ASAP supports three programs and serves as a member of multiple consortia to advance research for the benefit of the global Parkinson’s disease community.
ASAP shares the impact that our initiative, network, and supported programs have had on providing new insights into Parkinson’s disease. Discover news, interviews, awards, and annual impact.
ASAP is dedicated to facilitating a research environment where meaningful collaboration, research-enabling resources, and data sharing provides the answers we need to understand, diagnose, and treat Parkinson’s disease. Discover our open science philosophy.
ASAP is committed to developing and openly sharing research outputs, including data, code, protocols, and key lab materials, to help the scientific community build upon existing work.
Key Personnel: Team Hurley,
Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research
Mitophagy maintains mitochondrial health by degrading damaged mitochondria. TBK1 adaptors NAP1 and SINTBAD regulate OPTN-driven mitophagy initiation and NDP52-driven progression, balancing pathway activity for efficient functioning.
Cryo-EM analysis reveals activation pathway of PI3KC3-C1 in atomistic detail.
Protocol for adding a 3X HA tag to TMEM192 gene in human cells using CAS9 and recombination template is described for H9 ES AAVS1-NGN2 cells.
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