David Westaway
Distinguished University Professor Emeritus
Biochemistry
Custom Recreational Specialties
Canada
Biography
My lab's goal is to understand molecular events that cause the most common forms of neurodegenerative disease and thus inform the translational outcomes of diagnosis and therapy. Most dementia cases occur on a one-by-one basis without affected relatives, a pattern of appearance called "sporadic" or "idiopathic". Starting with natively folded precursor proteins such as the cellular prion protein (PrPC), accumulation of misfolded protein forms of these substrates is an accepted end-stage feature of many dementias; however, we have a poor understanding of the chemical events that trigger sporadic disease and we lack animal models that capture these events. We are using knowledge of infectious and genetic prion diseases to open the black box of sporadic prion disease, by looking at early misfolding events and proteolytic clearance pathways. We are also investigating the microtubule-associated protein Tau, which can also misfold and is associated with other dementias; here we are again interested in rare events that may mark the very beginnings of the disease process.
Research Interest
Biochemistry