Journal article
Ablation of tau causes an olfactory deficit in a murine model of Parkinson's disease
LC Beauchamp, J Chan, LW Hung, BS Padman, LJ Vella, XM Liu, B Coleman, AI Bush, M Lazarou, AF Hill, L Jacobson, KJ Barnham
Acta Neuropathologica Communications | BMC | Published : 2018
Abstract
Parkinson's disease is diagnosed upon the presentation of motor symptoms, resulting from substantial degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in the midbrain. Prior to diagnosis, there is a lengthy prodromal stage in which non-motor symptoms, including olfactory deficits (hyposmia), develop. There is limited information about non-motor impairments and there is a need for directed research into these early pathogenic cellular pathways that precede extensive dopaminergic death in the midbrain. The protein tau has been identified as a genetic risk factor in the development of sporadic PD. Tau knockout mice have been reported as an age-dependent model of PD, and this study has demonstrated that they..
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Grants
Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
NHMRC grants APP10331193; APP1002373; 628946.