Potential Role of Stathmin-2 in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

Episode 106,   Jan 12, 11:00 AM

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In this episode, Cathleen Lutz, PhD, vice president of the Rare Disease Translational Center at the Jackson Laboratory, provided comment on a recently published study which unveiled that stathmin-2 loss leads to neurofilament-dependent axonal collapse in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Lutz offered insight on the role stathmin-2 may have in this disease, the questions that still remain, and whether restoration of stathmin-2 may be an attractive therapeutic approach. Furthermore, she spoke on the potential of this protein as a disease-modifying biomarker and whether it may be incorporated in trials in the near future. 



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Episode Breakdown:
  • 1:15 – Idea behind studying stathmin-2
  • 2:45 – Overviewing study results
  • 7:05 – Next steps in extending this research
  • 8:40 – Neurology News Minute
  • 11:30 – Stathmin-2's connection with neurofilament light
  • 12:55 – Potential of stathmin-2 as ALS-specific biomarker
  • 14:45 – Future use of stathmin-2 in clinical trials
  • 15:30 – Closing thoughts

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The stories featured in this week's Neurology News Minute, which will give you quick updates on the following developments in neurology, are further detailed here:


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