is consistent with transneuronal spread of tau aggregates. We then detected tau seeding in frontal white matter tracts and the optic nerve, two brain regions comprised of axons that contain little to no neuronal cell bodies, implying that tau aggregates can indeed traverse along axons. Finally, we isolated cytosolic and synaptosome fractions along the Braak Tau Pathway from brains of varying Braak stages. Phosphorylated and seed competent tau was significantly enriched in the synaptic fraction of brain regions that did not have extensive cellular tau pathology, further suggesting that aggregated tau seeds move through the human brain along synaptically connected neurons. Together, these data provide further evidence that the spread of tau aggregates through the human brain along synaptically connected networks results in the pathogenesis of human Alzheimer's disease.