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Benjamin (Ben) D. Clarkson, Ph.D., studies how inflammatory cells and cytokines cause neuronal dysfunction in epilepsy, central nervous system autoimmune disease, and neurodegenerative diseases. He studies changes in the balance of excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmission; trafficking and replacement of injured axonal mitochondria; and changes in neuronal transcription or translation induced by retrograde signals arising from inflamed axonal segments.
Dr. Clarkson also investigates how acute systemic inflammation promotes seizure onset. He is currently working to develop a cell-based assay that may help determine diagnosis and prognosis for patients with idiopathic neurological symptoms or suspected novel autoimmune epilepsy.
Dr. Clarkson's research aims to prevent long-term neuronal dysfunction in patients with neuroinflammatory diseases. This includes testing drugs and gene therapy approaches for their ability to promote repair and replacement of injured axonal mitochondria, identifying druggable checkpoints along pathways of immune-mediated synaptic dysfunction, and determining the mechanisms by which cytotoxic T cells directly cause neuron loss.
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