Literature DB >> 28696431

Synaptic activity protects against AD and FTD-like pathology via autophagic-lysosomal degradation.

Y Akwa1, E Gondard2, A Mann2, E Capetillo-Zarate3,4,5, E Alberdi3, C Matute3, S Marty6, T Vaccari7, A M Lozano2,8, E E Baulieu1, D Tampellini1.   

Abstract

Changes in synaptic excitability and reduced brain metabolism are among the earliest detectable alterations associated with the development of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Stimulation of synaptic activity has been shown to be protective in models of AD beta-amyloidosis. Remarkably, deep brain stimulation (DBS) provides beneficial effects in AD patients, and represents an important therapeutic approach against AD and other forms of dementia. While several studies have explored the effect of synaptic activation on beta-amyloid, little is known about Tau protein. In this study, we investigated the effect of synaptic stimulation on Tau pathology and synapses in in vivo and in vitro models of AD and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). We found that chronic DBS or chemically induced synaptic stimulation reduced accumulation of pathological forms of Tau and protected synapses, while chronic inhibition of synaptic activity worsened Tau pathology and caused detrimental effects on pre- and post-synaptic markers, suggesting that synapses are affected. Interestingly, degradation via the proteasomal system was not involved in the reduction of pathological Tau during stimulation. In contrast, chronic synaptic activation promoted clearance of Tau oligomers by autophagosomes and lysosomes. Chronic inhibition of synaptic activity resulted in opposite outcomes, with build-up of Tau oligomers in enlarged auto-lysosomes. Our data indicate that synaptic activity counteracts the negative effects of Tau in AD and FTD by acting on autophagy, providing a rationale for therapeutic use of DBS and synaptic stimulation in tauopathies.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28696431      PMCID: PMC5641448          DOI: 10.1038/mp.2017.142

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Psychiatry        ISSN: 1359-4184            Impact factor:   15.992


Introduction

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common form of dementia, and it is characterized by progressive accumulation of aggregated beta-amyloid (Aβ) peptide and Tau protein, especially at synapses (1–3). Synapses are considered to be a primary target of pathology in AD and other forms of dementia (4, 5), and synapse loss has been considered the best correlate of memory impairment in AD (6, 7). In AD patients, neuronal activity is reduced (8, 9), as well as in several AD mouse models (10). Alterations of synaptic activity and reduced brain metabolism are among the earliest signs of AD pathology, which are detectable decades before the development of other symptoms (11, 12). Therefore, the study of synaptic activity in AD has become an important subject for basic research as well as for the development of therapeutics. Increasing evidence supports the positive effects of synaptic stimulation against AD pathology (13–15). Synaptic activity is implicated in neuronal survival, since it can activate pro-survival genes increasing protection against apoptosis (16). Synaptic stimulation is also required for ATP production at synapses, which is fundamental for their correct functioning, and is involved in mechanisms of protection against Aβ oligomer-induced toxicity (17, 18). Finally, deep brain stimulation (DBS) represents a very promising therapeutic approach, which may show beneficial effects on AD patients. It increases brain metabolism, and may ameliorate memory and quality of life in certain patients (19). In addition, more recent data demonstrated that AD patients treated with DBS had increased hippocampal volume, which correlated with an augmented hippocampal metabolism (20). In the last fourteen years multiple studies, including ours, showed that synaptic activation affects amyloid precursor protein (APP), and Aβ homeostasis. Stimulation of synaptic activity increases Aβ secretion, reduces intraneuronal Aβ, and induces APP anterograde trafficking to synapses (21–24). Synaptic stimulation promotes the recruitment of neprilysin that enhances Aβ42 degradation and, importantly, it also protects synapses by restoring levels of synaptic proteins and reducing synapse loss (25, 26). As of now, a limited number of studies were conducted to explore the effect of synaptic activity on Tau homeostasis: Neuronal stimulation resulted in augmented secretion of Tau in cell culture medium, and in the hippocampal interstitial fluid (27, 28). Synaptic activity was also shown to induce Tau translocation to dendritic spines, and Tau phosphorylation on specific residues, including Thr-205 and Ser-404 (29); however, it is unclear whether, in a pathological context, these changes are positive or negative. To investigate the role of synaptic activity on Tau pathology in vivo, we either chronically increased activity in mouse brains by DBS (30) or we inhibited it by unilateral vibrissal deprivation, (deafferentiation), an established technique used to reduce functional activity in the corresponding somatosensory (barrel) cortex (31) that we previously used with success (24, 25). We provide evidence both in vivo and in vitro that synaptic activation is protective because it reduces pathological Tau levels, and it restores normal levels of synaptic proteins, by stimulating the autophagic-lysosomal degradation pathway. Conversely, we demonstrate that inhibition of synaptic activity exacerbates accumulation of Tau oligomers in swollen lysosomes, and induces further deterioration of synapses.

Methods

Detailed methods are included in the Supplementary Methods section.

Mouse models

Triple transgenic model of AD (3xTg-AD, (32), and background strain wild-type mice (C57BL/6/129SVJ; The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, ME) were bred and maintained at the Toronto Western Research Institute. Male PS19 transgenic mice (33) were obtained from Jackson Laboratory and bred with female B6C3F1/N wild-type mice (Charles RIVER Laboratories, St-Germain-sur-l’Arbresle, France).

Surgical procedure for electrode implantation and DBS protocol

At the age of 3.75 months, 3xTg-AD and WT male mice were anaesthetized with isoflurane and bilaterally implanted with concentric bipolar Tungsten electrodes into the entorhinal cortex (EC), as previously described (30).

Surgical procedure for unilateral removal of whiskers

The procedure was performed as described (24, 25). Briefly, 5 months old PS19 and wild-type littermates mice were anesthetized and an incision was made around the skin area containing the whisker follicles, which were then removed. At 10 months of age, mice were sacrificed with pentobarbital and perfused with 4% PFA. The contralateral barrel cortices (corresponding to the half snouts that did not undergo surgery) were used as controls.

Inclusion/exclusion criteria

For the DBS experiments, we performed surgery on 22 male mice; for the unilateral whisker removal experiments, we performed surgery on 7 female and 6 male mice. The sample size was chosen based on our previous experience in performing similar experiments. Five mice per group were randomly selected to perform the histological analyses.

Antibodies

The full list of used antibodies and their applications is reported in the Supplementary Methods section.

Cell culture and treatments

Primary neuronal cultures from PS19 mice and wild-type littermates were prepared from E15 mouse embryos, as described (34).

Western blotting

Western blots analyses were performed as described (35).

Immunofluorescence

Neurons were grown on poly-D-lysine coated coverslips (Sigma-Aldrich) as previously described (34). After treatments, neurons were washed in ice-cold PBS and fixed in -20°C-cold methanol for 5 min for immunofluorescence. Brain sections were immunostained as previously described (25).

AD case and immunohistochemistry

Paraffin-embedded sections from human AD hippocampus were obtained from the Neurological Tissue Bank Hospital Clínic-IDIPAS Biobank. 8 μm sections were process as previously described (see Supplementary Methods).

Statistical analysis

Data were expressed as mean ± S.E.M. In experiments including mouse brain sections “n” refers to the number of mice analyzed per each condition. For each mouse, averages of measurements per section were considered as an individual measurement (n=1). A set of cultures prepared from one mouse embryo was considered as an n=1. In experiments involving cultured neurons ”n” refers to the number of cultured neurons prepared from one mouse embryo. Multiple coverslips prepared from one mouse embryo were considered repetitions, and the “n” was still considered one. The number of experiments repeated with cultured neurons for each treatment was either two or three, depending on the genotype of the cultured neurons. To reach an n=5, two or more preparations of cultured neurons were required, and experiments were repeated accordingly. Statistical comparisons were made using two-tailed unpaired t-tests (paired for the deafferentation data), and one-way ANOVA with significance placed at p<0.05. When appropriate, post hoc tests were conducted using the Fisher’s LSD correction. The statistical test type and p values are reported in figure legends. We did not perform an a priori power analysis since our sample sizes were similar to those reported in previously published papers (24, 25). Analysis of descriptive statistics showed no violation of any test assumptions that would justify the use of statistical test other than the ones used. The variance was similar between the analyzed groups. Statistical analyses were performed using GraphPad Prism 6 (GraphPad Software, San Diego, CA, USA) and Excel (Microsoft, Redmond, WA, USA).

Results

To investigate the effects of chronic synaptic activation on Tau pathology, we used four groups of mice: Two triple transgenics (3xTg-AD) and two wild-type (WT) (see methods). All mice underwent surgery and had electrodes implanted in the entorhinal cortex to induce deep brain stimulation (DBS). The entorhinal cortex is part of the circuit of Papez, essential for memory formation and consolidation; DBS of the mouse entorhinal cortex was shown to increase activity in the hippocampus and was associated with facilitation of spatial memory (30). One group of 3xTg-AD and one group of WT mice were stimulated (S), while the other two groups were not stimulated (NS) and were used as controls (five mice per group were analyzed). We found a significant decrease of synaptophysin in 3xTg-AD CA1 (Tg-NS) compared to wild-type (WT-NS) by quantitative immunofluorescence (Figure 1a, upper panels), confirming previous results (36). Interestingly, chronic DBS in 3xTg-AD mice (Tg-S) restored levels of synaptophysin back to WT mice (Figure 1a, upper panels: quantification in b). In the same brain sections, DBS reduced levels of Tau oligomers, more specifically the number of puncta (-18±3%), puncta area (-20±5%) and immunostaining intensity (-29±6%) compared to Tg-NS (Figure 1a, middle panels: quantification in c). No differences in synaptophysin levels were found between WT-S and WT-NS, in which Tau oligomers were not detected (Figure 1a: quantification in b). To confirm our observation that synaptic stimulation protects from Tau pathology, we chronically inhibited synaptic activity by unilateral deaferentiation in PS19 and wild-type littermate mice (Supplementary Figure 1a). Reduced cytochrome oxidase (COX) staining confirmed inhibition of neuronal activity in deafferented (Tg-deaff) compared to synaptically active control (Tg-CTRL) somatosensory cortices (Supplementary Figure 1b). Somatosensory cortices of Tg-deaff showed a significant decrease in levels of synaptophysin compared to Tg-CTRL (-11±4%; Figure 1d, upper panels: quantification in e); at the same time, reduced activity enhanced the accumulation of Tau oligomers, +22±8% and +18±2% in number of puncta and puncta area, respectively, in Tg-deaff compared to Tg-CTRL (Figure 1d, middle panels: quantification in f). Also in this case, no differences in synaptophysin levels were found between WT-CTRL and WT-deaff, and Tau oligomers were not detected.
Figure 1

Synaptic activity stimulation improves, while its inhibition worsens, Tau pathology in vivo.

a Chronic deep brain stimulation (DBS) in 3xTg-AD transgenic mice (Tg-S) resulted in reduced levels of Tau oligomers (middle panels), and increased levels of synaptophysin (upper panels) compared to non-stimulated (Tg-NS) mice, as quantified by confocal immunofluorescence in hippocampal CA1 (scale bars: 10μm; the pattern of synaptophysin immunostaining in WT-S panel appears altered probably because of a tilted angle of cutting and/or perfusion imperfections). b Quantitative analysis showing that levels of synaptophysin are restored to wild-type levels in Tg-S compared to NS-Tg (n=5; one-way ANOVA test, p=0.0045; WT-NS vs Tg-NS **p<0.01; WT-NS vs Tg-S p>0.05). c In Tg-S CA1, levels of Tau-oligomers presented reduced number of puncta (18±3%), puncta area (20±5%) and immunostaining intensity (29±6%) compared to Tg-NS. (two-tailed unpaired t-test, *p<0.05).

d Chronic synaptic inhibition by unilateral deafferentation (Tg-deaff) increased levels of Tau oligomers (middle panels), and reduced levels of synaptophysin (upper panels) compared to undeafferented (Tg-CTRL) somatosensory cortex in PS19 transgenic mice (scale bars: 10μm). e Quantitative analysis showed that levels of synaptophysin are reduced in Tg compared to WT brains, and are further reduced (11±4%) in Tg-deaff compared to Tg-CTRL (n=5; one-way ANOVA test, p<0.0001; WT-CTRL vs Tg-CTRL ****p<0.0001; WT-deaff vs Tg-deaff ****p<0.0001; Tg-CTRL vs Tg-deaff * p<0.05). f Levels of Tau-oligomers showed increased number of puncta (22±8%) and puncta area (18±2%) in Tg-deaff compared to Tg-CTRL (two-tailed paired t-test, *p<0.05, **p<0.01). g DBS decreased levels of phospho-Tau (AT8) in Tg-S compared Tg-NS hippocampi (scale bars: 10μm). Quantitative analysis showed that levels of AT8 are decreased (12±1%) in Tg-S compared to Tg-NS hippocampi of PS19 transgenic mice (n=5; two-tailed unpaired t-test, p=0.028). h Chronic synaptic inhibition increased levels of AT8 in Tg-deaff compared Tg-CTRL somatosensory cortices (scale bars: 10μm). Quantitative analysis showed that levels of AT8 are increased (13±3%) in Tg-deaff compared to Tg-CTRL somatosensory cortex of PS19 transgenic mice (n=5; two-tailed paired t-test, p=0.012). ”n” refers to the number of mice analyzed per each condition. 3xTg mice age: 7 months old; PS19 mice age: 10 months old.

Next, we explored the effects of synaptic activation or inhibition on pathological Tau phosphorylation. We observed that DBS decreased (-12±1%) levels of Tau phosphorylated at residue Ser202 (AT8) in Tg-S compared Tg-NS hippocampi (Figure 1g); these data were also confirmed by Western blot (-53±12%; Supplementary Figure 1c-d). In contrast, levels of AT8 were increased (13±3%) in Tg-deaff compared Tg-CTRL (Figure 1h). No changes were found in levels of total Tau by either DBS or deafferentation (Supplementary Figure 1e-h). AT8 immunostaining in wild-type mouse brains was too weak to be quantified (Supplementary Figure 1i-j). Overall, these data show that synaptic stimulation reduces Tau phosphorylation and accumulation of Tau oligomers, and protects synapses in in vivo models of Tau pathology. To investigate how the state of synaptic activity affects Tau, we prepared primary neuronal cultures from PS19 and wild-type embryos. Since to our knowledge no previous publication described the use of primary neurons from the PS19 mouse model, we first explored whether PS19 cultured neurons (Tg) show pathological phenotype(s) comparable to PS19 brain neurons. Levels of phospho- and total Tau accumulated with time in Tg cultured neurons: Tg neurons differentiated for 21 days in vitro (Tg-21DIV) show increased levels of AT8 and total Tau compared to Tg-14DIV neurons (Supplementary Figure 2a: quantification in b-c). Tg-14DIV neurons had reduced levels of pre-synaptic protein synaptophysin (-24±7%; Supplementary Figure 2d: quantification in e) and post-synaptic protein PSD-95 (-53±1%; Supplementary Figure 2d: quantification in f) compared to 14DIV wild-type (WT-14DIV) neurons. Progressive accumulation of Tau and reduction of synaptic proteins are alterations that have been described to occur in brains of PS19 mice (33). In addition, we found that Tg-14DIV, but not WT-14DIV, cultured neurons specifically developed Tau oligomers (Supplementary Figure 2g, upper panels). Since Tg-14DIV neurons presented a sufficiently clear pathological phenotype, similar to that observed in vivo, we used such neurons for all our further experiments. We then tested whether synaptic activation provides beneficial effects against pathological Tau in vitro. To this end, Tg cultured neurons were stimulated using a well-established glycine-induced long-term potentiation (gLTP) protocol (37), that we have extensively used in the past (24, 26). gLTP-dependent activation of neurons was confirmed by increased levels of the phosphorylated Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) compared to CTRL (Figure 2c, lowest panel), as previously shown (24). Stimulation of neurons by gLTP decreased levels of Tau oligomers (-34±6%), compared to unstimulated neurons (CTRL), as quantified by confocal immunofluorescence (Figure 2a: quantification in b). gLTP also reduced levels of AT8 (-25±5%) compared to CTRL, as quantified by Western blot (Figure 2c) and confocal immunofluorescence (Supplementary Figure 3a, upper panels; quantification in b), while levels of total Tau remained unchanged (Figure 2c; Supplementary Figure 3a, lower panels: quantification in c). gLTP stimulation also restored both synaptophysin and PSD-95 (Figure 2e) levels back to WT (quantification in Figure 2f and 2g, respectively). Higher magnification images show presence of synaptophysin and PSD-95 puncta on dendritic branches (MAP2; Figure 2h); a similar trend was observed by Western blot (Supplementary Figure 3d- f).
Figure 2

Synaptic activation reduced pathological Tau, and restored synaptophysin and PSD-95 to wild-type levels in PS19 cultured neurons.

a, b gLTP reduced levels of Tau oligomers (34±6%) compared to control treated (CTRL) Tg neurons, as quantified by confocal immunofluorescence (n=5; two-tailed unpaired t-test, *p<0.05; scale bar: 7.5μm). c, d Western blot analyses demonstrated a reduction (25±5%) of AT8 in gLTP compared to CTRL Tg neurons (n=5; two-tailed unpaired t-test, *p<0.05). e, h gLTP restored levels of synaptophysin (green) and PSD-95 (red) back to WT levels compared with CTRL Tg neurons, as quantified in f (n=5; one-way ANOVA test, p=0.0018; WT vs Tg ***p<0.001; Tg vs Tg+gLTP **p<0.01) and g (n=5; one-way ANOVA test, p=0.0068; WT vs Tg **p<0.01; Tg vs Tg+gLTP **p<0.01), respectively (scale bars: 7.5μm). “n” refers to a set of cultured neurons prepared from one mouse embryo. Three preparations of neurons were required and experiments were repeated accordingly.

As the in vitro system recapitulates the in vivo observations, we sought to use it to mechanistically clarify how the reduction of pathological Tau occurs upon synaptic activation. We initially hypothesized that the proteasome might be responsible for Tau degradation. Indeed, it was reported that synaptic activity promotes access of the proteasome to dendritic spines and synapses and its maintenance (38). To test this hypothesis, Tg cultured neurons were treated with epoxomicin to block proteasome activity during gLTP; quantitative immunofluorescence demonstrated that epoxomicin treatment failed to prevent clearance of Tau oligomers in Tg neurons during gLTP (Supplementary Figure 3g, upper panels: quantification in h). In addition, in the presence of epoxomicin, synaptic activity was still able to reduce AT8, despite the expected accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins, as revealed by Western blot (Supplementary Figure 3i-k; quantification in j). This data indicate that proteasomal degradation is not involved in the clearance of Tau induced by synaptic activity. An alternative hypothesis is that clearance of pathological Tau might depend on autophagy and the endo-lysosomal system. It was reported that aggregated forms of Tau are transported to the lysosomal system for degradation (39, 40). To assess this, gLTP stimulated Tg neurons were treated with chloroquine (CQ), which impairs lysosomal function by neutralizing luminal pH. CQ prevented gLTP ability to reduce levels of Tau oligomers, and to augment levels of synaptophysin (Figure 3a, d: quantification b-c). Quantitative immunofluorescence also revealed that lysosomes, labeled with an antibody against the lysosomal component cathepsin D, in the soma of cultured neurons were bigger (+41±4%) in Tg compared to WT neurons (Figure 3e upper panels: quantification in f). Significantly, Tau oligomers (Figure 3e, middle panels) accumulated within lysosomes (Figure 3e, bottom panels). gLTP activation restored the size of lysosomes in Tg neurons to WT, while CQ treatment did not (Figure 3e upper panels: quantification in f). In addition, Western blot analysis showed that synaptic activation reduced of 54±3% levels of immature cathepsin D in Tg neurons (Figure 3g, upper panel: quantification in h, resulting in an increase of the ratio mature/immature cathepsin D (+27±7%) in gLTP stimulated compared to CTRL neurons (Figure 3g: quantification in i), consistent with elevated lysosomal degradation. To directly test lysosomal activity, we measured processing of the substrate DQ-BSA, which fluoresces upon cleavage in lysosomes. gLTP increased levels of DQ-BSA fluorescence compared to CTRL (+17±2%; Figure 3j; quantification in k), demonstrating enhanced lysosomal degradation.
Figure 3

Tau oligomers accumulate in swollen lysosomes, and lysosomal activity is required for their gLTP-dependent clearance.

a-d Chloroquine (CQ) treatment prevented gLTP to reduce levels of Tau oligomers (lower panels), and to restore levels of synaptophysin (upper panels; scale bar 10μm) in Tg cultured neurons, as quantified by confocal immunofluorescence in c (n=5; one-way ANOVA test, p=0.0114; Tg+gLTP vs Tg+gLTP+CQ **p<0.01; Tg vs Tg+gLTP+CQ p>0.05) and b (one-way ANOVA test, p=0.0019; WT vs Tg+gLTP P>0.05; WT vs Tg+gLTP+CQ **p<0.01), respectively. e Zoomed-in of neuronal somas displayed in a: the size of lysosomes (upper panels; scale bar 10μm) is increased (41±4% of puncta area) in Tg compared to WT neurons, and Tau oligomers (middle panels) accumulated in enlarged lysosomes (merged images, bottom panels). f gLTP restored the size of lysosomes in Tg neurons back to WT; however, inhibition of lysosomal activity by CQ treatment prevented it. (n=5; one-way ANOVA test, p=0.0001; WT vs Tg ***p<0.001; Tg vs Tg+gLTP *** p<0.001; Tg+gLTP vs Tg+gLTP=CQ *** p<0.001). g-i Western blot analyses demonstrated a reduction (56±3%) of immature cathepsin D and an increase (58±9%) of the mature/immature cathepsin D ratio in gLTP compared to CTRL Tg neurons (n=5; two-tailed unpaired t-test, **p<0.01). j, k DQ-BSA assay to measure lysosomal function revealed a 17±2% increase of lysosomal activity in gLTP compared to CTRL neurons (n=5; two-tailed unpaired t-test, *p<0.05). “n” refers to a set of cultured neurons prepared from one mouse embryo. Two preparations of neurons were required and experiments were repeated accordingly.

Immunostaining of Tg mouse brains confirmed the observation in Tg cultured neurons that oligomeric Tau is mostly found in lysosomes, and that lysosomal compartment size is reduced (-15±3% and -25±5% in puncta area and fluorescence intensity, respectively) upon synaptic activation in 3xTg mice (Figure 4a: quantification in b-c). Importantly, DBS reduced as well the amount of Tau oligomers in lysosomes, as shown by the 25±3% decrease in Tau-cathepsin D colocalization (Figure 4a: quantification in d-e). Western blot analyses showed that levels of immature cathepsin D are increased of 83±22% (with a trend for mature cathepsin D, which did not reach statistical significance) in Tg-NS compared to WT mice, and that DBS in Tg-S mice restored cathepsin D levels back to WT (Figure 4f; quantification in g and h). Tau oligomers accumulated also within lysosomes in PS19 mouse brains. In this case, chronic inhibition of activity resulted in an increase in lysosomal size (+50±14%), and fluorescence intensity (+14±10%) compared to the control side (Figure 4i: quantification in j-k). Chronic inhibition of synaptic activity also exacerbated Tau oligomer deposition (+77±32%) in swollen lysosomes (Figure 4l). Taken together, these results provided evidence for an involvement of the lysosomal system in the reduction of pathological Tau during synaptic activation.
Figure 4

Synaptic activation reduced the size of lysosomes, and their load of Tau oligomers.

a Synaptic activation in Tg-S mice reduced the size of lysosomes (cathepsin D, left panels) and of Tau oligomers (middle panels), and localization of Tau oligomers with lysosomes (merged, right panels; scale bar 10μm). b, c quantification showing decreased cathepsin D puncta area (15±3%) and fluorescence intensity (25±5%) respectively, in Tg-S compared to Tg-NS CA1 (n=5; two-tailed unpaired t-test, *p<0.05). d Area of colocalization between Tau oligomers and lysosomes is reduced (25±3%) in Tg-S compared to Tg-NS CA1; e the number of colocalizing puncta between Tau oligomers and lysosomes is also reduced (42±14%) in Tg-S compared to Tg-NS CA1 (n=5; two-tailed unpaired t-test, *p<0.05). f-h Western blot analyses demonstrated an increase of 83±22% of immature cathepsin D in Tg-NS mouse brains (n=5; one-way ANOVA test, p=0.0242; Tg-NS vs WT *p<0.05; Tg-NS vs Tg-S *p<0.05); mature cathepsin D also showed a trend for an increase in Tg-NS compared to WT, which did not reach statistical significance (n=5; one-way ANOVA test, p=0.0757). i Tau oligomers (middle panels) accumulated within lysosomes (left panels) in PS19 barrel cortices. Chronic inhibition of synaptic activity by whisker deafferentation exacerbated Tau oligomer deposition in enlarged lysosomes, as assessed by confocal microscopy (right panels, merged; scale bar 10μm). j, k Quantification of immunofluorescence showed an increase (50±14%) of cathepsin D puncta area, and fluorescence intensity (14±10%), respectively, in Tg-deaff compared to Tg-CTRL somatosensory cortex (n=5; two-tailed paired t-test, *p<0.05). l Quantification of cathepsin D and Tau oligomers colocalization revealed a 77±32% increase in size of colocalizing puncta areas in Tg-deaff compared to Tg-CTRL (n=5; two-tailed paired t-test, *p<0.05). ”n” refers to the number of mice analyzed per each condition. 3xTg mice age: 7 months old; PS19 mice age: 10 months old.

How could oligomeric Tau end up in lysosomes? Previous studies demonstrated that stimulation of autophagy provides protective effects in mouse models of AD and FTD (41, 42). Thus, it is possible that oligomeric Tau is an autophagic cargo. If this is the case, Tau should be recognized by specific autophagy cargo adapters, such as p62, which has been previously associated to proteotoxic stress, and Tau clearance (43–45). In agreement with these studies, we found that p62 labels oligomeric Tau in the soma of Tg mouse brains (Figure 5a, arrows). Importantly, p62 levels increased (+50±20%) in Tg-deaff compared to Tg-CTRL (Figure 5a). In addition, in cultured neurons p62 was markedly increased (111±43%) in Tg compared to WT neurons, and gLTP stimulation returned levels of p62 in Tg neurons back to WT levels (Figure 5b: quantification in c). Finally, to explore whether Tau oligomers (which we found positive for p62) are enclosed into mature autophagosomes that can be degraded in lysosomes during synaptic activity, PS19 brain sections were co-immunostained to detect the autophagosomal membrane protein Microtubule-associated proteins 1A/1B light chain 3 (LC3) and cathepsin D. Most of Tau oligomers were colocalizing with both LC3 and cathepsin D (Figure 5d, bottom panels, arrows), revealing that they are present in auto-lysosomes, the organelles formed by the fusion of mature autophagosomes with lysosomes. Importantly, chronic inhibition of synaptic activity increased levels of LC3 (129±24%, Figure 5d). In Figure 5d (right panels, arrow) it is possible to appreciate LC3 and Tau oligomers puncta colocalizing in lysosomes (cathepsin D). Remarkably, both p62 and LC3 presented accumulation in neurites, which was exacerbated in Tg-deaff together with bigger Tau deposits in auto-lysosomes in the soma (Figure 5a and d, arrow heads), suggesting that reduced synaptic stimulation might alter Tau, as well as general autophagic clearance. In contrast, Western blot analysis showed that DBS significantly increased the LC3-II/LC3-I ratio of 48±11% in Tg-S mouse brains (Figure 5e; quantification in f), consistent with stimulation of autophagy. To further investigate whether autophagosomes are required by Tau oligomers to reach lysosomes for degradation, autophagy was inhibited in Tg cultured neurons by incubation with the PI3K inhibitor 3-methyladenine (3-MA). 3-MA treatment reduced of 39±6% the colcalization of Tau oligomers with cathepsin D (Supplementary Figure 4a: quantification in b). Remarkably, upon autophagy inhibition levels of oligomers were reduced in the soma (-54±4%) and increased of 27±7% in neurites (Supplementary Figure 4a: quantification in c and d). Finally, to explore whether lysosomes might be responsible for AT8 reduction during synaptic activity, we prepared lysosome-enriched fraction from cultured Tg neurons. The cathepsin D-positive fraction contained most of phosphorylated-Tau (AT8), compared to the nuclear-enriched fraction, (Supplementary Figure 5a). In addition, despite a different pattern of immunostaining, T22 and AT8 showed some colocalization in puncta within somas of PS19 mouse brain (Supplementary Figure 5b, lower panels, arrows), supporting that also pathologic phosphorylated Tau accumulates in lysosomes. Together, these data indicate that synaptic stimulation relies on autophagy for the clearance of pathological Tau and reveal that synaptic activity upregulates autolysosomal degradation.
Figure 5

Synaptic activity induces degradation of Tau oligomers via the autophagic-lysosomal system.

a p62 (left panels) colocalized with Tau oligomers (middle panels) in both Tg-deaff and Tg-CTRL (right panels, arrows, scale bar 10μm). Chronic inhibition of activity increased p62 levels of 50±20% in Tg-deaff compared to Tg-CTRL; p62 accumulation was evident in somas, but also in neurites (arrow heads; n=5; two-tailed paired t-test, p=0.041). b, c p62 levels were increased (111±43%) in Tg compared to WT cultured neurons. gLTP reduced levels of p62 in Tg neurons (Tg+gLTP) back to WT levels, as quantified by Western blot (n=5; one-way ANOVA test, p=0.0485; WT vs Tg *p<0.05; Tg vs Tg+gLTP *p<0.05). d Chronic synaptic inhibition induced an accumulation of the autophagosomal marker LC3 in Tg-deaff compared to Tg-CTRL somatosensory cortices. LC3 (green) showed colocalization with Tau oligomers (red) and lysosomes (blue) in both Tg-deaff and Tg-CTRL (arrows, bottom panels and zoomed in images; scale bar 10μm). LC3 accumulation was also present in neurites, especially in Tg-deaff (arrow heads). Quantification of confocal images revealed a 129±24% increase of LC3 fluorescence intensity in Tg-deaff compared to Tg-CTRL (n=5; two-tailed paired t-test, p=0.006). e, f Western blot analyses demonstrated a 54±9% increase of LC3-II/LC3-I ratio in Tg-S compared to Tg-NS mouse brain (n=5; one-way ANOVA test, p=0.0173, Tg-S vs Tg-NS *p<0.05). For experiments on mouse brains (immunofluorescence and Western blot),”n” refers to the number of mice analyzed per each condition. For Western blot experiments on cultured neurons, “n” refers to a set of cultured neurons prepared from one mouse embryo. Three preparations of neurons were required and experiments were repeated accordingly. 3xTg mice age: 7 months old; PS19 mice age: 10 months old.

Discussion

Our data demonstrate that synaptic stimulation improves Tau pathology, while its inhibition worsens it, with consequent amelioration or deterioration of synapses. Experimental procedures, performed on two different transgenic mouse models harboring two different familial-FTD Tau mutant genes showed notable complementarity. This is the first time, to our knowledge, that a link between synaptic activity and modulation of the autophagic-lysosomal degradation pathway is revealed, despite it has been known for several years that abnormal endosomal-lysosomal function is associated with accumulation of Aβ and Tau aggregates (46, 47). Autophagosomes accumulate in AD (48, 49), enhancing Tau pathology (50). Consistent with these observations, we detected the presence of Tau oligomers within autophagosomes, both in somas and neurites, of human AD hippocampus (Supplementary Figure 6). In addition, our experimental data revealed that inhibition of synaptic activity exacerbates p62 and LC3 accumulation, and increases lysosomal size. Levels of Tau oligomers also increased with activity inhibition, and their accumulation occurred within swollen lysosomes, where they also colocalized with LC3 and p62. On the contrary, synaptic activation reduced pathological Tau, p62 and lysosomal size, while increasing autophagy flux (51) and lysosomal degradation, ultimately protecting synapses. Tau oligomers are detected at pre-symptomatic AD stages (52), and might be the most toxic and pathological form of Tau aggregates (53, 54). Contrary to physiologic Tau degradation (39, 40), clearance of toxic Tau, in particular Tau oligomers, upon stimulation of synaptic activity did not require the proteasome. Strikingly, activity-dependent clearance of pathologic Tau required lysosomal activity, suggesting that synaptic stimulation might directly act on the autophagic-lysosomal degradation pathway. In agreement with our findings, stimulation of autophagy has been shown to reduce Tau aggregates and to improve neuronal survival in models of AD and Tauopathy (41, 42, 55–57). Our data also indirectly rule out that expression of Tau, under the experimental conditions that we used, might induce cell death due to lysosomal damage, as suggested for Aβ (58); indeed, we did not observe cell death in overexpressing cells, regardless the state of activation of their synapses (data not shown). How could synaptic activity modulate autophagic clearance? We provided evidence that synaptic activity enhances maturation of cathepsin D in neurons and degradation of a lysosomal substrate. In line with these observation, it was recently demonstrated that synaptic maintenance protects against lysosomal storage diseases (59). While the mechanistic details for the control of autophagic clearance by synaptic activity remain to be determined, one possibility is that synaptic activity might regulate the function of transcription Factor EB (TFEB), a well-known master regulator of autophagy and lysosomes. Indeed, activation of TFEB was reported to control autophagic clearance of phospho-Tau via modulation of the PTEN/PI3K/mTor pathway (60). Because TFEB activity at lysosomes is regulated by Ca2+ signaling (61), an attractive hypothesis is that activation of autophagy and lysosomal clearance might be sensitive to the ionic changes associated with synaptic transmission. In this scenario, synaptic activity could enhance autophagosome formation along nerve terminals to uptake cytoplasmic oligomeric Tau, targeted by p62, within autophagosomes. Consistent with this interpretation, pro-aggregating Tau fragments have been proposed to be cleared by chaperone-mediated microautophagy (62), which appears to be activated at synapsis during activity (63, 64). Mature autophagosomes are known to reach the soma by retrograde transport before lysosomal degradation (65), accounting for our observation that auto-lysosomes containing oligomeric Tau are mostly in the soma. In support of this hypothesis, we showed that autophagy inhibition markedly decreased the presence of Tau oligomers in the soma and within lysosomes, and promoted their accumulation in neurites. These outcomes seems to indicate that transport of oligomeric tau from the cell periphery to lysosomes in the soma depends on autophagy; however, since a reduced amount of oligomers could still be observed in somas and lysosomes, we cannot exclude the possibility that the endocytic pathway could also play a role in targeting oligomeric Tau to lysosomes, perhaps limited to the extracellular pool, as shown for Aβ (58). In the light of these considerations and the fact that TFEB is also known to control lysosomal exocytosis in mammalian models of lysosomal storage diseases (66), it will be interesting in the future to determine how modulation of synaptic activity may contribute to extracellular Tau spreading, which was recently reported to increase upon synaptic stimulation (67). As previously mentioned, alterations of brain activity/metabolism are among the earliest markers of AD pathogenesis. The literature contains data showing neuronal hyper or hypoactivity in subjects with high risk to develop AD (68). While hypoactivity is typically associated with deleterious symptoms, more recent outcomes provided evidence for compensatory/protective mechanisms of hyperactivity in pre-symptomatic AD brains (69). Therefore, synaptic activation might be protective for the preservation of neurons and synapses, and conservancy of cognitive functions with aging (15). In support of this hypothesis, epidemiological studies reported that higher educational attainment, or involvement in intellectual activities correlates with reduced risk of developing AD (70, 71). DBS is a surgical procedure utilized to treat movement disorders, including Parkinson’s disease, and dystonia (72). Recent studies demonstrated that DBS is safe and well tolerated in AD patients (73), and phase I and II trials are providing promising results of DBS as treatment for AD (19, 20, 74, 75). Here we demonstrated that DBS protective mechanism include induction of the autophagic-lysosomal degradation of pathological Tau and synapse preservation, both of which might explain the better clinical outcomes observed in some AD patients (19, 75). Overall, our data provide evidence for positive effects of synaptic stimulation against AD and FTD pathologies, and support future therapeutic investigations involving the modulation of synaptic activity and of autophagy.
  75 in total

1.  Activation of synaptic NMDA receptors induces membrane insertion of new AMPA receptors and LTP in cultured hippocampal neurons.

Authors:  W Lu; H Man; W Ju; W S Trimble; J F MacDonald; Y T Wang
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2001-01       Impact factor: 17.173

2.  Alzheimer's disease. A new take on tau.

Authors:  Jean Marx
Journal:  Science       Date:  2007-06-08       Impact factor: 47.728

3.  Activity-dependent tau protein translocation to excitatory synapse is disrupted by exposure to amyloid-beta oligomers.

Authors:  Marie Lise Frandemiche; Sandrine De Seranno; Travis Rush; Eve Borel; Auréliane Elie; Isabelle Arnal; Fabien Lanté; Alain Buisson
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2014-04-23       Impact factor: 6.167

Review 4.  Autophagy and Neurodegeneration: Pathogenic Mechanisms and Therapeutic Opportunities.

Authors:  Fiona M Menzies; Angeleen Fleming; Andrea Caricasole; Carla F Bento; Stephen P Andrews; Avraham Ashkenazi; Jens Füllgrabe; Anne Jackson; Maria Jimenez Sanchez; Cansu Karabiyik; Floriana Licitra; Ana Lopez Ramirez; Mariana Pavel; Claudia Puri; Maurizio Renna; Thomas Ricketts; Lars Schlotawa; Mariella Vicinanza; Hyeran Won; Ye Zhu; John Skidmore; David C Rubinsztein
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2017-03-08       Impact factor: 17.173

Review 5.  (Re-)activation of neurons in aging and dementia: lessons from the hypothalamus.

Authors:  Dick F Swaab; Ai-Min Bao
Journal:  Exp Gerontol       Date:  2010-09-15       Impact factor: 4.032

6.  Endocytic pathway abnormalities precede amyloid beta deposition in sporadic Alzheimer's disease and Down syndrome: differential effects of APOE genotype and presenilin mutations.

Authors:  A M Cataldo; C M Peterhoff; J C Troncoso; T Gomez-Isla; B T Hyman; R A Nixon
Journal:  Am J Pathol       Date:  2000-07       Impact factor: 4.307

Review 7.  p62 Stages an interplay between the ubiquitin-proteasome system and autophagy in the heart of defense against proteotoxic stress.

Authors:  Huabo Su; Xuejun Wang
Journal:  Trends Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2011-11       Impact factor: 6.677

8.  Selective clearance of aberrant tau proteins and rescue of neurotoxicity by transcription factor EB.

Authors:  Vinicia A Polito; Hongmei Li; Heidi Martini-Stoica; Baiping Wang; Li Yang; Yin Xu; Daniel B Swartzlander; Michela Palmieri; Alberto di Ronza; Virginia M-Y Lee; Marco Sardiello; Andrea Ballabio; Hui Zheng
Journal:  EMBO Mol Med       Date:  2014-09       Impact factor: 12.137

9.  Memory retrieval by activating engram cells in mouse models of early Alzheimer's disease.

Authors:  Dheeraj S Roy; Autumn Arons; Teryn I Mitchell; Michele Pignatelli; Tomás J Ryan; Susumu Tonegawa
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2016-03-16       Impact factor: 49.962

10.  Lysosomal calcium signalling regulates autophagy through calcineurin and ​TFEB.

Authors:  Diego L Medina; Simone Di Paola; Ivana Peluso; Andrea Armani; Diego De Stefani; Rossella Venditti; Sandro Montefusco; Anna Scotto-Rosato; Carolina Prezioso; Alison Forrester; Carmine Settembre; Wuyang Wang; Qiong Gao; Haoxing Xu; Marco Sandri; Rosario Rizzuto; Maria Antonietta De Matteis; Andrea Ballabio
Journal:  Nat Cell Biol       Date:  2015-03       Impact factor: 28.824

View more
  14 in total

Review 1.  Lysosome trafficking and signaling in health and neurodegenerative diseases.

Authors:  Pearl P Y Lie; Ralph A Nixon
Journal:  Neurobiol Dis       Date:  2018-05-30       Impact factor: 5.996

2.  Deep Brain Stimulation Rescues Memory and Synaptic Activity in a Rat Model of Global Ischemia.

Authors:  Elise Gondard; Lucy Teves; Lihua Wang; Chris McKinnon; Clement Hamani; Suneil K Kalia; Peter L Carlen; Michael Tymianski; Andres M Lozano
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2019-01-29       Impact factor: 6.167

Review 3.  Activation of the Brain to Postpone Dementia: A Concept Originating from Postmortem Human Brain Studies.

Authors:  Qiong-Bin Zhu; Ai-Min Bao; Dick Swaab
Journal:  Neurosci Bull       Date:  2019-02-05       Impact factor: 5.203

Review 4.  Molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease.

Authors:  Tiantian Guo; Denghong Zhang; Yuzhe Zeng; Timothy Y Huang; Huaxi Xu; Yingjun Zhao
Journal:  Mol Neurodegener       Date:  2020-07-16       Impact factor: 14.195

5.  Thioredoxin-80 protects against amyloid-beta pathology through autophagic-lysosomal pathway regulation.

Authors:  Gorka Gerenu; Torbjörn Persson; Julen Goikolea; Javier Calvo-Garrido; Raúl Loera-Valencia; Philipp Pottmeier; Cesar Santiago; Helen Poska; Jenny Presto; Angel Cedazo-Minguez
Journal:  Mol Psychiatry       Date:  2019-09-13       Impact factor: 15.992

6.  Guidelines for the use and interpretation of assays for monitoring autophagy (4th edition)1.

Authors:  Daniel J Klionsky; Amal Kamal Abdel-Aziz; Sara Abdelfatah; Mahmoud Abdellatif; Asghar Abdoli; Steffen Abel; Hagai Abeliovich; Marie H Abildgaard; Yakubu Princely Abudu; Abraham Acevedo-Arozena; Iannis E Adamopoulos; Khosrow Adeli; Timon E Adolph; Annagrazia Adornetto; Elma Aflaki; Galila Agam; Anupam Agarwal; Bharat B Aggarwal; Maria Agnello; Patrizia Agostinis; Javed N Agrewala; Alexander Agrotis; Patricia V Aguilar; S Tariq Ahmad; Zubair M Ahmed; Ulises Ahumada-Castro; Sonja Aits; Shu Aizawa; Yunus Akkoc; Tonia Akoumianaki; Hafize Aysin Akpinar; Ahmed M Al-Abd; Lina Al-Akra; Abeer Al-Gharaibeh; Moulay A Alaoui-Jamali; Simon Alberti; Elísabet Alcocer-Gómez; Cristiano Alessandri; Muhammad Ali; M Abdul Alim Al-Bari; Saeb Aliwaini; Javad Alizadeh; Eugènia Almacellas; Alexandru Almasan; Alicia Alonso; Guillermo D Alonso; Nihal Altan-Bonnet; Dario C Altieri; Élida M C Álvarez; Sara Alves; Cristine Alves da Costa; Mazen M Alzaharna; Marialaura Amadio; Consuelo Amantini; Cristina Amaral; Susanna Ambrosio; Amal O Amer; Veena Ammanathan; Zhenyi An; Stig U Andersen; Shaida A Andrabi; Magaiver Andrade-Silva; Allen M Andres; Sabrina Angelini; David Ann; Uche C Anozie; Mohammad Y Ansari; Pedro Antas; Adam Antebi; Zuriñe Antón; Tahira Anwar; Lionel Apetoh; Nadezda Apostolova; Toshiyuki Araki; Yasuhiro Araki; Kohei Arasaki; Wagner L Araújo; Jun Araya; Catherine Arden; Maria-Angeles Arévalo; Sandro Arguelles; Esperanza Arias; Jyothi Arikkath; Hirokazu Arimoto; Aileen R Ariosa; Darius Armstrong-James; Laetitia Arnauné-Pelloquin; Angeles Aroca; Daniela S Arroyo; Ivica Arsov; Rubén Artero; Dalia Maria Lucia Asaro; Michael Aschner; Milad Ashrafizadeh; Osnat Ashur-Fabian; Atanas G Atanasov; Alicia K Au; Patrick Auberger; Holger W Auner; Laure Aurelian; Riccardo Autelli; Laura Avagliano; Yenniffer Ávalos; Sanja Aveic; Célia Alexandra Aveleira; Tamar Avin-Wittenberg; Yucel Aydin; Scott Ayton; Srinivas Ayyadevara; Maria Azzopardi; Misuzu Baba; Jonathan M Backer; Steven K Backues; Dong-Hun Bae; Ok-Nam Bae; Soo Han Bae; Eric H Baehrecke; Ahruem Baek; Seung-Hoon Baek; Sung Hee Baek; Giacinto Bagetta; Agnieszka Bagniewska-Zadworna; Hua Bai; Jie Bai; Xiyuan Bai; Yidong Bai; Nandadulal Bairagi; Shounak Baksi; Teresa Balbi; Cosima T Baldari; Walter Balduini; Andrea Ballabio; Maria Ballester; Salma Balazadeh; Rena Balzan; Rina Bandopadhyay; Sreeparna Banerjee; Sulagna Banerjee; Ágnes Bánréti; Yan Bao; Mauricio S Baptista; Alessandra Baracca; Cristiana Barbati; Ariadna Bargiela; Daniela Barilà; Peter G Barlow; Sami J Barmada; Esther Barreiro; George E Barreto; Jiri Bartek; Bonnie Bartel; Alberto Bartolome; Gaurav R Barve; Suresh H Basagoudanavar; Diane C Bassham; Robert C Bast; Alakananda Basu; Henri Batoko; Isabella Batten; Etienne E Baulieu; Bradley L Baumgarner; Jagadeesh Bayry; Rupert Beale; Isabelle Beau; Florian Beaumatin; Luiz R G Bechara; George R Beck; Michael F Beers; Jakob Begun; Christian Behrends; Georg M N Behrens; Roberto Bei; Eloy Bejarano; Shai Bel; Christian Behl; Amine Belaid; Naïma Belgareh-Touzé; Cristina Bellarosa; Francesca Belleudi; Melissa Belló Pérez; Raquel Bello-Morales; Jackeline Soares de Oliveira Beltran; Sebastián Beltran; Doris Mangiaracina Benbrook; Mykolas Bendorius; Bruno A Benitez; Irene Benito-Cuesta; Julien Bensalem; Martin W Berchtold; Sabina Berezowska; Daniele Bergamaschi; Matteo Bergami; Andreas Bergmann; Laura Berliocchi; Clarisse Berlioz-Torrent; Amélie Bernard; Lionel Berthoux; Cagri G Besirli; Sebastien Besteiro; Virginie M Betin; Rudi Beyaert; Jelena S Bezbradica; Kiran Bhaskar; Ingrid Bhatia-Kissova; Resham Bhattacharya; Sujoy Bhattacharya; Shalmoli Bhattacharyya; Md Shenuarin Bhuiyan; Sujit Kumar Bhutia; Lanrong Bi; Xiaolin Bi; Trevor J Biden; Krikor Bijian; Viktor A Billes; Nadine Binart; Claudia Bincoletto; Asa B Birgisdottir; Geir Bjorkoy; Gonzalo Blanco; Ana Blas-Garcia; Janusz Blasiak; Robert Blomgran; Klas Blomgren; Janice S Blum; Emilio Boada-Romero; Mirta Boban; Kathleen Boesze-Battaglia; Philippe Boeuf; Barry Boland; Pascale Bomont; Paolo Bonaldo; Srinivasa Reddy Bonam; Laura Bonfili; Juan S Bonifacino; Brian A Boone; Martin D Bootman; Matteo Bordi; Christoph Borner; Beat C Bornhauser; Gautam Borthakur; Jürgen Bosch; Santanu Bose; Luis M Botana; Juan Botas; Chantal M Boulanger; Michael E Boulton; Mathieu Bourdenx; Benjamin Bourgeois; Nollaig M Bourke; Guilhem Bousquet; Patricia Boya; Peter V Bozhkov; Luiz H M Bozi; Tolga O Bozkurt; Doug E Brackney; Christian H Brandts; Ralf J Braun; Gerhard H Braus; Roberto Bravo-Sagua; José M Bravo-San Pedro; Patrick Brest; Marie-Agnès Bringer; Alfredo Briones-Herrera; V Courtney Broaddus; Peter Brodersen; Jeffrey L Brodsky; Steven L Brody; Paola G Bronson; Jeff M Bronstein; Carolyn N Brown; Rhoderick E Brown; Patricia C Brum; John H Brumell; Nicola Brunetti-Pierri; Daniele Bruno; Robert J Bryson-Richardson; Cecilia Bucci; Carmen Buchrieser; Marta Bueno; Laura Elisa Buitrago-Molina; Simone Buraschi; Shilpa Buch; J Ross Buchan; Erin M Buckingham; Hikmet Budak; Mauricio Budini; Geert Bultynck; Florin Burada; Joseph R Burgoyne; M Isabel Burón; Victor Bustos; Sabrina Büttner; Elena Butturini; Aaron Byrd; Isabel Cabas; Sandra Cabrera-Benitez; Ken Cadwell; Jingjing Cai; Lu Cai; Qian Cai; Montserrat Cairó; Jose A Calbet; Guy A Caldwell; Kim A Caldwell; Jarrod A Call; Riccardo Calvani; Ana C Calvo; Miguel Calvo-Rubio Barrera; Niels Os Camara; Jacques H Camonis; Nadine Camougrand; Michelangelo Campanella; Edward M Campbell; François-Xavier Campbell-Valois; Silvia Campello; Ilaria Campesi; Juliane C Campos; Olivier Camuzard; Jorge Cancino; Danilo Candido de Almeida; Laura Canesi; Isabella Caniggia; Barbara Canonico; Carles Cantí; Bin Cao; Michele Caraglia; Beatriz Caramés; Evie H Carchman; Elena Cardenal-Muñoz; Cesar Cardenas; Luis Cardenas; Sandra M Cardoso; Jennifer S Carew; Georges F Carle; Gillian Carleton; Silvia Carloni; Didac Carmona-Gutierrez; Leticia A Carneiro; Oliana Carnevali; Julian M Carosi; Serena Carra; Alice Carrier; Lucie Carrier; Bernadette Carroll; A Brent Carter; Andreia Neves Carvalho; Magali Casanova; Caty Casas; Josefina Casas; Chiara Cassioli; Eliseo F Castillo; Karen Castillo; Sonia Castillo-Lluva; Francesca Castoldi; Marco Castori; Ariel F Castro; Margarida Castro-Caldas; Javier Castro-Hernandez; Susana Castro-Obregon; Sergio D Catz; Claudia Cavadas; Federica Cavaliere; Gabriella Cavallini; Maria Cavinato; Maria L Cayuela; Paula Cebollada Rica; Valentina Cecarini; Francesco Cecconi; Marzanna Cechowska-Pasko; Simone Cenci; Victòria Ceperuelo-Mallafré; João J Cerqueira; Janete M Cerutti; Davide Cervia; Vildan Bozok Cetintas; Silvia Cetrullo; Han-Jung Chae; Andrei S Chagin; Chee-Yin Chai; Gopal Chakrabarti; Oishee Chakrabarti; Tapas Chakraborty; Trinad Chakraborty; Mounia Chami; Georgios Chamilos; David W Chan; Edmond Y W Chan; Edward D Chan; H Y Edwin Chan; Helen H Chan; Hung Chan; Matthew T V Chan; Yau Sang Chan; Partha K Chandra; Chih-Peng Chang; Chunmei Chang; Hao-Chun Chang; Kai Chang; Jie Chao; Tracey Chapman; Nicolas Charlet-Berguerand; Samrat Chatterjee; Shail K Chaube; Anu Chaudhary; Santosh Chauhan; Edward Chaum; Frédéric Checler; Michael E Cheetham; Chang-Shi Chen; Guang-Chao Chen; Jian-Fu Chen; Liam L Chen; Leilei Chen; Lin Chen; Mingliang Chen; Mu-Kuan Chen; Ning Chen; Quan Chen; Ruey-Hwa Chen; Shi Chen; Wei Chen; Weiqiang Chen; Xin-Ming Chen; Xiong-Wen Chen; Xu Chen; Yan Chen; Ye-Guang Chen; Yingyu Chen; Yongqiang Chen; Yu-Jen Chen; Yue-Qin Chen; Zhefan Stephen Chen; Zhi Chen; Zhi-Hua Chen; Zhijian J Chen; Zhixiang Chen; Hanhua Cheng; Jun Cheng; Shi-Yuan Cheng; Wei Cheng; Xiaodong Cheng; Xiu-Tang Cheng; Yiyun Cheng; Zhiyong Cheng; Zhong Chen; Heesun Cheong; Jit Kong Cheong; Boris V Chernyak; Sara Cherry; Chi Fai Randy Cheung; Chun Hei Antonio Cheung; King-Ho Cheung; Eric Chevet; Richard J Chi; Alan Kwok Shing Chiang; Ferdinando Chiaradonna; Roberto Chiarelli; Mario Chiariello; Nathalia Chica; Susanna Chiocca; Mario Chiong; Shih-Hwa Chiou; Abhilash I Chiramel; Valerio Chiurchiù; Dong-Hyung Cho; Seong-Kyu Choe; Augustine M K Choi; Mary E Choi; Kamalika Roy Choudhury; Norman S Chow; Charleen T Chu; Jason P Chua; John Jia En Chua; Hyewon Chung; Kin Pan Chung; Seockhoon Chung; So-Hyang Chung; Yuen-Li Chung; Valentina Cianfanelli; Iwona A Ciechomska; Mariana Cifuentes; Laura Cinque; Sebahattin Cirak; Mara Cirone; Michael J Clague; Robert Clarke; Emilio Clementi; Eliana M Coccia; Patrice Codogno; Ehud Cohen; Mickael M Cohen; Tania Colasanti; Fiorella Colasuonno; Robert A Colbert; Anna Colell; Miodrag Čolić; Nuria S Coll; Mark O Collins; María I Colombo; Daniel A Colón-Ramos; Lydie Combaret; Sergio Comincini; Márcia R Cominetti; Antonella Consiglio; Andrea Conte; Fabrizio Conti; Viorica Raluca Contu; Mark R Cookson; Kevin M Coombs; Isabelle Coppens; Maria Tiziana Corasaniti; Dale P Corkery; Nils Cordes; Katia Cortese; Maria do Carmo Costa; Sarah Costantino; Paola Costelli; Ana Coto-Montes; Peter J Crack; Jose L Crespo; Alfredo Criollo; Valeria Crippa; Riccardo Cristofani; Tamas Csizmadia; Antonio Cuadrado; Bing Cui; Jun Cui; Yixian Cui; Yong Cui; Emmanuel Culetto; Andrea C Cumino; Andrey V Cybulsky; Mark J Czaja; Stanislaw J Czuczwar; Stefania D'Adamo; Marcello D'Amelio; Daniela D'Arcangelo; Andrew C D'Lugos; Gabriella D'Orazi; James A da Silva; Hormos Salimi Dafsari; Ruben K Dagda; Yasin Dagdas; Maria Daglia; Xiaoxia Dai; Yun Dai; Yuyuan Dai; Jessica Dal Col; Paul Dalhaimer; Luisa Dalla Valle; Tobias Dallenga; Guillaume Dalmasso; Markus Damme; Ilaria Dando; Nico P Dantuma; April L Darling; Hiranmoy Das; Srinivasan Dasarathy; Santosh K Dasari; Srikanta Dash; Oliver Daumke; Adrian N Dauphinee; Jeffrey S Davies; Valeria A Dávila; Roger J Davis; Tanja Davis; Sharadha Dayalan Naidu; Francesca De Amicis; Karolien De Bosscher; Francesca De Felice; Lucia De Franceschi; Chiara De Leonibus; Mayara G de Mattos Barbosa; Guido R Y De Meyer; Angelo De Milito; Cosimo De Nunzio; Clara De Palma; Mauro De Santi; Claudio De Virgilio; Daniela De Zio; Jayanta Debnath; Brian J DeBosch; Jean-Paul Decuypere; Mark A Deehan; Gianluca Deflorian; James DeGregori; Benjamin Dehay; Gabriel Del Rio; Joe R Delaney; Lea M D Delbridge; Elizabeth Delorme-Axford; M Victoria Delpino; Francesca Demarchi; Vilma Dembitz; Nicholas D Demers; Hongbin Deng; Zhiqiang Deng; Joern Dengjel; Paul Dent; Donna Denton; Melvin L DePamphilis; Channing J Der; Vojo Deretic; Albert Descoteaux; Laura Devis; Sushil Devkota; Olivier Devuyst; Grant Dewson; Mahendiran Dharmasivam; Rohan Dhiman; Diego di Bernardo; Manlio Di Cristina; Fabio Di Domenico; Pietro Di Fazio; Alessio Di Fonzo; Giovanni Di Guardo; Gianni M Di Guglielmo; Luca Di Leo; Chiara Di Malta; Alessia Di Nardo; Martina Di Rienzo; Federica Di Sano; George Diallinas; Jiajie Diao; Guillermo Diaz-Araya; Inés Díaz-Laviada; Jared M Dickinson; Marc Diederich; Mélanie Dieudé; Ivan Dikic; Shiping Ding; Wen-Xing Ding; Luciana Dini; Jelena Dinić; Miroslav Dinic; Albena T Dinkova-Kostova; Marc S Dionne; Jörg H W Distler; Abhinav Diwan; Ian M C Dixon; Mojgan Djavaheri-Mergny; Ina Dobrinski; Oxana Dobrovinskaya; Radek Dobrowolski; Renwick C J Dobson; Jelena Đokić; Serap Dokmeci Emre; Massimo Donadelli; Bo Dong; Xiaonan Dong; Zhiwu Dong; Gerald W Dorn Ii; Volker Dotsch; Huan Dou; Juan Dou; Moataz Dowaidar; Sami Dridi; Liat Drucker; Ailian Du; Caigan Du; Guangwei Du; Hai-Ning Du; Li-Lin Du; André du Toit; Shao-Bin Duan; Xiaoqiong Duan; Sónia P Duarte; Anna Dubrovska; Elaine A Dunlop; Nicolas Dupont; Raúl V Durán; Bilikere S Dwarakanath; Sergey A Dyshlovoy; Darius Ebrahimi-Fakhari; Leopold Eckhart; Charles L Edelstein; Thomas Efferth; Eftekhar Eftekharpour; Ludwig Eichinger; Nabil Eid; Tobias Eisenberg; N Tony Eissa; Sanaa Eissa; Miriam Ejarque; Abdeljabar El Andaloussi; Nazira El-Hage; Shahenda El-Naggar; Anna Maria Eleuteri; Eman S El-Shafey; Mohamed Elgendy; Aristides G Eliopoulos; María M Elizalde; Philip M Elks; Hans-Peter Elsasser; Eslam S Elsherbiny; Brooke M Emerling; N C Tolga Emre; Christina H Eng; Nikolai Engedal; Anna-Mart Engelbrecht; Agnete S T Engelsen; Jorrit M Enserink; Ricardo Escalante; Audrey Esclatine; Mafalda Escobar-Henriques; Eeva-Liisa Eskelinen; Lucile Espert; Makandjou-Ola Eusebio; Gemma Fabrias; Cinzia Fabrizi; Antonio Facchiano; Francesco Facchiano; Bengt Fadeel; Claudio Fader; Alex C Faesen; W Douglas Fairlie; Alberto Falcó; Bjorn H Falkenburger; Daping Fan; Jie Fan; Yanbo Fan; Evandro F Fang; Yanshan Fang; Yognqi Fang; Manolis Fanto; Tamar Farfel-Becker; Mathias Faure; Gholamreza Fazeli; Anthony O Fedele; Arthur M Feldman; Du Feng; Jiachun Feng; Lifeng Feng; Yibin Feng; Yuchen Feng; Wei Feng; Thais Fenz Araujo; Thomas A Ferguson; Álvaro F Fernández; Jose C Fernandez-Checa; Sonia Fernández-Veledo; Alisdair R Fernie; Anthony W Ferrante; Alessandra Ferraresi; Merari F Ferrari; Julio C B Ferreira; Susan Ferro-Novick; Antonio Figueras; Riccardo Filadi; Nicoletta Filigheddu; Eduardo Filippi-Chiela; Giuseppe Filomeni; Gian Maria Fimia; Vittorio Fineschi; Francesca Finetti; Steven Finkbeiner; Edward A Fisher; Paul B Fisher; Flavio Flamigni; Steven J Fliesler; Trude H Flo; Ida Florance; Oliver Florey; Tullio Florio; Erika Fodor; Carlo Follo; Edward A Fon; Antonella Forlino; Francesco Fornai; Paola Fortini; Anna Fracassi; Alessandro Fraldi; Brunella Franco; Rodrigo Franco; Flavia Franconi; Lisa B Frankel; Scott L Friedman; Leopold F Fröhlich; Gema Frühbeck; Jose M Fuentes; Yukio Fujiki; Naonobu Fujita; Yuuki Fujiwara; Mitsunori Fukuda; Simone Fulda; Luc Furic; Norihiko Furuya; Carmela Fusco; Michaela U Gack; Lidia Gaffke; Sehamuddin Galadari; Alessia Galasso; Maria F Galindo; Sachith Gallolu Kankanamalage; Lorenzo Galluzzi; Vincent Galy; Noor Gammoh; Boyi Gan; Ian G Ganley; Feng Gao; Hui Gao; Minghui Gao; Ping Gao; Shou-Jiang Gao; Wentao Gao; Xiaobo Gao; Ana Garcera; Maria Noé Garcia; Verónica E Garcia; Francisco García-Del Portillo; Vega Garcia-Escudero; Aracely Garcia-Garcia; Marina Garcia-Macia; Diana García-Moreno; Carmen Garcia-Ruiz; Patricia García-Sanz; Abhishek D Garg; Ricardo Gargini; Tina Garofalo; Robert F Garry; Nils C Gassen; Damian Gatica; Liang Ge; Wanzhong Ge; Ruth Geiss-Friedlander; Cecilia Gelfi; Pascal Genschik; Ian E Gentle; Valeria Gerbino; Christoph Gerhardt; Kyla Germain; Marc Germain; David A Gewirtz; Elham Ghasemipour Afshar; Saeid Ghavami; Alessandra Ghigo; Manosij Ghosh; Georgios Giamas; Claudia Giampietri; Alexandra Giatromanolaki; Gary E Gibson; Spencer B Gibson; Vanessa Ginet; Edward Giniger; Carlotta Giorgi; Henrique Girao; Stephen E Girardin; Mridhula Giridharan; Sandy Giuliano; Cecilia Giulivi; Sylvie Giuriato; Julien Giustiniani; Alexander Gluschko; Veit Goder; Alexander Goginashvili; Jakub Golab; David C Goldstone; Anna Golebiewska; Luciana R Gomes; Rodrigo Gomez; Rubén Gómez-Sánchez; Maria Catalina Gomez-Puerto; Raquel Gomez-Sintes; Qingqiu Gong; Felix M Goni; Javier González-Gallego; Tomas Gonzalez-Hernandez; Rosa A Gonzalez-Polo; Jose A Gonzalez-Reyes; Patricia González-Rodríguez; Ing Swie Goping; Marina S Gorbatyuk; Nikolai V Gorbunov; Kıvanç Görgülü; Roxana M Gorojod; Sharon M Gorski; Sandro Goruppi; Cecilia Gotor; Roberta A Gottlieb; Illana Gozes; Devrim Gozuacik; Martin Graef; Markus H Gräler; Veronica Granatiero; Daniel Grasso; Joshua P Gray; Douglas R Green; Alexander Greenhough; Stephen L Gregory; Edward F Griffin; Mark W Grinstaff; Frederic Gros; Charles Grose; Angelina S Gross; Florian Gruber; Paolo Grumati; Tilman Grune; Xueyan Gu; Jun-Lin Guan; Carlos M Guardia; Kishore Guda; Flora Guerra; Consuelo Guerri; Prasun Guha; Carlos Guillén; Shashi Gujar; Anna Gukovskaya; Ilya Gukovsky; Jan Gunst; Andreas Günther; Anyonya R Guntur; Chuanyong Guo; Chun Guo; Hongqing Guo; Lian-Wang Guo; Ming Guo; Pawan Gupta; Shashi Kumar Gupta; Swapnil Gupta; Veer Bala Gupta; Vivek Gupta; Asa B Gustafsson; David D Gutterman; Ranjitha H B; Annakaisa Haapasalo; James E Haber; Aleksandra Hać; Shinji Hadano; Anders J Hafrén; Mansour Haidar; Belinda S Hall; Gunnel Halldén; Anne Hamacher-Brady; Andrea Hamann; Maho Hamasaki; Weidong Han; Malene Hansen; Phyllis I Hanson; Zijian Hao; Masaru Harada; Ljubica Harhaji-Trajkovic; Nirmala Hariharan; Nigil Haroon; James Harris; Takafumi Hasegawa; Noor Hasima Nagoor; Jeffrey A Haspel; Volker Haucke; Wayne D Hawkins; Bruce A Hay; Cole M Haynes; Soren B Hayrabedyan; Thomas S Hays; Congcong He; Qin He; Rong-Rong He; You-Wen He; Yu-Ying He; Yasser Heakal; Alexander M Heberle; J Fielding Hejtmancik; Gudmundur Vignir Helgason; Vanessa Henkel; Marc Herb; Alexander Hergovich; Anna Herman-Antosiewicz; Agustín Hernández; Carlos Hernandez; Sergio Hernandez-Diaz; Virginia Hernandez-Gea; Amaury Herpin; Judit Herreros; Javier H Hervás; Daniel Hesselson; Claudio Hetz; Volker T Heussler; Yujiro Higuchi; Sabine Hilfiker; Joseph A Hill; William S Hlavacek; Emmanuel A Ho; Idy H T Ho; Philip Wing-Lok Ho; Shu-Leong Ho; Wan Yun Ho; G Aaron Hobbs; Mark Hochstrasser; Peter H M Hoet; Daniel Hofius; Paul Hofman; Annika Höhn; Carina I Holmberg; Jose R Hombrebueno; Chang-Won Hong Yi-Ren Hong; Lora V Hooper; Thorsten Hoppe; Rastislav Horos; Yujin Hoshida; I-Lun Hsin; Hsin-Yun Hsu; Bing Hu; Dong Hu; Li-Fang Hu; Ming Chang Hu; Ronggui Hu; Wei Hu; Yu-Chen Hu; Zhuo-Wei Hu; Fang Hua; Jinlian Hua; Yingqi Hua; Chongmin Huan; Canhua Huang; Chuanshu Huang; Chuanxin Huang; Chunling Huang; Haishan Huang; Kun Huang; Michael L H Huang; Rui Huang; Shan Huang; Tianzhi Huang; Xing Huang; Yuxiang Jack Huang; Tobias B Huber; Virginie Hubert; Christian A Hubner; Stephanie M Hughes; William E Hughes; Magali Humbert; Gerhard Hummer; James H Hurley; Sabah Hussain; Salik Hussain; Patrick J Hussey; Martina Hutabarat; Hui-Yun Hwang; Seungmin Hwang; Antonio Ieni; Fumiyo Ikeda; Yusuke Imagawa; Yuzuru Imai; Carol Imbriano; Masaya Imoto; Denise M Inman; Ken Inoki; Juan Iovanna; Renato V Iozzo; Giuseppe Ippolito; Javier E Irazoqui; Pablo Iribarren; Mohd Ishaq; Makoto Ishikawa; Nestor Ishimwe; Ciro Isidoro; Nahed Ismail; Shohreh Issazadeh-Navikas; Eisuke Itakura; Daisuke Ito; Davor Ivankovic; Saška Ivanova; Anand Krishnan V Iyer; José M Izquierdo; Masanori Izumi; Marja Jäättelä; Majid Sakhi Jabir; William T Jackson; Nadia Jacobo-Herrera; Anne-Claire Jacomin; Elise Jacquin; Pooja Jadiya; Hartmut Jaeschke; Chinnaswamy Jagannath; Arjen J Jakobi; Johan Jakobsson; Bassam Janji; Pidder Jansen-Dürr; Patric J Jansson; Jonathan Jantsch; Sławomir Januszewski; Alagie Jassey; Steve Jean; Hélène Jeltsch-David; Pavla Jendelova; Andreas Jenny; Thomas E Jensen; Niels Jessen; Jenna L Jewell; Jing Ji; Lijun Jia; Rui Jia; Liwen Jiang; Qing Jiang; Richeng Jiang; Teng Jiang; Xuejun Jiang; Yu Jiang; Maria Jimenez-Sanchez; Eun-Jung Jin; Fengyan Jin; Hongchuan Jin; Li Jin; Luqi Jin; Meiyan Jin; Si Jin; Eun-Kyeong Jo; Carine Joffre; Terje Johansen; Gail V W Johnson; Simon A Johnston; Eija Jokitalo; Mohit Kumar Jolly; Leo A B Joosten; Joaquin Jordan; Bertrand Joseph; Dianwen Ju; Jeong-Sun Ju; Jingfang Ju; Esmeralda Juárez; Delphine Judith; Gábor Juhász; Youngsoo Jun; Chang Hwa Jung; Sung-Chul Jung; Yong Keun Jung; Heinz Jungbluth; Johannes Jungverdorben; Steffen Just; Kai Kaarniranta; Allen Kaasik; Tomohiro Kabuta; Daniel Kaganovich; Alon Kahana; Renate Kain; Shinjo Kajimura; Maria Kalamvoki; Manjula Kalia; Danuta S Kalinowski; Nina Kaludercic; Ioanna Kalvari; Joanna Kaminska; Vitaliy O Kaminskyy; Hiromitsu Kanamori; Keizo Kanasaki; Chanhee Kang; Rui Kang; Sang Sun Kang; Senthilvelrajan Kaniyappan; Tomotake Kanki; Thirumala-Devi Kanneganti; Anumantha G Kanthasamy; Arthi Kanthasamy; Marc Kantorow; Orsolya Kapuy; Michalis V Karamouzis; Md Razaul Karim; Parimal Karmakar; Rajesh G Katare; Masaru Kato; Stefan H E Kaufmann; Anu Kauppinen; Gur P Kaushal; Susmita Kaushik; Kiyoshi Kawasaki; Kemal Kazan; Po-Yuan Ke; Damien J Keating; Ursula Keber; John H Kehrl; Kate E Keller; Christian W Keller; Jongsook Kim Kemper; Candia M Kenific; Oliver Kepp; Stephanie Kermorgant; Andreas Kern; Robin Ketteler; Tom G Keulers; Boris Khalfin; Hany Khalil; Bilon Khambu; Shahid Y Khan; Vinoth Kumar Megraj Khandelwal; Rekha Khandia; Widuri Kho; Noopur V Khobrekar; Sataree Khuansuwan; Mukhran Khundadze; Samuel A Killackey; Dasol Kim; Deok Ryong Kim; Do-Hyung Kim; Dong-Eun Kim; Eun Young Kim; Eun-Kyoung Kim; Hak-Rim Kim; Hee-Sik Kim; Jeong Hun Kim; Jin Kyung Kim; Jin-Hoi Kim; Joungmok Kim; Ju Hwan Kim; Keun Il Kim; Peter K Kim; Seong-Jun Kim; Scot R Kimball; Adi Kimchi; Alec C Kimmelman; Tomonori Kimura; Matthew A King; Kerri J Kinghorn; Conan G Kinsey; Vladimir Kirkin; Lorrie A Kirshenbaum; Sergey L Kiselev; Shuji Kishi; Katsuhiko Kitamoto; Yasushi Kitaoka; Kaio Kitazato; Richard N Kitsis; Josef T Kittler; Ole Kjaerulff; Peter S Klein; Thomas Klopstock; Jochen Klucken; Helene Knævelsrud; Roland L Knorr; Ben C B Ko; Fred Ko; Jiunn-Liang Ko; Hotaka Kobayashi; Satoru Kobayashi; Ina Koch; Jan C Koch; Ulrich Koenig; Donat Kögel; Young Ho Koh; Masato Koike; Sepp D Kohlwein; Nur M Kocaturk; Masaaki Komatsu; Jeannette König; Toru Kono; Benjamin T Kopp; Tamas Korcsmaros; Gözde Korkmaz; Viktor I Korolchuk; Mónica Suárez Korsnes; Ali Koskela; Janaiah Kota; Yaichiro Kotake; Monica L Kotler; Yanjun Kou; Michael I Koukourakis; Evangelos Koustas; Attila L Kovacs; Tibor Kovács; Daisuke Koya; Tomohiro Kozako; Claudine Kraft; Dimitri Krainc; Helmut Krämer; Anna D Krasnodembskaya; Carole Kretz-Remy; Guido Kroemer; Nicholas T Ktistakis; Kazuyuki Kuchitsu; Sabine Kuenen; Lars Kuerschner; Thomas Kukar; Ajay Kumar; Ashok Kumar; Deepak Kumar; Dhiraj Kumar; Sharad Kumar; Shinji Kume; Caroline Kumsta; Chanakya N Kundu; Mondira Kundu; Ajaikumar B Kunnumakkara; Lukasz Kurgan; Tatiana G Kutateladze; Ozlem Kutlu; SeongAe Kwak; Ho Jeong Kwon; Taeg Kyu Kwon; Yong Tae Kwon; Irene Kyrmizi; Albert La Spada; Patrick Labonté; Sylvain Ladoire; Ilaria Laface; Frank Lafont; Diane C Lagace; Vikramjit Lahiri; Zhibing Lai; Angela S Laird; Aparna Lakkaraju; Trond Lamark; Sheng-Hui Lan; Ane Landajuela; Darius J R Lane; Jon D Lane; Charles H Lang; Carsten Lange; Ülo Langel; Rupert Langer; Pierre Lapaquette; Jocelyn Laporte; Nicholas F LaRusso; Isabel Lastres-Becker; Wilson Chun Yu Lau; Gordon W Laurie; Sergio Lavandero; Betty Yuen Kwan Law; Helen Ka-Wai Law; Rob Layfield; Weidong Le; Herve Le Stunff; Alexandre Y Leary; Jean-Jacques Lebrun; Lionel Y W Leck; Jean-Philippe Leduc-Gaudet; Changwook Lee; Chung-Pei Lee; Da-Hye Lee; Edward B Lee; Erinna F Lee; Gyun Min Lee; He-Jin Lee; Heung Kyu Lee; Jae Man Lee; Jason S Lee; Jin-A Lee; Joo-Yong Lee; Jun Hee Lee; Michael Lee; Min Goo Lee; Min Jae Lee; Myung-Shik Lee; Sang Yoon Lee; Seung-Jae Lee; Stella Y Lee; Sung Bae Lee; Won Hee Lee; Ying-Ray Lee; Yong-Ho Lee; Youngil Lee; Christophe Lefebvre; Renaud Legouis; Yu L Lei; Yuchen Lei; Sergey Leikin; Gerd Leitinger; Leticia Lemus; Shuilong Leng; Olivia Lenoir; Guido Lenz; Heinz Josef Lenz; Paola Lenzi; Yolanda León; Andréia M Leopoldino; Christoph Leschczyk; Stina Leskelä; Elisabeth Letellier; Chi-Ting Leung; Po Sing Leung; Jeremy S Leventhal; Beth Levine; Patrick A Lewis; Klaus Ley; Bin Li; Da-Qiang Li; Jianming Li; Jing Li; Jiong Li; Ke Li; Liwu Li; Mei Li; Min Li; Min Li; Ming Li; Mingchuan Li; Pin-Lan Li; Ming-Qing Li; Qing Li; Sheng Li; Tiangang Li; Wei Li; Wenming Li; Xue Li; Yi-Ping Li; Yuan Li; Zhiqiang Li; Zhiyong Li; Zhiyuan Li; Jiqin Lian; Chengyu Liang; Qiangrong Liang; Weicheng Liang; Yongheng Liang; YongTian Liang; Guanghong Liao; Lujian Liao; Mingzhi Liao; Yung-Feng Liao; Mariangela Librizzi; Pearl P Y Lie; Mary A Lilly; Hyunjung J Lim; Thania R R Lima; Federica Limana; Chao Lin; Chih-Wen Lin; Dar-Shong Lin; Fu-Cheng Lin; Jiandie D Lin; Kurt M Lin; Kwang-Huei Lin; Liang-Tzung Lin; Pei-Hui Lin; Qiong Lin; Shaofeng Lin; Su-Ju Lin; Wenyu Lin; Xueying Lin; Yao-Xin Lin; Yee-Shin Lin; Rafael Linden; Paula Lindner; Shuo-Chien Ling; Paul Lingor; Amelia K Linnemann; Yih-Cherng Liou; Marta M Lipinski; Saška Lipovšek; Vitor A Lira; Natalia Lisiak; Paloma B Liton; Chao Liu; Ching-Hsuan Liu; Chun-Feng Liu; Cui Hua Liu; Fang Liu; Hao Liu; Hsiao-Sheng Liu; Hua-Feng Liu; Huifang Liu; Jia Liu; Jing Liu; Julia Liu; Leyuan Liu; Longhua Liu; Meilian Liu; Qin Liu; Wei Liu; Wende Liu; Xiao-Hong Liu; Xiaodong Liu; Xingguo Liu; Xu Liu; Xuedong Liu; Yanfen Liu; Yang Liu; Yang Liu; Yueyang Liu; Yule Liu; J Andrew Livingston; Gerard Lizard; Jose M Lizcano; Senka Ljubojevic-Holzer; Matilde E LLeonart; David Llobet-Navàs; Alicia Llorente; Chih Hung Lo; Damián Lobato-Márquez; Qi Long; Yun Chau Long; Ben Loos; Julia A Loos; Manuela G López; Guillermo López-Doménech; José Antonio López-Guerrero; Ana T López-Jiménez; Óscar López-Pérez; Israel López-Valero; Magdalena J Lorenowicz; Mar Lorente; Peter Lorincz; Laura Lossi; Sophie Lotersztajn; Penny E Lovat; Jonathan F Lovell; Alenka Lovy; Péter Lőw; Guang Lu; Haocheng Lu; Jia-Hong Lu; Jin-Jian Lu; Mengji Lu; Shuyan Lu; Alessandro Luciani; John M Lucocq; Paula Ludovico; Micah A Luftig; Morten Luhr; Diego Luis-Ravelo; Julian J Lum; Liany Luna-Dulcey; Anders H Lund; Viktor K Lund; Jan D Lünemann; Patrick Lüningschrör; Honglin Luo; Rongcan Luo; Shouqing Luo; Zhi Luo; Claudio Luparello; Bernhard Lüscher; Luan Luu; Alex Lyakhovich; Konstantin G Lyamzaev; Alf Håkon Lystad; Lyubomyr Lytvynchuk; Alvin C Ma; Changle Ma; Mengxiao Ma; Ning-Fang Ma; Quan-Hong Ma; Xinliang Ma; Yueyun Ma; Zhenyi Ma; Ormond A MacDougald; Fernando Macian; Gustavo C MacIntosh; Jeffrey P MacKeigan; Kay F Macleod; Sandra Maday; Frank Madeo; Muniswamy Madesh; Tobias Madl; Julio Madrigal-Matute; Akiko Maeda; Yasuhiro Maejima; Marta Magarinos; Poornima Mahavadi; Emiliano Maiani; Kenneth Maiese; Panchanan Maiti; Maria Chiara Maiuri; Barbara Majello; Michael B Major; Elena Makareeva; Fayaz Malik; Karthik Mallilankaraman; Walter Malorni; Alina Maloyan; Najiba Mammadova; Gene Chi Wai Man; Federico Manai; Joseph D Mancias; Eva-Maria Mandelkow; Michael A Mandell; Angelo A Manfredi; Masoud H Manjili; Ravi Manjithaya; Patricio Manque; Bella B Manshian; Raquel Manzano; Claudia Manzoni; Kai Mao; Cinzia Marchese; Sandrine Marchetti; Anna Maria Marconi; Fabrizio Marcucci; Stefania Mardente; Olga A Mareninova; Marta Margeta; Muriel Mari; Sara Marinelli; Oliviero Marinelli; Guillermo Mariño; Sofia Mariotto; Richard S Marshall; Mark R Marten; Sascha Martens; Alexandre P J Martin; Katie R Martin; Sara Martin; Shaun Martin; Adrián Martín-Segura; Miguel A Martín-Acebes; Inmaculada Martin-Burriel; Marcos Martin-Rincon; Paloma Martin-Sanz; José A Martina; Wim Martinet; Aitor Martinez; Ana Martinez; Jennifer Martinez; Moises Martinez Velazquez; Nuria Martinez-Lopez; Marta Martinez-Vicente; Daniel O Martins; Joilson O Martins; Waleska K Martins; Tania Martins-Marques; Emanuele Marzetti; Shashank Masaldan; Celine Masclaux-Daubresse; Douglas G Mashek; Valentina Massa; Lourdes Massieu; Glenn R Masson; Laura Masuelli; Anatoliy I Masyuk; Tetyana V Masyuk; Paola Matarrese; Ander Matheu; Satoaki Matoba; Sachiko Matsuzaki; Pamela Mattar; Alessandro Matte; Domenico Mattoscio; José L Mauriz; Mario Mauthe; Caroline Mauvezin; Emanual Maverakis; Paola Maycotte; Johanna Mayer; Gianluigi Mazzoccoli; Cristina Mazzoni; Joseph R Mazzulli; Nami McCarty; Christine McDonald; Mitchell R McGill; Sharon L McKenna; BethAnn McLaughlin; Fionn McLoughlin; Mark A McNiven; Thomas G McWilliams; Fatima Mechta-Grigoriou; Tania Catarina Medeiros; Diego L Medina; Lynn A Megeney; Klara Megyeri; Maryam Mehrpour; Jawahar L Mehta; Alfred J Meijer; Annemarie H Meijer; Jakob Mejlvang; Alicia Meléndez; Annette Melk; Gonen Memisoglu; Alexandrina F Mendes; Delong Meng; Fei Meng; Tian Meng; Rubem Menna-Barreto; Manoj B Menon; Carol Mercer; Anne E Mercier; Jean-Louis Mergny; Adalberto Merighi; Seth D Merkley; Giuseppe Merla; Volker Meske; Ana Cecilia Mestre; Shree Padma Metur; Christian Meyer; Hemmo Meyer; Wenyi Mi; Jeanne Mialet-Perez; Junying Miao; Lucia Micale; Yasuo Miki; Enrico Milan; Małgorzata Milczarek; Dana L Miller; Samuel I Miller; Silke Miller; Steven W Millward; Ira Milosevic; Elena A Minina; Hamed Mirzaei; Hamid Reza Mirzaei; Mehdi Mirzaei; Amit Mishra; Nandita Mishra; Paras Kumar Mishra; Maja Misirkic Marjanovic; Roberta Misasi; Amit Misra; Gabriella Misso; Claire Mitchell; Geraldine Mitou; Tetsuji Miura; Shigeki Miyamoto; Makoto Miyazaki; Mitsunori Miyazaki; Taiga Miyazaki; Keisuke Miyazawa; Noboru Mizushima; Trine H Mogensen; Baharia Mograbi; Reza Mohammadinejad; Yasir Mohamud; Abhishek Mohanty; Sipra Mohapatra; Torsten Möhlmann; Asif Mohmmed; Anna Moles; Kelle H Moley; Maurizio Molinari; Vincenzo Mollace; Andreas Buch Møller; Bertrand Mollereau; Faustino Mollinedo; Costanza Montagna; Mervyn J Monteiro; Andrea Montella; L Ruth Montes; Barbara Montico; Vinod K Mony; Giacomo Monzio Compagnoni; Michael N Moore; Mohammad A Moosavi; Ana L Mora; Marina Mora; David Morales-Alamo; Rosario Moratalla; Paula I Moreira; Elena Morelli; Sandra Moreno; Daniel Moreno-Blas; Viviana Moresi; Benjamin Morga; Alwena H Morgan; Fabrice Morin; Hideaki Morishita; Orson L Moritz; Mariko Moriyama; Yuji Moriyasu; Manuela Morleo; Eugenia Morselli; Jose F Moruno-Manchon; Jorge Moscat; Serge Mostowy; Elisa Motori; Andrea Felinto Moura; Naima Moustaid-Moussa; Maria Mrakovcic; Gabriel Muciño-Hernández; Anupam Mukherjee; Subhadip Mukhopadhyay; Jean M Mulcahy Levy; Victoriano Mulero; Sylviane Muller; Christian Münch; Ashok Munjal; Pura Munoz-Canoves; Teresa Muñoz-Galdeano; Christian Münz; Tomokazu Murakawa; Claudia Muratori; Brona M Murphy; J Patrick Murphy; Aditya Murthy; Timo T Myöhänen; Indira U Mysorekar; Jennifer Mytych; Seyed Mohammad Nabavi; Massimo Nabissi; Péter Nagy; Jihoon Nah; Aimable Nahimana; Ichiro Nakagawa; Ken Nakamura; Hitoshi Nakatogawa; Shyam S Nandi; Meera Nanjundan; Monica Nanni; Gennaro Napolitano; Roberta Nardacci; Masashi Narita; Melissa Nassif; Ilana Nathan; Manabu Natsumeda; Ryno J Naude; Christin Naumann; Olaia Naveiras; Fatemeh Navid; Steffan T Nawrocki; Taras Y Nazarko; Francesca Nazio; Florentina Negoita; Thomas Neill; Amanda L Neisch; Luca M Neri; Mihai G Netea; Patrick Neubert; Thomas P Neufeld; Dietbert Neumann; Albert Neutzner; Phillip T Newton; Paul A Ney; Ioannis P Nezis; Charlene C W Ng; Tzi Bun Ng; Hang T T Nguyen; Long T Nguyen; Hong-Min Ni; Clíona Ní Cheallaigh; Zhenhong Ni; M Celeste Nicolao; Francesco Nicoli; Manuel Nieto-Diaz; Per Nilsson; Shunbin Ning; Rituraj Niranjan; Hiroshi Nishimune; Mireia Niso-Santano; Ralph A Nixon; Annalisa Nobili; Clevio Nobrega; Takeshi Noda; Uxía Nogueira-Recalde; Trevor M Nolan; Ivan Nombela; Ivana Novak; Beatriz Novoa; Takashi Nozawa; Nobuyuki Nukina; Carmen Nussbaum-Krammer; Jesper Nylandsted; Tracey R O'Donovan; Seónadh M O'Leary; Eyleen J O'Rourke; Mary P O'Sullivan; Timothy E O'Sullivan; Salvatore Oddo; Ina Oehme; Michinaga Ogawa; Eric Ogier-Denis; Margret H Ogmundsdottir; Besim Ogretmen; Goo Taeg Oh; Seon-Hee Oh; Young J Oh; Takashi Ohama; Yohei Ohashi; Masaki Ohmuraya; Vasileios Oikonomou; Rani Ojha; Koji Okamoto; Hitoshi Okazawa; Masahide Oku; Sara Oliván; Jorge M A Oliveira; Michael Ollmann; James A Olzmann; Shakib Omari; M Bishr Omary; Gizem Önal; Martin Ondrej; Sang-Bing Ong; Sang-Ging Ong; Anna Onnis; Juan A Orellana; Sara Orellana-Muñoz; Maria Del Mar Ortega-Villaizan; Xilma R Ortiz-Gonzalez; Elena Ortona; Heinz D Osiewacz; Abdel-Hamid K Osman; Rosario Osta; Marisa S Otegui; Kinya Otsu; Christiane Ott; Luisa Ottobrini; Jing-Hsiung James Ou; Tiago F Outeiro; Inger Oynebraten; Melek Ozturk; Gilles Pagès; Susanta Pahari; Marta Pajares; Utpal B Pajvani; Rituraj Pal; Simona Paladino; Nicolas Pallet; Michela Palmieri; Giuseppe Palmisano; Camilla Palumbo; Francesco Pampaloni; Lifeng Pan; Qingjun Pan; Wenliang Pan; Xin Pan; Ganna Panasyuk; Rahul Pandey; Udai B Pandey; Vrajesh Pandya; Francesco Paneni; Shirley Y Pang; Elisa Panzarini; Daniela L Papademetrio; Elena Papaleo; Daniel Papinski; Diana Papp; Eun Chan Park; Hwan Tae Park; Ji-Man Park; Jong-In Park; Joon Tae Park; Junsoo Park; Sang Chul Park; Sang-Youel Park; Abraham H Parola; Jan B Parys; Adrien Pasquier; Benoit Pasquier; João F Passos; Nunzia Pastore; Hemal H Patel; Daniel Patschan; Sophie Pattingre; Gustavo Pedraza-Alva; Jose Pedraza-Chaverri; Zully Pedrozo; Gang Pei; Jianming Pei; Hadas Peled-Zehavi; Joaquín M Pellegrini; Joffrey Pelletier; Miguel A Peñalva; Di Peng; Ying Peng; Fabio Penna; Maria Pennuto; Francesca Pentimalli; Cláudia Mf Pereira; Gustavo J S Pereira; Lilian C Pereira; Luis Pereira de Almeida; Nirma D Perera; Ángel Pérez-Lara; Ana B Perez-Oliva; María Esther Pérez-Pérez; Palsamy Periyasamy; Andras Perl; Cristiana Perrotta; Ida Perrotta; Richard G Pestell; Morten Petersen; Irina Petrache; Goran Petrovski; Thorsten Pfirrmann; Astrid S Pfister; Jennifer A Philips; Huifeng Pi; Anna Picca; Alicia M Pickrell; Sandy Picot; Giovanna M Pierantoni; Marina Pierdominici; Philippe Pierre; Valérie Pierrefite-Carle; Karolina Pierzynowska; Federico Pietrocola; Miroslawa Pietruczuk; Claudio Pignata; Felipe X Pimentel-Muiños; Mario Pinar; Roberta O Pinheiro; Ronit Pinkas-Kramarski; Paolo Pinton; Karolina Pircs; Sujan Piya; Paola Pizzo; Theo S Plantinga; Harald W Platta; Ainhoa Plaza-Zabala; Markus Plomann; Egor Y Plotnikov; Helene Plun-Favreau; Ryszard Pluta; Roger Pocock; Stefanie Pöggeler; Christian Pohl; Marc Poirot; Angelo Poletti; Marisa Ponpuak; Hana Popelka; Blagovesta Popova; Helena Porta; Soledad Porte Alcon; Eliana Portilla-Fernandez; Martin Post; Malia B Potts; Joanna Poulton; Ted Powers; Veena Prahlad; Tomasz K Prajsnar; Domenico Praticò; Rosaria Prencipe; Muriel Priault; Tassula Proikas-Cezanne; Vasilis J Promponas; Christopher G Proud; Rosa Puertollano; Luigi Puglielli; Thomas Pulinilkunnil; Deepika Puri; Rajat Puri; Julien Puyal; Xiaopeng Qi; Yongmei Qi; Wenbin Qian; Lei Qiang; Yu Qiu; Joe Quadrilatero; Jorge Quarleri; Nina Raben; Hannah Rabinowich; Debora Ragona; Michael J Ragusa; Nader Rahimi; Marveh Rahmati; Valeria Raia; Nuno Raimundo; Namakkal-Soorappan Rajasekaran; Sriganesh Ramachandra Rao; Abdelhaq Rami; Ignacio Ramírez-Pardo; David B Ramsden; Felix Randow; Pundi N Rangarajan; Danilo Ranieri; Hai Rao; Lang Rao; Rekha Rao; Sumit Rathore; J Arjuna Ratnayaka; Edward A Ratovitski; Palaniyandi Ravanan; Gloria Ravegnini; Swapan K Ray; Babak Razani; Vito Rebecca; Fulvio Reggiori; Anne Régnier-Vigouroux; Andreas S Reichert; David Reigada; Jan H Reiling; Theo Rein; Siegfried Reipert; Rokeya Sultana Rekha; Hongmei Ren; Jun Ren; Weichao Ren; Tristan Renault; Giorgia Renga; Karen Reue; Kim Rewitz; Bruna Ribeiro de Andrade Ramos; S Amer Riazuddin; Teresa M Ribeiro-Rodrigues; Jean-Ehrland Ricci; Romeo Ricci; Victoria Riccio; Des R Richardson; Yasuko Rikihisa; Makarand V Risbud; Ruth M Risueño; Konstantinos Ritis; Salvatore Rizza; Rosario Rizzuto; Helen C Roberts; Luke D Roberts; Katherine J Robinson; Maria Carmela Roccheri; Stephane Rocchi; George G Rodney; Tiago Rodrigues; Vagner Ramon Rodrigues Silva; Amaia Rodriguez; Ruth Rodriguez-Barrueco; Nieves Rodriguez-Henche; Humberto Rodriguez-Rocha; Jeroen Roelofs; Robert S Rogers; Vladimir V Rogov; Ana I Rojo; Krzysztof Rolka; Vanina Romanello; Luigina Romani; Alessandra Romano; Patricia S Romano; David Romeo-Guitart; Luis C Romero; Montserrat Romero; Joseph C Roney; Christopher Rongo; Sante Roperto; Mathias T Rosenfeldt; Philip Rosenstiel; Anne G Rosenwald; Kevin A Roth; Lynn Roth; Steven Roth; Kasper M A Rouschop; Benoit D Roussel; Sophie Roux; Patrizia Rovere-Querini; Ajit Roy; Aurore Rozieres; Diego Ruano; David C Rubinsztein; Maria P Rubtsova; Klaus Ruckdeschel; Christoph Ruckenstuhl; Emil Rudolf; Rüdiger Rudolf; Alessandra Ruggieri; Avnika Ashok Ruparelia; Paola Rusmini; Ryan R Russell; Gian Luigi Russo; Maria Russo; Rossella Russo; Oxana O Ryabaya; Kevin M Ryan; Kwon-Yul Ryu; Maria Sabater-Arcis; Ulka Sachdev; Michael Sacher; Carsten Sachse; Abhishek Sadhu; Junichi Sadoshima; Nathaniel Safren; Paul Saftig; Antonia P Sagona; Gaurav Sahay; Amirhossein Sahebkar; Mustafa Sahin; Ozgur Sahin; Sumit Sahni; Nayuta Saito; Shigeru Saito; Tsunenori Saito; Ryohei Sakai; Yasuyoshi Sakai; Jun-Ichi Sakamaki; Kalle Saksela; Gloria Salazar; Anna Salazar-Degracia; Ghasem H Salekdeh; Ashok K Saluja; Belém Sampaio-Marques; Maria Cecilia Sanchez; Jose A Sanchez-Alcazar; Victoria Sanchez-Vera; Vanessa Sancho-Shimizu; J Thomas Sanderson; Marco Sandri; Stefano Santaguida; Laura Santambrogio; Magda M Santana; Giorgio Santoni; Alberto Sanz; Pascual Sanz; Shweta Saran; Marco Sardiello; Timothy J Sargeant; Apurva Sarin; Chinmoy Sarkar; Sovan Sarkar; Maria-Rosa Sarrias; Surajit Sarkar; Dipanka Tanu Sarmah; Jaakko Sarparanta; Aishwarya Sathyanarayan; Ranganayaki Sathyanarayanan; K Matthew Scaglione; Francesca Scatozza; Liliana Schaefer; Zachary T Schafer; Ulrich E Schaible; Anthony H V Schapira; Michael Scharl; Hermann M Schatzl; Catherine H Schein; Wiep Scheper; David Scheuring; Maria Vittoria Schiaffino; Monica Schiappacassi; Rainer Schindl; Uwe Schlattner; Oliver Schmidt; Roland Schmitt; Stephen D Schmidt; Ingo Schmitz; Eran Schmukler; Anja Schneider; Bianca E Schneider; Romana Schober; Alejandra C Schoijet; Micah B Schott; Michael Schramm; Bernd Schröder; Kai Schuh; Christoph Schüller; Ryan J Schulze; Lea Schürmanns; Jens C Schwamborn; Melanie Schwarten; Filippo Scialo; Sebastiano Sciarretta; Melanie J Scott; Kathleen W Scotto; A Ivana Scovassi; Andrea Scrima; Aurora Scrivo; David Sebastian; Salwa Sebti; Simon Sedej; Laura Segatori; Nava Segev; Per O Seglen; Iban Seiliez; Ekihiro Seki; Scott B Selleck; Frank W Sellke; Joshua T Selsby; Michael Sendtner; Serif Senturk; Elena Seranova; Consolato Sergi; Ruth Serra-Moreno; Hiromi Sesaki; Carmine Settembre; Subba Rao Gangi Setty; Gianluca Sgarbi; Ou Sha; John J Shacka; Javeed A Shah; Dantong Shang; Changshun Shao; Feng Shao; Soroush Sharbati; Lisa M Sharkey; Dipali Sharma; Gaurav Sharma; Kulbhushan Sharma; Pawan Sharma; Surendra Sharma; Han-Ming Shen; Hongtao Shen; Jiangang Shen; Ming Shen; Weili Shen; Zheni Shen; Rui Sheng; Zhi Sheng; Zu-Hang Sheng; Jianjian Shi; Xiaobing Shi; Ying-Hong Shi; Kahori Shiba-Fukushima; Jeng-Jer Shieh; Yohta Shimada; Shigeomi Shimizu; Makoto Shimozawa; Takahiro Shintani; Christopher J Shoemaker; Shahla Shojaei; Ikuo Shoji; Bhupendra V Shravage; Viji Shridhar; Chih-Wen Shu; Hong-Bing Shu; Ke Shui; Arvind K Shukla; Timothy E Shutt; Valentina Sica; Aleem Siddiqui; Amanda Sierra; Virginia Sierra-Torre; Santiago Signorelli; Payel Sil; Bruno J de Andrade Silva; Johnatas D Silva; Eduardo Silva-Pavez; Sandrine Silvente-Poirot; Rachel E Simmonds; Anna Katharina Simon; Hans-Uwe Simon; Matias Simons; Anurag Singh; Lalit P Singh; Rajat Singh; Shivendra V Singh; Shrawan K Singh; Sudha B Singh; Sunaina Singh; Surinder Pal Singh; Debasish Sinha; Rohit Anthony Sinha; Sangita Sinha; Agnieszka Sirko; Kapil Sirohi; Efthimios L Sivridis; Panagiotis Skendros; Aleksandra Skirycz; Iva Slaninová; Soraya S Smaili; Andrei Smertenko; Matthew D Smith; Stefaan J Soenen; Eun Jung Sohn; Sophia P M Sok; Giancarlo Solaini; Thierry Soldati; Scott A Soleimanpour; Rosa M Soler; Alexei Solovchenko; Jason A Somarelli; Avinash Sonawane; Fuyong Song; Hyun Kyu Song; Ju-Xian Song; Kunhua Song; Zhiyin Song; Leandro R Soria; Maurizio Sorice; Alexander A Soukas; Sandra-Fausia Soukup; Diana Sousa; Nadia Sousa; Paul A Spagnuolo; Stephen A Spector; M M Srinivas Bharath; Daret St Clair; Venturina Stagni; Leopoldo Staiano; Clint A Stalnecker; Metodi V Stankov; Peter B Stathopulos; Katja Stefan; Sven Marcel Stefan; Leonidas Stefanis; Joan S Steffan; Alexander Steinkasserer; Harald Stenmark; Jared Sterneckert; Craig Stevens; Veronika Stoka; Stephan Storch; Björn Stork; Flavie Strappazzon; Anne Marie Strohecker; Dwayne G Stupack; Huanxing Su; Ling-Yan Su; Longxiang Su; Ana M Suarez-Fontes; Carlos S Subauste; Selvakumar Subbian; Paula V Subirada; Ganapasam Sudhandiran; Carolyn M Sue; Xinbing Sui; Corey Summers; Guangchao Sun; Jun Sun; Kang Sun; Meng-Xiang Sun; Qiming Sun; Yi Sun; Zhongjie Sun; Karen K S Sunahara; Eva Sundberg; Katalin Susztak; Peter Sutovsky; Hidekazu Suzuki; Gary Sweeney; J David Symons; Stephen Cho Wing Sze; Nathaniel J Szewczyk; Anna Tabęcka-Łonczynska; Claudio Tabolacci; Frank Tacke; Heinrich Taegtmeyer; Marco Tafani; Mitsuo Tagaya; Haoran Tai; Stephen W G Tait; Yoshinori Takahashi; Szabolcs Takats; Priti Talwar; Chit Tam; Shing Yau Tam; Davide Tampellini; Atsushi Tamura; Chong Teik Tan; Eng-King Tan; Ya-Qin Tan; Masaki Tanaka; Motomasa Tanaka; Daolin Tang; Jingfeng Tang; Tie-Shan Tang; Isei Tanida; Zhipeng Tao; Mohammed Taouis; Lars Tatenhorst; Nektarios Tavernarakis; Allen Taylor; Gregory A Taylor; Joan M Taylor; Elena Tchetina; Andrew R Tee; Irmgard Tegeder; David Teis; Natercia Teixeira; Fatima Teixeira-Clerc; Kumsal A Tekirdag; Tewin Tencomnao; Sandra Tenreiro; Alexei V Tepikin; Pilar S Testillano; Gianluca Tettamanti; Pierre-Louis Tharaux; Kathrin Thedieck; Arvind A Thekkinghat; Stefano Thellung; Josephine W Thinwa; V P Thirumalaikumar; Sufi Mary Thomas; Paul G Thomes; Andrew Thorburn; Lipi Thukral; Thomas Thum; Michael Thumm; Ling Tian; Ales Tichy; Andreas Till; Vincent Timmerman; Vladimir I Titorenko; Sokol V Todi; Krassimira Todorova; Janne M Toivonen; Luana Tomaipitinca; Dhanendra Tomar; Cristina Tomas-Zapico; Sergej Tomić; Benjamin Chun-Kit Tong; Chao Tong; Xin Tong; Sharon A Tooze; Maria L Torgersen; Satoru Torii; Liliana Torres-López; Alicia Torriglia; Christina G Towers; Roberto Towns; Shinya Toyokuni; Vladimir Trajkovic; Donatella Tramontano; Quynh-Giao Tran; Leonardo H Travassos; Charles B Trelford; Shirley Tremel; Ioannis P Trougakos; Betty P Tsao; Mario P Tschan; Hung-Fat Tse; Tak Fu Tse; Hitoshi Tsugawa; Andrey S Tsvetkov; David A Tumbarello; Yasin Tumtas; María J Tuñón; Sandra Turcotte; Boris Turk; Vito Turk; Bradley J Turner; Richard I Tuxworth; Jessica K Tyler; Elena V Tyutereva; Yasuo Uchiyama; Aslihan Ugun-Klusek; Holm H Uhlig; Marzena Ułamek-Kozioł; Ilya V Ulasov; Midori Umekawa; Christian Ungermann; Rei Unno; Sylvie Urbe; Elisabet Uribe-Carretero; Suayib Üstün; Vladimir N Uversky; Thomas Vaccari; Maria I Vaccaro; Björn F Vahsen; Helin Vakifahmetoglu-Norberg; Rut Valdor; Maria J Valente; Ayelén Valko; Richard B Vallee; Angela M Valverde; Greet Van den Berghe; Stijn van der Veen; Luc Van Kaer; Jorg van Loosdregt; Sjoerd J L van Wijk; Wim Vandenberghe; Ilse Vanhorebeek; Marcos A Vannier-Santos; Nicola Vannini; M Cristina Vanrell; Chiara Vantaggiato; Gabriele Varano; Isabel Varela-Nieto; Máté Varga; M Helena Vasconcelos; Somya Vats; Demetrios G Vavvas; Ignacio Vega-Naredo; Silvia Vega-Rubin-de-Celis; Guillermo Velasco; Ariadna P Velázquez; Tibor Vellai; Edo Vellenga; Francesca Velotti; Mireille Verdier; Panayotis Verginis; Isabelle Vergne; Paul Verkade; Manish Verma; Patrik Verstreken; Tim Vervliet; Jörg Vervoorts; Alexandre T Vessoni; Victor M Victor; Michel Vidal; Chiara Vidoni; Otilia V Vieira; Richard D Vierstra; Sonia Viganó; Helena Vihinen; Vinoy Vijayan; Miquel Vila; Marçal Vilar; José M Villalba; Antonio Villalobo; Beatriz Villarejo-Zori; Francesc Villarroya; Joan Villarroya; Olivier Vincent; Cecile Vindis; Christophe Viret; Maria Teresa Viscomi; Dora Visnjic; Ilio Vitale; David J Vocadlo; Olga V Voitsekhovskaja; Cinzia Volonté; Mattia Volta; Marta Vomero; Clarissa Von Haefen; Marc A Vooijs; Wolfgang Voos; Ljubica Vucicevic; Richard Wade-Martins; Satoshi Waguri; Kenrick A Waite; Shuji Wakatsuki; David W Walker; Mark J Walker; Simon A Walker; Jochen Walter; Francisco G Wandosell; Bo Wang; Chao-Yung Wang; Chen Wang; Chenran Wang; Chenwei Wang; Cun-Yu Wang; Dong Wang; Fangyang Wang; Feng Wang; Fengming Wang; Guansong Wang; Han Wang; Hao Wang; Hexiang Wang; Hong-Gang Wang; Jianrong Wang; Jigang Wang; Jiou Wang; Jundong Wang; Kui Wang; Lianrong Wang; Liming Wang; Maggie Haitian Wang; Meiqing Wang; Nanbu Wang; Pengwei Wang; Peipei Wang; Ping Wang; Ping Wang; Qing Jun Wang; Qing Wang; Qing Kenneth Wang; Qiong A Wang; Wen-Tao Wang; Wuyang Wang; Xinnan Wang; Xuejun Wang; Yan Wang; Yanchang Wang; Yanzhuang Wang; Yen-Yun Wang; Yihua Wang; Yipeng Wang; Yu Wang; Yuqi Wang; Zhe Wang; Zhenyu Wang; Zhouguang Wang; Gary Warnes; Verena Warnsmann; Hirotaka Watada; Eizo Watanabe; Maxinne Watchon; Anna Wawrzyńska; Timothy E Weaver; Grzegorz Wegrzyn; Ann M Wehman; Huafeng Wei; Lei Wei; Taotao Wei; Yongjie Wei; Oliver H Weiergräber; Conrad C Weihl; Günther Weindl; Ralf Weiskirchen; Alan Wells; Runxia H Wen; Xin Wen; Antonia Werner; Beatrice Weykopf; Sally P Wheatley; J Lindsay Whitton; Alexander J Whitworth; Katarzyna Wiktorska; Manon E Wildenberg; Tom Wileman; Simon Wilkinson; Dieter Willbold; Brett Williams; Robin S B Williams; Roger L Williams; Peter R Williamson; Richard A Wilson; Beate Winner; Nathaniel J Winsor; Steven S Witkin; Harald Wodrich; Ute Woehlbier; Thomas Wollert; Esther Wong; Jack Ho Wong; Richard W Wong; Vincent Kam Wai Wong; W Wei-Lynn Wong; An-Guo Wu; Chengbiao Wu; Jian Wu; Junfang Wu; Kenneth K Wu; Min Wu; Shan-Ying Wu; Shengzhou Wu; Shu-Yan Wu; Shufang Wu; William K K Wu; Xiaohong Wu; Xiaoqing Wu; Yao-Wen Wu; Yihua Wu; Ramnik J Xavier; Hongguang Xia; Lixin Xia; Zhengyuan Xia; Ge Xiang; Jin Xiang; Mingliang Xiang; Wei Xiang; Bin Xiao; Guozhi Xiao; Hengyi Xiao; Hong-Tao Xiao; Jian Xiao; Lan Xiao; Shi Xiao; Yin Xiao; Baoming Xie; Chuan-Ming Xie; Min Xie; Yuxiang Xie; Zhiping Xie; Zhonglin Xie; Maria Xilouri; Congfeng Xu; En Xu; Haoxing Xu; Jing Xu; JinRong Xu; Liang Xu; Wen Wen Xu; Xiulong Xu; Yu Xue; Sokhna M S Yakhine-Diop; Masamitsu Yamaguchi; Osamu Yamaguchi; Ai Yamamoto; Shunhei Yamashina; Shengmin Yan; Shian-Jang Yan; Zhen Yan; Yasuo Yanagi; Chuanbin Yang; Dun-Sheng Yang; Huan Yang; Huang-Tian Yang; Hui Yang; Jin-Ming Yang; Jing Yang; Jingyu Yang; Ling Yang; Liu Yang; Ming Yang; Pei-Ming Yang; Qian Yang; Seungwon Yang; Shu Yang; Shun-Fa Yang; Wannian Yang; Wei Yuan Yang; Xiaoyong Yang; Xuesong Yang; Yi Yang; Ying Yang; Honghong Yao; Shenggen Yao; Xiaoqiang Yao; Yong-Gang Yao; Yong-Ming Yao; Takahiro Yasui; Meysam Yazdankhah; Paul M Yen; Cong Yi; Xiao-Ming Yin; Yanhai Yin; Zhangyuan Yin; Ziyi Yin; Meidan Ying; Zheng Ying; Calvin K Yip; Stephanie Pei Tung Yiu; Young H Yoo; Kiyotsugu Yoshida; Saori R Yoshii; Tamotsu Yoshimori; Bahman Yousefi; Boxuan Yu; Haiyang Yu; Jun Yu; Jun Yu; Li Yu; Ming-Lung Yu; Seong-Woon Yu; Victor C Yu; W Haung Yu; Zhengping Yu; Zhou Yu; Junying Yuan; Ling-Qing Yuan; Shilin Yuan; Shyng-Shiou F Yuan; Yanggang Yuan; Zengqiang Yuan; Jianbo Yue; Zhenyu Yue; Jeanho Yun; Raymond L Yung; David N Zacks; Gabriele Zaffagnini; Vanessa O Zambelli; Isabella Zanella; Qun S Zang; Sara Zanivan; Silvia Zappavigna; Pilar Zaragoza; Konstantinos S Zarbalis; Amir Zarebkohan; Amira Zarrouk; Scott O Zeitlin; Jialiu Zeng; Ju-Deng Zeng; Eva Žerovnik; Lixuan Zhan; Bin Zhang; Donna D Zhang; Hanlin Zhang; Hong Zhang; Hong Zhang; Honghe Zhang; Huafeng Zhang; Huaye Zhang; Hui Zhang; Hui-Ling Zhang; Jianbin Zhang; Jianhua Zhang; Jing-Pu Zhang; Kalin Y B Zhang; Leshuai W Zhang; Lin Zhang; Lisheng Zhang; Lu Zhang; Luoying Zhang; Menghuan Zhang; Peng Zhang; Sheng Zhang; Wei Zhang; Xiangnan Zhang; Xiao-Wei Zhang; Xiaolei Zhang; Xiaoyan Zhang; Xin Zhang; Xinxin Zhang; Xu Dong Zhang; Yang Zhang; Yanjin Zhang; Yi Zhang; Ying-Dong Zhang; Yingmei Zhang; Yuan-Yuan Zhang; Yuchen Zhang; Zhe Zhang; Zhengguang Zhang; Zhibing Zhang; Zhihai Zhang; Zhiyong Zhang; Zili Zhang; Haobin Zhao; Lei Zhao; Shuang Zhao; Tongbiao Zhao; Xiao-Fan Zhao; Ying Zhao; Yongchao Zhao; Yongliang Zhao; Yuting Zhao; Guoping Zheng; Kai Zheng; Ling Zheng; Shizhong Zheng; Xi-Long Zheng; Yi Zheng; Zu-Guo Zheng; Boris Zhivotovsky; Qing Zhong; Ao Zhou; Ben Zhou; Cefan Zhou; Gang Zhou; Hao Zhou; Hong Zhou; Hongbo Zhou; Jie Zhou; Jing Zhou; Jing Zhou; Jiyong Zhou; Kailiang Zhou; Rongjia Zhou; Xu-Jie Zhou; Yanshuang Zhou; Yinghong Zhou; Yubin Zhou; Zheng-Yu Zhou; Zhou Zhou; Binglin Zhu; Changlian Zhu; Guo-Qing Zhu; Haining Zhu; Hongxin Zhu; Hua Zhu; Wei-Guo Zhu; Yanping Zhu; Yushan Zhu; Haixia Zhuang; Xiaohong Zhuang; Katarzyna Zientara-Rytter; Christine M Zimmermann; Elena Ziviani; Teresa Zoladek; Wei-Xing Zong; Dmitry B Zorov; Antonio Zorzano; Weiping Zou; Zhen Zou; Zhengzhi Zou; Steven Zuryn; Werner Zwerschke; Beate Brand-Saberi; X Charlie Dong; Chandra Shekar Kenchappa; Zuguo Li; Yong Lin; Shigeru Oshima; Yueguang Rong; Judith C Sluimer; Christina L Stallings; Chun-Kit Tong
Journal:  Autophagy       Date:  2021-02-08       Impact factor: 13.391

Review 7.  Lysosome dysfunction as a cause of neurodegenerative diseases: Lessons from frontotemporal dementia and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

Authors:  Jessica Root; Paola Merino; Austin Nuckols; Michelle Johnson; Thomas Kukar
Journal:  Neurobiol Dis       Date:  2021-03-31       Impact factor: 7.046

Review 8.  Cell Clearing Systems Bridging Neuro-Immunity and Synaptic Plasticity.

Authors:  Fiona Limanaqi; Francesca Biagioni; Carla Letizia Busceti; Larisa Ryskalin; Paola Soldani; Alessandro Frati; Francesco Fornai
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2019-05-04       Impact factor: 5.923

9.  Steroids and Brain, a Rising Bio-Medical Domain: a Perspective.

Authors:  Etienne-Emile Baulieu
Journal:  Front Endocrinol (Lausanne)       Date:  2018-06-15       Impact factor: 5.555

10.  Genomic deletion of TLR2 induces aggravated white matter damage and deteriorated neurobehavioral functions in mouse models of Alzheimer's disease.

Authors:  Chao Zhou; Xiaoyu Sun; Yuting Hu; Jiaxing Song; Shuyu Dong; Delian Kong; Yuqiao Wang; Xiaodong Hua; Jingjing Han; Yan Zhou; Guoliang Jin; Xinxin Yang; Hongjuan Shi; Zuohui Zhang; Fang Hua
Journal:  Aging (Albany NY)       Date:  2019-09-11       Impact factor: 5.682

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.