Dr. Veerle Baekelandt studies the molecular pathogenesis of Parkinson’s disease (PD) and related disorders. Her overall approach consists of generating novel cellular and preclinical models based on mutations involved in familial forms of PD, with the aim to better reproduce the pathogenesis of the disease than the existing models. Better disease models and insights in the molecular pathogenesis are required to develop novel causal therapeutic strategies that can cure or slow the disease. The lab is using viral vector technology, stereotactic neurosurgery and noninvasive molecular imaging as core technologies. She is recognized internationally for the application of viral vectors in rodent brain to model and study PD. The main research focus is on the role of alpha-synuclein aggregation in PD and related synucleinopathies and on LRRK2, a kinase linked to PD. Her lab has also contributed to recent research on ATP13A2 and ATP10B.
Associated Grants
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IMPACT-PD: Implications of Polyamine and Glucosylceramide Transport in Parkinson’s Disease
2024
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Inhibiting Programmed Cell Death to Reduce Axonal Degeneration and Brain Inflammation in Parkinson's Disease
2023
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IMPACT-PD - Implications of Polyamine and Glucosylceramide Transport in Parkinson’s Disease
2020
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Study of the Molecular and Cellular Consequences of LRRK2 Kinase Inhibition in Neurons and Microglia
2015