Lennart Mucke, MD

Professor
Joseph B. Martin Distinguished Professor of Neuroscience
Director and Senior Investigator, Gladstone Institute of Neurological Disease
Department of Neurology
+1 415 734-2504
Research Description: 

Overview
Lennart Mucke’s laboratory aims to unravel how major neurologic and psychiatric conditions cause cognitive deficits, behavioral abnormalities, and other disabling symptoms, with an emphasis on dementias, epilepsy, and autism.

Our group uses mouse models and brain cell cultures to study disease-causing factors and pathways at molecular, cellular, network, and behavioral levels. Such models are also used to identify and validate novel entry points for therapeutic interventions.

The clinical relevance of discoveries is assessed through collaborative studies of human patients and brain tissues. Several findings we originally made in mouse models were subsequently identified for the first time in the human condition, highlighting the validity and power of experimental models. The most informative models have been used to identify novel strategies to counteract the development of brain dysfunctions and decline.

Major Contributions
• Instigated paradigm shifts in understanding and preventing the pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease

• Advanced the field from its traditional focus on morphological changes toward an understanding of Alzheimer’s disease at the synaptic and neural network level

• Defined molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying cognitive decline in Alzheimer’s disease

• Discovered unexpected links among Alzheimer’s disease, epilepsy and autism

• Identified novel therapeutic strategies and paved the path toward the development of tau-lowering therapeutics

• Provided critical guidance for the design of clinical trials aimed at reversing network hyperexcitability in Alzheimer’s disease

• Encouraged and enabled the translation of scientific discoveries into better treatments for brain diseases that are frequent, devastating, and costly to populations around the world

Interests and Ongoing Studies
• Mechanisms and treatment of dementia, epilepsy, and autism spectrum disorders

• Pathobiology of amyloid proteins, tau, apolipoprotein E, α-synuclein, TREM2, PTEN, and related signaling pathways

• Neural processes underlying important brain functions

• Role of glia in health and disease

• Dissection of complex neuropathogenic pathways in experimental models

• Development and (pre)clinical assessment of novel therapeutic strategies

• Establishment and guidance of interdisciplinary research programs

Primary Thematic Area: 
Neurobiology
Secondary Thematic Area: 
Tissue / Organ Biology & Endocrinology
Research Summary: 
Neurobiology of Alzheimer’s Disease and Other Cognitive Disorders
Mentorship Development: 

9/11/20    Mentoring Across Differences

Websites

Publications: 

Author Correction: Expression of A152T human tau causes age-dependent neuronal dysfunction and loss in transgenic mice.

EMBO reports

Maeda S, Djukic B, Taneja P, Yu GQ, Lo I, Davis A, Craft R, Guo W, Wang X, Kim D, Ponnusamy R, Gill TM, Masliah E, Mucke L

CHOIR improves significance-based detection of cell types and states from single-cell data.

bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology

Petersen C, Mucke L, Corces MR

Alzheimer risk-increasing TREM2 variant causes aberrant cortical synapse density and promotes network hyperexcitability in mouse models.

Neurobiology of disease

Das M, Mao W, Voskobiynyk Y, Necula D, Lew I, Petersen C, Zahn A, Yu GQ, Yu X, Smith N, Sayed FA, Gan L, Paz JT, Mucke L

TAU ablation in excitatory neurons and postnatal TAU knockdown reduce epilepsy, SUDEP, and autism behaviors in a Dravet syndrome model.

Science translational medicine

Shao E, Chang CW, Li Z, Yu X, Ho K, Zhang M, Wang X, Simms J, Lo I, Speckart J, Holtzman J, Yu GQ, Roberson ED, Mucke L

Effect of Levetiracetam on Cognition in Patients With Alzheimer Disease With and Without Epileptiform Activity: A Randomized Clinical Trial.

JAMA neurology

Vossel K, Ranasinghe KG, Beagle AJ, La A, Ah Pook K, Castro M, Mizuiri D, Honma SM, Venkateswaran N, Koestler M, Zhang W, Mucke L, Howell MJ, Possin KL, Kramer JH, Boxer AL, Miller BL, Nagarajan SS, Kirsch HE