News

Stockton University to provide SPEAK OUT! voice therapy in NJ

A $50,000 grant will allow Stockton University to provide free SPEAK OUT! voice therapy to people in New Jersey with Parkinson’s disease. Parkinson Voice Project (PVP), which is providing the grant, designed the SPEAK OUT! program to help Parkinson’s patients with motor symptoms including low speech volume, slurred…

Psilocybin eases depression, anxiety in Parkinson’s: Pilot trial

Low-dose psilocybin, a naturally occurring psychedelic compound, may be a promising therapy for mood issues including depression and anxiety in people with Parkinson’s disease, according to data from a pilot Phase 2 clinical trial. In addition to significant reductions in depression and anxiety, results from the trial (NCT04932434)…

IC 100 reduces inflammasome activation, alpha-synuclein clumps

Blocking the inflammatory protein ASC with IC 100, ZyVersa Therapeutics’ experimental therapy to reduce inflammation, prevented the activation of the inflammasome in microglia — the brain’s resident immune cells — and the start and perpetuation of an inflammatory response. That’s according to results from a study announced by the…

STING protein-linked inflammation may have role in Parkinson’s

The STING protein, which has been linked to cell damage and brain inflammation — two known contributing factors to Parkinson’s disease and other neurodegenerative diseases — has a dual function, a study found. The researchers said their finding could have implications for treating Parkinson’s and other neurodegenerative diseases. Lysosomes,…

Verily gets $14.7M grant to develop data for Parkinson’s research

The Michael J. Fox Foundation (MJFF) has awarded a $14.7 million research grant to Verily, an artificial intelligence platform for health analytics, to generate a detailed set of molecular information for Parkinson’s disease research. Verily will analyze biological samples, including blood and cerebrospinal fluid, from participants in the…

Peptides prevent alpha-synuclein clumps seen in Parkinson’s in lab

Ring-shaped small proteins called macrocyclic peptides — originally developed to target proteins linked to diabetes and Alzheimer’s disease — have now been shown in a laboratory to also prevent alpha-synuclein from forming the hallmark toxic clumps observed in Parkinson’s disease. That’s according to researchers from the Technical University of…

Defects in Parkinson’s-linked VPS13C disrupt lysosome repair

Defects in VPS13C, a protein whose dysfunction has been linked to Parkinson’s disease, can prevent cells from repairing damage to their waste disposal systems, a study shows. VPS13C and other proteins associated with genetic forms of Parkinson’s help repair damaged lysosomes, which are cell components that recycle waste. Without…