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Alzheimer's disease

Theses and Dissertations

Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences

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Age-Dependent Increase In Tyrosine Level Depletes Tyrosyl-Trna Synthetase And Causes Neuronal Oxidative Dna Damage In Alzheimer’S Disease, Megha Jhanji Oct 2021

Age-Dependent Increase In Tyrosine Level Depletes Tyrosyl-Trna Synthetase And Causes Neuronal Oxidative Dna Damage In Alzheimer’S Disease, Megha Jhanji

Theses and Dissertations

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common form of dementia, and it currently affects more than 50 million people worldwide. Much of the population develop late-onset AD after 65 and constitute more than 95% of the cases. Currently, there is no definitive cure or way to slow down the progression of this disease that addresses the neurodegeneration and loss of cognitive functions. Although the underlying cause of AD is still unknown, the “amyloid cascade hypothesis” attributed it to the aggregation of amyloid beta (AU+03B2) peptides and has been the focus for targeting most disease-modifying drugs in clinical trials. However, emerging …


Curcumin/Melatonin Hybrids As Neuroprotective Agents For Alzheimer's Disease, John Saathoff Jan 2016

Curcumin/Melatonin Hybrids As Neuroprotective Agents For Alzheimer's Disease, John Saathoff

Theses and Dissertations

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder and the leading cause of dementia, affecting ~5.2 million Americans. Current FDA approved medications provide mainly symptomatic relief and there are no agents available to delay or cure this disease. Multiple factors such as amyloid-β aggregates, dyshomeostasis of biometals, oxidative stress, and neuroinflammation have been implicated in the development of AD. Even though significant advances have been made in understanding the mechanisms leading to AD, the exact etiology still remains elusive. Given AD’s multifactorial nature, a multifunctional strategy of small molecule design would help to identify novel chemical templates. Recently our lab …